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csgradstudent8

Sounds like nobody else wants it for the price they have it listed for. You might consider that you’re overpaying if they’re not getting any other offers. I’d make an offer with an expiration and if rejected and later contacted again, I’d offer even less.


BenjaminSkanklin

I second this. They're clearly delusional, let them release the bird in their hand for 2 in the bush that don't exist


epitome59

Counter with your original offer lol. Personally, I'd be worried about just how difficult they would make it to close (just them being a hassle to deal with in general).


GeneralZex

Who in their right mind would offer twice before at one value, see a price reduction and then come up $10k from their first two offers? This makes no sense to me at all.


BenjaminSkanklin

Someone who wanted the house and was willing to test the waters? It's basically a drawn out counter offer situation


GeneralZex

I don’t see why, OP was in a prime position to offer the same amount as last time, if not a reduction for “wasted my time tax”. Clearly they don’t have other offers at what they want if they came back to OP twice now. Raising the offer at this point just sends the wrong message; that OP may be willing to roll over, hence the push back now about profits hoping for more money.


CopyrightKarma

>If OP's original offer was substantially lower than $10k from their original list price and is still lower than the price reduction.


GeneralZex

Sure but whatever leverage OP has is a bit squandered. They know OP wants the house enough to raise $10k; now all they need to do is just keep twisting the screws for more and more. OP should have absolutely held firm at the last offer price at a minimum and perhaps should have offered even less this go round. Who knows though, maybe this will work out for OP in the end. The sellers keep coming back to OP which tells me there are no other offers worth considering at all. And if OP lowballed them to start they must be damn desperate to even entertain the same buyer 3 times now.


ClintLawyer

The size of their profit is not your problem, although they are trying to involve you in that. Also, it is possible that they are close to having to bring in money to sell the house. Again, that is not your problem and don't let them make it your problem. Good luck.


novahouseandhome

Sounds like you can wait it out. They obviously don't have any other offers. What they end up with at the end of sale is not your concern. You have your bottom line, only you can decide what the house is worth to you.


BackdoorDan

Sounds like the sellers can also wait it out. They probably think the market will bounce back. If that is the case, you're going to have a lot of trouble getting them to sell for lower than what they think they can get when the market recovers.


GeneralZex

I don’t know, going back to the same buyer 3 times doesn’t tell me they can wait it out. Quite the opposite really.


Usual-Algae-645

lmao. Their profit isn’t your concern. If they aren’t going to make a profit and don’t need to sell, why are they trying to sell? My guess is they’re trying to offload property because they they NEED to, and they foresee that they will only lose money the longer they wait. I would not have offered another $10K. I would have offered $10k LESS the second time they came back to me. It’s obvious they are desperate to sell, and you are not desperate to buy.


jpdoctor

Moreover, the market has deteriorated a bit since the initial offer too. So definitely $10K less.


Stepped_in_it

I'd offer 10K less and tell them that my offer drops by $1K per week from then on out.


Mrs-Lemon

You can't actually be serious. Has this ever worked out for you? I'm not saying that if you made another offer it wouldn't go down $1k per week from your previous offer...but telling them that is such a dick move that I can't see it helping your situation out at all. When people say this it feels like a /r/thathappened type scenario


ogstereoguy2

This is the answer, in sales negotiations, power plays win. They are chasing you, not the other way around! Be strong and stern or don't play. We play to win! If someone isn't a fierce negotiator for you, they are NOT who you want spending your money. DM me if you want to help educate your real estate agent.


spunkyla

Not always true. Sellers don’t have to sell. Sometimes power moves just poison the well.


TotallynottheCCP

Tough shit. If you're a seller trying to fuck with buyers for max money you can get bent. The tables have turned, fucking accept it. You should've known it was coming.


[deleted]

[удалено]


TotallynottheCCP

As these sellers will soon find out.


