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Gabe’s December 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Gabe’s December 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Click on the image below to view or download my December 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter:

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HouseCalls Archive

Search here for Stuart Florida Real estate

Gabe’s December 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Gabe’s November 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Gabe’s November 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Click on the image below to view or download my November 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter:

Gabe's November 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Click here to download the full PDF of our November 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

You can see all the past issues here:

HouseCalls Archive

Search here for Stuart Florida Real estate

Gabe’s November 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Gabe’s October 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Gabe’s October 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Click on the image below to view or download my October 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter:

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Click here to download the full PDF of our October 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

You can see all the past issues here:

HouseCalls Archive

Gabe’s October 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Gabe’s September 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Gabe’s September 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Click on the image below to view or download my September 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter:

Gabe's September 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Click here to download the full PDF of our September 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

You can see all the past issues here:

HouseCalls Archive

Gabe’s September 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Gabe’s August 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Gabe’s August 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Click on the image below to view or download my August 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter:

Gabe's August 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Click here to download the full PDF of our August 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

You can see all the past issues here:

HouseCalls Archive

Gabe’s August 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Gabe’s July 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Gabe’s July 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Click on the image below to view or download our July 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter:

Gabe’s July 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Click here to download the full PDF of our July 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

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HouseCalls Archive

Gabe’s July 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Gabe’s June 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Gabe’s June 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Click on the image below to view or download our June 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter:

Gabe’s June 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Click here to download the full PDF of our June 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

You can see all the past issues here:

HouseCalls Archive

Gabe’s June 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Gabe’s May 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Gabe’s May 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Click on the image below to view or download our May 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter:

Gabe's May 2016 Housecalls Newsletter

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Gabe’s May 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

April 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

April 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

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April 2016 Housecalls Newsletter

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April 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

March 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

March 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

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March 2016 HoueCalls Newsletter

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March 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

February 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

February 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Click on the image below to view or download our February 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter:

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February 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

January 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

January 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

Click on the image below to view or download our January 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter:

January 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

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January 2016 HouseCalls Newsletter

December 2015 HouseCalls Newsletter

December 2015 HouseCalls Newsletter

Click on the image below to view or download our December 2015 HouseCalls Newsletter:

December 2015 HouseCalls Newsletter

You can see all the past issues here:

HouseCalls Archive

March 2015 BlueWater Realty Team HouseCalls Newsletter

March 2015 BlueWater Realty Team HouseCalls Newsletter

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the Gabe Sanders BlueWater Realty Team March 2015 Housecalls

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Think Like a Skeptic When Picking a Jensen Beach Home for Sale

Think Like a Skeptic When Picking a Jensen Beach Home for Sale

Spacious 4 BR Jensen Beach Home

If you are among this July’s consumers who are actively shopping for a home for sale in Jensen Beach, you have probably already taken a look at the Martin County listings and most likely jotted down some addresses you’d like to examine in detail. Then, if you find yourself in the happy situation of finding more than one Treasure Coast home for sale that passes your first in-person tour visit, the tough question arises about how to pick between two or more quality homes. Should you depend upon your emotional leaningseven if a few practical details seem to point you in the opposite direction? Or should you simply let price be the determining factor? Or is there some other criterion the most experienced house hunters rely on?

Of all the factors that could go into that decision, truthfully, pointing out which are the most important is always a subjective exercise (all except for one I’ll bring up last). Here are some of the most useful ones:

  • Compare the neighborhoods, and take a close look the adjacent streets. Drive by the properties at different times of the day and at least once on a weekend. See how the neighbors keep their homes. Neglected lawns (or bars on too many windows) are not signs you may want to ignore—just as uniformly well-kept landscaping should count on the positive side.
  • Next visit to the candidates, do a consciously thorough walk-over. Pace the perimeter of the home and lot. Look for fencing issues you might need to address, or even how intrusive neighbors’ windows might be. Check for signs of water pooling anywhere on the lot with an eye to whether drainage problems could become an issue when the rains come.
  • If there is another home for sale on the street, drive the immediate area looking for more. If there is more than one home for sale, check the web to see if there are too many—or enough that it indicates that values are in flux. If it appears there are many—but no reason other than chance—it could be a good sign that your offer will be very welcome!

What is that less subjective factor (the one I said I’d bring up last)? It’s one that calls for becoming more skeptical than you really are: one that has you pretending to be a member of the public at large who doesn’t feel particularly drawn to either of the homes for sale you are comparing.

Put yourself into that mindset—then judge which of the homes will be easier to sell in a future where you have decided to move on. Deep-six your idiosyncratic leanings, and concentrate on elements that the majority of people would agree are those that add or subtract resale value. Experienced house hunters have bought and sold often enough that they are keenly aware of how much easier it is to sell a home that has universal appeal—even over one that’s more personally attractive. Keeping aware of the personal factors that may make you comfortable but which could adversely affect resaleability will help you determine a property’s future value to others (and, many would argue, that is the real value!)…

This summer, we’re fortunate to have a market that offers many Jensen Beach homes for sale offering exceptional value. I hope you’ll give me a call to help find your family’s next home!

Think Like a Skeptic When Picking a Jensen Beach Home for Sale

Selling a Palm City Home Yourself is a Lonely Proposition

Selling a Palm City Home Yourself is a Lonely Proposition

 FSBO

You pronounce it “FIZZ-bow.”

