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Dear Edith: After looking at a house a second
time, I told my agent I would like to make an offer on it the
next day. That evening my agent said the listing agent had
told her that there was another "very good" offer
being prepared. My agent suggested I write a contract
immediately before the other one could be presented.
Instead of trying to offer the price and terms I wanted, I was
convinced that in order to have my offer accepted, I should
offer $500 over the asking price. This was accepted by the
sellers.
What are the chances that either agent duped me? - E.K.N.
Slim.
It really is sometimes advisable to make an offer for more
than the asking price, particularly when property is newly
listed at a no-nonsense figure.
Of course I can't know whether any particular person is
honest, but consider this: by the time the commission was
divided among listing office, listing agent, selling office
and selling agent, "your" agent probably stood to
make about $7 if you paid $500 more. Hardly seems worth lying
about.
Neither one was your agent, by the way, unless you had
specifically hired a buyer's broker. Both
were working for the seller. Both agents had special legal
obligations to the seller, including obtaining the best price
for the house. They were also, however, required by law to
deal honestly with buyers.
This Homebuyers Tip was excerpted from:
Dear Edith...On Real Estate, by Edith Lank, Longman Financial
Services Publishing, 1990.
ISBN# 0793100070
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