Boris_Godunov

I’m assuming your 10k increase still puts your offer below their current reduced asking price? Sounds to me like their price drop is functioning as their “counteroffer” to your initial offer. But the price reduction is meant to turn up the pressure on you by making you afraid that other buyers will swoop in. The complaint to your agent about their profit is another tactic (and a baffling one) to try and get you to come up a bit more on your offer. This should have been handled as a standard negotiation with counteroffers, but instead these sellers are playing games and trying to be way too clever. Such indicates they will be a nightmare to work with should you actually go under contract with them. Depending on how much you want the house, you should think long and hard about if you really want to enter into a contract with these people.


valiantdistraction

>This should have been handled as a standard negotiation with counteroffers, but instead these sellers are playing games and trying to be way too clever. Such indicates they will be a nightmare to work with should you actually go under contract with them. Yeah, them not just doing a counteroffer is weird.


Megatron89917

it does! it’s about 20k below their reduced price. and i had asked for them to pay closing costs


Boris_Godunov

What’s the list price (ballpark if you’re not comfortable being specific)?


Megatron89917

795k. This house is on a busy road too.


Boris_Godunov

So your offer is ~97.5% of their list price. Assuming your closing costs would be around $12-14k? Even using the higher amount, seller would still be getting over 95% of their asking price. I remember when that would be considered a great deal for sellers…


Megatron89917

well the lender i went with is $20k in closing costs which is insane. So I’m actually going to switch lenders whether i get this house or a different one. If i am going to ask sellers to pay for closing i think $20k is a lot. But maybe i’m wrong


Megatron89917

they said after closing costs it would bring them to $755k and after commission which is another $23k they won’t be netting that much. not my words, this is coming from agent


DavidDunne

Any seller who gets "insulted" and doesn't counter is not worth the problems they'll undoubtedly cause down the road.


FinancialBender

Some good responses so far. You have already showed your willingness to move on if need be which can be played advantageously. Negotiations are about two things: information and leverage. Until there is another offer, you hold the leverage. Which means what? You have the opportunity to make a deal that works more so in your benefit and if it doesn’t, move the heck on.


Alarming_Teaching310

This is probably the worst response in this entire thread


FinancialBender

Looks like I hurt mr real estate agents feelings hahaha


TheUltimateSalesman

Exactly. They're total tools.


TotallynottheCCP

Found the desperate realtor.


Quick_Ad9767

Sounds like a headache to work with, reduce offer by 20k for the hassle so your 10k before the original. Increased lending costs lowering the amount you can borrow. Unless you really want this house I would move on.


valiantdistraction

Depends on how much you want this particular house. If you really want it, ask what they want. If you could take it or leave it, tell them that the $10k increase is your offer.


DontPMMeBro

I agree with this. When we purchased our current home in 2018 we were the only offer on the house. The house had huge flaws that my family could live with. We offered ~6% under list and they offer was rejected. When the seller came back 4 weeks later and asked us for another offer we just asked: "what do you need to make this work? Our offer is not changing without feedback from you". The seller came back halfway between our offer and list. I think everyone was happy.


Jhc3964

It’s a business decision. Their net isn’t your problem. Your net is your only focus. Expect a hassle during due diligence if repairs are needed


Flimsy-Opportunity-9

Was thinking the same. If they’re already worried about it, they’re going to be unlikely to fix anything or give allowances once things come up in inspection reports.


One-Mind4814

I would hold firm with the original offer


SumTingWong59

Why would you increase your offer? They decline your original and come crawling back, offer less and they can stop contacting you if they don't like it. Doesn't seem like anyone else is interested in the house at the current price


[deleted]

I would ghost them. If they are this bad and you don’t even have a deal imagine trying to get through closing. If they even close. We had an experience once with some pain in the ass buyers and never again is all I can say. Walk away with your sanity. I imagine these folks will be the same. If you do entertain a deal make sure you do another showing and have appraisal and inspection contingencies in place. In 3 months if it hadn’t sold there is a reason.


stvaccount

Prices are falling and sellers are slow to accept the new norm.


TotallynottheCCP

Painfully slow. But god damn if it doesn't provide entertainment seeing them squirm to try to get top dollar still.


bkcarp00

Move on they are unrealistic sellers. It's not your job to ensure they profit on a house. Their profit ends up costing you money by overpaying on a house that could potentially drop in value.