That’s FSBO: For Sale by Owner, and it’s the Road Less Traveled by area homeowners bent on selling a home in Palm City as economically as possible. It does seem to make common sense, after all. It’s the homeowner who knows the ins and outs of their own home best—so who could be more qualified to show it off to the buyers who’ll be lined up, waiting to take a look?

And even more to the point, why lose any part of the sale proceeds to some Martin County real estate agent? It can’t be rocket science to fill out the paperwork and complete the sale. Isn’t that just common sense?

For those considering selling a home themselves, even cursory research is likely to result in one nagging question. The latest sampling from the NAR shows that the vast majority—88%, in fact—of today’s successful sellers are assisted by a real estate agent. That proportion has been growing, lately, too: it’s up 19 percentage points since 2001. This has to give rise to the nagging question: “If it’s common sense, how come the vast majority eventually wind up going with a real estate agent?”

What actually happens in a sale plays a large part, starting with an examination of the bottom line of actual sales. It reflects the fact that the customary commission percentage that goes to real estate professionals is split in two, with half going to the seller’s and half to the buyer’s agent. So the net “savings” a FSBO seller stands to realize is half of the usual initial assumption when the buyer is professionally introduced by the buyer’s representative.

Unless the buyer just appears on his or her own.

Which brings up a couple of other potential problems. If the buyer shows up on the seller’s doorstep, who has qualified him or her? (Short answer: nobody). It’s awkward and practically impossible for a homeowner to interview every prospective buyer in depth before showing the home, but having strangers in your Palm City home with no outside record of the event is at best an iffy prospect. The fact is, most qualified home buyers see the advantage of teaming with a licensed Martin County real estate agent, whose market knowledge is up to the minute, and who will assist them every step of the way at no cost to themselves. Those qualified buyers stand to be a FSBO’s likeliest prospects, in which case the potential ‘savings’ from a do-it-yourself strategy are halved.

But as a working reality, FSBO sellers run a substantial risk that those hoped-for calls from active agents may be slow to materialize. It is often the case that local agents, noting that the home is a FSBO, place it low on the list of properties their clients have time to tour. Among other indicators, a FSBO listing on the MLS signals to the Martin County real estate community that the owner is not truly serious about selling the home—else why is it not part of a professional office’s marketing package? Too, buyers’ agents work to protect their clients from difficult situations, and many FSBO sellers are not well-versed and experienced in negotiating and selling houses. Problems can erupt. All things being equal, it means that FSBOs get few showing requests.

Plus, any advertising costs will be paid for out of the owner’s own pocket—an expensive strategy.

It’s pretty clear why almost 9 out of 10 homeowners selling a home go with a qualified real estate agent. I hope you agree—and decide to give me a call!

Selling a Palm City Home Yourself is a Lonely Proposition

Martin County Real Estate News Can’t Compete with this China Item

Martin County Real Estate News Can’t Compete with this China Item

 3D_Printer

Martin County real estate news is fairly predictable—at least compared with some of the stories that filter in from the rest of the world. Here in Stuart, for instance, wherever a new home is being built, you’re likely to see familiar evidence like stacks of lumber and drywall, cartons of nail gun ammo, sacks of cement, and workmen hustling around as they put everything together.

Nary a printer in sight.

Not so in China. According to The Washington Post, the real estate news includes an item about an innovation from Asia. “Innovation” is perhaps a bit of an understatement, because the gist of the story was that in April a year ago, a Chinese concern built 10 houses in one day using a 3-D printer.

Despite what you may be thinking, this item did not have an April 1 dateline.

The 3-D printers we’ve been reading about over the past few years are the ones that take pellets or powders made of plastic, wax, ceramic, or even metal, and print three-dimensional objects, layer by layer, as directed by a computer.

Only a few years back, for most of us, stories about 3-D printers seemed more like science fiction than reality. But apparently the things actually work! As evidence, there have been lots of stories about the legal and other ramifications that accompany the printing of firearms. A few months ago, astronauts printed up a 3D wrench aboard the International Space Station: they’ll just print up spare parts when things break down. And there was that car (the “Strati”) that a company printed in Chicago: it took 44 hours to print, with a top speed of 40 MPH…

Doesn’t this all sound a little bit nuts?

But back to the real estate news from China. It seems that the outfit that printed the 10 houses last year, built a really, really big 3D printer, and used it to print a mansion: an 11,840 square-foot villa. Next to it, they printed up a 5-story building (just showing off, you have to think). According to reports, the process is more than just fast: it’s becoming cheaper and more energy-efficient. The Chinese company says that it can save 30%-60% of building materials, 50% of labor costs, etc. They want to print bridges, too…

But don’t think American ingenuity is being left in the polymer dust! USC Engineering Professor B. Khoshnevis is plugging away at the forefront of the technology, except he calls it “contour crafting” instead of “3D printing” (or “Xeroxing”). On his web site, in answer to the FAQ “Can you print an entire house?” the answer is Theoretically, yes. He hopes to seeentry-level construction models on the market within one to two years.”

Soooo, how long before our local Martin County real estate news will be trumpeting our own 3D printed houses for sale? No time soon. It turns out that the villa, 10 small houses, and 5-story apartment building in China “aren’t much to look at.” In fact, some say they are for demonstration only. So when you give me a call to help you find the Stuart home of your dreams, I suspect a printed model won’t be on our tour list. We won’t be making the rounds in a Strati, any time soon, either.

It’s only a two-seater, anyway.