Halfway through July and property sales in Cocoa Beach and Cape Canaveral are ticking along at a heated rate. Of the 26 reported closed condos and townhomes so far in the month two went for more than a half million, both at Michelina, $600,000 and $575,000. Another high sale was a 2nd floor northeast corner at Villa Verde in the same stack as the collapsed 4th floor balcony in April. It has 3 bedrooms 3.5 baths, 2512 square feet, 2 car garage and closed for $395,000.
Shorewood in Cape Canaveral has been active with three closed sales of non-direct units at prices between $202,000 and $245,000.
One of the last bank-owned Pier Resort units closed for $170,000. Side peek of the ocean with three bedrooms, three baths and 1900 square feet.
A 2nd floor Diplomat 2/1, 750 sf with mild updating sold furnished for $116,000.
Two Bayport villas in Cape Canaveral closed for $205,000 and $240,000, 1507 and 1686 square feet.
A 2nd floor Royale Towers south facing C building 2/2 closed for $202,000.
The highest closing price since 2005 at Beachwalk on the grand canal on Banana River Drive in Cocoa Beach happened this month. A 2nd floor 2/2 closed for $190,000. It had a boat slip with lift and a garage. Several direct water units similar to this have sold for under $150,000 in the last three years. A ground floor direct with boat lift closed in January this year for $128,500. This same story is being repeated at most complexes as prices are ratcheting up with the evaporation of distressed inventory.
Let's revisit multiple offers. I had an interesting encounter with a buyer last week who thought multiple offers should include multiple chances to do "best and highest". It doesn't work that way. Typically in our market, if more than one offer is received at the same time, the listing agent will go back to all buyers' agents and give them the opportunity to bring their best and highest offer to be presented to the seller at the same time. This is risky for the seller as the pervasive distrust of real estate agents means that they run the risk of losing one or all of the buyers. I was involved in one situation where both buyers withdrew their offer when asked to bring their best and highest. The condo ultimately sold to an entirely different person for less than at least one of the first buyers was willing to pay. If your buyer's agent tells you that the listing agent has called for "best and highest" because there are multiple offers, you have three choices.
- keep your offer exactly the same in hopes of being the winning offer
- increase your price and/or better your terms in hopes of being the winning offer
- withdraw your offer because you "don't play games' or believe the agent/s are lying to you
- They can accept the offer they like best and proceed to closing. Note that the best offer may not necessarily be the highest. Closing date and terms may win out over price.
- They can choose not to respond to any of the offers if none are good enough.
- They can counter one or several of the offers. If none of the prices are acceptable to them they can offer the same counter-price to all and accept the first one (if any) to respond. Or, if one is clearly better than the others, they may choose to counter that one alone with a change of price and/or terms.
At this stage of our market, multiple offers are the name of the game for any priced-right listing so be prepared for this if you're offering and don't let it deter you from participation. You decide what price and terms you're comfortable with and then hope for the best. You might win just by staying in the game without changing the offer at all. If you don't trust your agent enough to be honest with him, find another one.
"All journalism is advocacy journalism. No matter how it's presented,
every report by every reporter advances someone's point of view."
_______Matt Taibbi
Larry Walker - larry@southcocoabeach.com - 321.917.5786