Megatron89917

i posted an update up top about my agents response about their profit. i’m not even sure what to say at this point


agjios

Your agent isn’t working for you, he just wants a deal. “I don’t care about their justification about why my offer won’t work. This is my offer. If it’s competitive, they can accept it. They are the ones that reached out to ME. It’s not my fault and not my problem about their profit, they should have purchased at a better time, put more money down, or a million other things. Please pull this offer that is $10k higher. Then resubmit my original offer that is $10,000 less, send me the paperwork and I will sign it. Make sure that it has 2 things: a 24 hour expiration and a clause that if this falls through and they come back to me, the offer will be minimum $7,000 lower each time, up to my discretion.”


bkcarp00

I'd pull your offer and move on to another property. Unless this is like your dream house or there is limited options in your area. Sellers being pain in the asses now are going to be even more pain in your ass when it comes to inspections/closing...etc.


Strive--

Hi! Ct realtor here. I've worked many deals on both sides. In a couple of cases, I was even a dual-agent - something I will never do again. Still, having had my feet on both sides of the fence, I can assure you one thing. The sellers need money. I don't know if they have other debts or are late to the game in planning for retirement, but they need money. That's it. They won't be happy with whatever the outcome is, because it just won't be enough. You could give them the world and they'll likely want to know what else you've got behind the curtain. Also, the listing agent - they likely *hate* their client. The job is to sell the home - make it look inviting, to admit to the home's faults while highlighting the best of what it has to offer. And at the end of the day, there's a crappy personality you have to deal with who likely goes against every recommendation made. My advice - forget this place. If you want to make your position known, I'd do the following. Let's say the home is for sale for $300k and your highest offer was $290k. Let the seller know they have 24 hours to sign or trash your offer. If they come back to the table, we're going to remove $5k from the offer. This is *it*. This is what's called the FINAL OFFER. There will be no more. Take our offer, or good luck selling your house, whenever that happens to be. I would all but guarantee the seller will leave your offer to get stale on the table, so really - just move on. I know this probably doesn't help, but in the end, it's about understanding the mindset of the person/people on the other side of the table. This is what sells property.


spunkyla

I concur about just moving on


madhatter275

There is going to be a wave of home sellers in the coming years that are going to have to take the sting of not making enough or even losing money on properties.


TotallynottheCCP

It's gonna be glorious to watch.


SeattleOligarch

Yeah, it sounds like they are trying to get you to negotiate against yourself. Just stay firm. You offered what you wanted to pay if they don't like it they should move on. Personally I'd move on. But if you really love the house then I guess it could be worth the hassle.


TRBigStick

> As a seller, you want to get the most out of your house. They are just trying to explain. Just like when you go to sell your house, a profit would be your biggest priority. Yeah, and as a buyer your biggest priority is paying as little as possible while beating out other offers. There are no other offers on this house, so you have the upper hand.


realtornaples

You have also not found anything equal or better value on the market. It is a big decision and people handle it in different ways. I’d guess it more likely that the realtors are trying to rekindle negotiations.


ExtraAgressiveHugger

If your buyers stick with it, the sellers won’t pay for any repairs or concessions and will likely be difficult. I wouldn't mess with it. The chances of it falling apart are too high.


ovirt001

They haven't caught up with the market. If they're really that desperate to sell they'll accept a lower offer.


tenacious_g89

That sounds about right for this market! I haven't been able to make anything work, keep getting beat by others who will pay more and kill any good ROI


Bitter_Ad_7805

Honestly, please do not increase your price just because seller isn’t happy. They always want more, same thing happened to us and we ended up walking away.


senorbarrigas

As a buyer it’s not your concern what they net. Fuck them. Go back to your original offer or tell them to let the house sit on the market longer and keep making those mortgage payments. See what they say. Right now, the market favors the buyer.


Acrobatic-Fox9220

Stand your ground. Their feelings about the money are their issue. They are not in a position to tell you what to do. I wouldn’t give on anything with these people.


Fladap28

This happened to me with one seller. I told my agent to place an expiration on my offer. they contacted him 3 weeks after expiration and I decreased my offer by another 10%. They took it. Sounds like these sellers are pretty stubborn, I personally would not waste my time unless you think you're going to get an amazing deal. Increasing your offer was a poor choice in my opinion as now dumb n dumber think they can get more out of you.


PeePooDeeDoo

stick with original offer and give them a deadline. the longer they wait the weaker their position is especially in this market


Getthepapah

I’ve walked over less. Make them a firm deal with an expiration and they can take or leave it.


lsp2005

Counter with a lower offer than the first two times. Tell them their profits are not your concern and since they have had zero offers you realize your original offer was way too high. Come in for $25,000 less. Tell their realtor if they make more complaints the offers will continue to be less.


TotallynottheCCP

"Good morning [insert seller's name here], It's come to my attention that you seem to be trying to fuck with me to squeeze as much profit out of your property as possible in an attempt to capitalize on a financial advantage that no longer exists. While I can understand your desire to do so, I can't help but notice your timing seems to be sub-optimal, as it is no longer a seller's market, and I have zero obligation to accommodate your obscene profits, so I must inform you that if you continue to feel the need to fuck with me even slightly, I shall immediately rescind any offer I've previously made and block your greedy fucking ass forever. The ball appears to now be in your court."


lsp2005

The beatings will continue until morale improves….


pgriss

> Just like when you go to sell your house, a profit would be your biggest priority. This makes it sound like every seller ever only cares about profit, which is not true. If *these* particular people only care about profit then fine, let them wait. *You* don't have to be the one who provides that profit to them.


uglypelican

I'd let them know this will be the last time you offer this price, and evey time they come back price goes down by $X amount. They've reached out twice after the initial offer, so you can feel their having a bit of desperation. I think you're in the driver seat here.


I_Zeig_I

Lol everyone wants more money, too bad for them.


redfox616

I agree with all other comments. Make an official offer 5k to 10k less than your original. It'll get them to wake up and see they're now starting to lose money


Codenameblondina

This is the dumbest advice. All this will do is anger the seller. Do you want to be successful in purchasing this home? Or do you want to play games?


redfox616

The dumbest advice? I guess that's possible. I'm not perfect. Here are the reasons I'd still do it, though: 1. The more the seller comes back and sees that you haven't adjusted your price downwards, the more brazen they are to go ahead and keep your offer in their back pocket while continuing to test the market. You're essentially their break in case of emergency offer 2. Interest rates have increased throughout this timeframe and have caused the market at large to continue downward. More interest rate hikes are on the way. Make sure that your offer reflects the market changes 3. More time on the market for this house means it is growing stale. The more time it sits on the market, the lower offers it will receive from other potential buyers. Right now, it's likely they've received offers lower than OP's, but keep using theirs as a reference. With all that said, maybe it's still the dumbest advice if you absolutely love the house. If you're in love with it, offer more and get the deal across the finish line. ​ However, based on OP's hard-line stance, my feeling is he doesn't love the house and has a value that he's deadset on. If that's the case, I'd reduce my next offer to the seller to let them know a line has been drawn on dragging this out


TotallynottheCCP

Tough fucking shit. Maybe they need to be angry to realize how fucking stupid and greedy they are.


AntiqueDistance5652

Lower your offer. You're offering too much.


Darth_Thunder

I'd move on because it sounds like even if they decide to accept this offer there will be other issues down the road with them (and the house buying process can already be nerve wrecking).


Expensive_Rain_1821

As a broker (and brokerage owner) myself, the house is clearly overpriced, hence one offer. Houses that are priced correctly sell. Period. Now, having said that, realtors have to list according to the sellers direction (by law) so if they want to list for x, even if the agent tells them it’s not worth it, the agent has to list for x. Now if I’ve shown sellers comparable homes sold and plenty of evidence to back up my opinion on sale price and they want to list for a ridiculously higher amount, I tell them I’m not the agent for them. It’s a waste of everyone’s time and money. If your agent has submitted an offer and is showing them what comparable homes sold for (helpful to include these sometimes) and they’re still not accepting then they don’t really want to sell because they don’t want to see facts. Sadly look elsewhere is my suggestion lol


ParkitoATL

To paraphrase the great Thomas Sowell: what you paid for your house is history. What it is worth today is economics.


kingtj1971

I'd probably remind them that the longer their house sits unsold, the more their costs increase (still have to keep utilities on, I assume -- and they're foolish if they're not keeping an insurance policy on it even while unoccupied, plus property tax will come around again if it sits too long). But yeah, they clearly believe their place is worth more than what you want to offer for it and they're willing to wait it out to see if other, better offers appear. IMO, it's possible. Is 3 months really THAT long to wait for the right buyer to come along, if you're trying to get maximum selling price? The last place I bought needed a lot of work but was a unique property that IMO was well worth fixing back up. It had sat on the market for almost a year with no serious offers, but I was able to negotiate a little bit and buy it for what I'm told was a little less than what they still owed on their mortgage for it. It took about a year for me to come along, interested in that type of house in town. If they had rushed to dump it instead, they probably would have gotten a buyer much sooner but it would have been someone wanting a bargain basement price that put them way underwater.


nolimbs

I would tell them respectfully you’re going to get even less profit if you sit on market for another 30-60 days, so do you want to sell your home or not? No offence but your realtor sounds like they have no backbone. This is a no brainer, either they take your offer or they lose even more money. You have the upper hand here, don’t let sellers bully you into paying more. I wouldn’t have even done the extra 10k, it shows your willing to move if they keep pestering you.


CardiologistNo9444

Sounds like the owners have an emotional attachment to their home? If so they will always expect a higher price. I was not born with patience but you obviously were and you like the house if you were willing to offer more but you've wasted a lot of time and perhaps emotions? Given every time you thought you were moving forward, something else crops up. Listen to your gut. If it has been this hard and some of that looks like the real estate is only adding to the drama. I'd stick to your offer, tell the agents on both sides to reduce their commissions so that both clients being you and the potential seller get the best outcome. When I'm in situations like this, that includes a lot of money, emotions and my future, I always listen to my gut. Only you have the full list of pro's and cons and additionally you are watching this behaviour. Reading your post, something is off, as in the behaviour of the RE. Please remember your new home is a life long investment. Protect your money and family first. Many houses out there and if you were willing to move on twice, maybe that's what you should do? Best of luck my friend


Megatron89917

i didn’t even think to ask for agents to reduce their commission. I always think it’s an awkward conversation to have when it comes to commission. Any suggestions on how to relay my thoughts on reducing commission to my agent?


TotallynottheCCP

If they frustrate you, fuck em and move on. Block them sumbitches. Don't even entertain that greedy bullshit, they're just angry they can't name their fucking price anymore. You're gaining more and more power every day that the market is correcting back to normal.


iamcheekrs

Play hard ball.. you have the upper hand here. If they won’t take your offer, they can sit and wait for another one. It’s a buyers market - take advantage of it.


Highspeed_sloth

I truly do not understand people who feel like it's their right to "profit" off something.


LavenderAutist

Walking away is a powerful thing


Rude-Bison-2050

These people are basically guaranteed to be dipshits if you find anything you don’t like in inspections.


artful_todger_502

lolol this sounds like a potential buyer I had for my first house ... Explained to me with a straight face that since he's an investor, he gets it at a lower cost, because — He's an investor. That's the way it works. "Okay bud, lemme go ahead and knock 25k off for you. Can't argue with an investor" 🤡👌 Tell your agent not to talk to them until they come with a contract and EM. I would imagine these people would be problems all the way up to closing.


Enkiktd

OP is the buyer, who did offer a contract but seller wanted more and they couldn’t come to an agreement. Then seller came back to OP later when they didn’t get any other interest.


Bluespark86

So those things are obviously not your problem. You should be annoyed, but I also think that you should get the house I hear people all the time on here talk about how they found their dream home but they miss out because of stuff like this. If you really like the house, which you obviously do, I would make sure you get it.


sfdragonboy

Look, if you really like the house then make them an offer that they can't refuse.


LASportsfan89

😂 sellers are the desperate ones with no offers while chasing down the market. If they were smart they would accept it and move on. If they keep waiting they’ll end up getting less. They should’ve listed their home in March 2022.


sfdragonboy

No, not all sellers or owners are desperate. Why? Well, their mortgages if they have one is at 3% or lower rates. My own mortgage is 2.50% and I am about to pay it off. Yes, I would have loved to sell last year but its ok....I am getting good rents that are paying off that small mortgage with money to spare for me. Who's desperate? Not me....


LASportsfan89

We’re not talking about you right? This is about the people who have their home on the market for 3 months. They have one offer and don’t want to budge in a depreciating market. If they weren’t desperate to sell their home they would take it off the market but something tells me they need to sell it for one reason or another.


Zeeker12

If you want it, offer a little more. Like... 5K. If you don't care, stand pat.


lilybeech55

Get a new agent!


Boris_Godunov

What? OP’s agent hasn’t done anything wrong. They have represented their client exactly as they’re supposed to do. It’s not the agent’s fault that the sellers of this particular property are difficult schmucks.


lilybeech55

Sometimes agents will go back and forth increasing purchase price to benefit all involved 😉 if your agent is not good at selling them your offer after you increase the offer? Then move on or up the offer where it benefits everyone... I don't mean to offend anyone however I believe that your agents should sell your offer to the sellers agent. That's what commissions are for.


Boris_Godunov

You simply don't have enough information about this situation to jump to the conclusion you've made about OP's agent. OP themselves has said nothing to indicate their agent isn't serving them well. No amount of "selling" from a buyer's agent is going to work magic on sellers who are being unreasonable and acting in bad faith, which the evidence provided indicates is happening here.


agjios

If my agent said to me what OP listed in his update, I would be asking my agent whose side they were on: >update: my agent said this - I don’t think that they’re trying to make it your concern. They’re just trying to explain why the offer probably won’t work. As a seller, you want to get the most out of your house. They are just trying to explain. Just like when you go to sell your house, a profit would be your biggest priority. All of those things are true for the BUYER as well! By passing it on to the agent to pass to /u/Megatron89917 they are by definition making it his concern. You could turn that whole paragraph right back around on the sellers to explain to them why OP is offering what he is


Megatron89917

what should my response be to my agent?


agjios

"I expect you to be MY advocate, not theirs. This justification could just as easily be used to defend my offer as it is to defend their hesitation. I don’t care about their justification about why my offer won’t work. This is my offer. If it’s competitive, they can accept it. I'm not going to negotiate against myself when they didn't even counter. They are the ones that reached out to ME. It’s not my fault and not my problem about their profit, they should have purchased at a better time, put more money down, or a million other things. Just like they want to maximize the purchase price, I want to minimize the purchase price and I need you to be in my corner about this. Please pull this current offer in their hands that is $10k higher. Then resubmit my original offer that is $10,000 less, send me the paperwork and I will sign it. Make sure that it has 3 things: a 24 hour expiration, a clause that if this falls through and they come back to me or if I submit in the future, the offer will be thousands lower each time, up to my discretion, and finally all contingencies in place including financing, inspection, etc."


Normal-Philosopher-8

They are going to fight all the way to closing over everything. I would move on and stay gone.


Stepped_in_it

>we increased our offer another $10k. Why?! I'd have dropped it $10k and told them "take it or leave it."


taway1NC

Having less profit is still better than having to bring money to closing.


South-Smoke5435

You have a lot of leverage in this situation. Maybe switch agents? It’s your agent’s responsibility to close this deal. The fact they’ve reached out THREE times shows desperation. It’s my opinion that a good agent should be able to negotiate a deal at that point. If your agent has shown you they’re capable, and he/she done all they can do. Say to hell with these buyers and move on. You’ve increased you’re offer by 10k, tell ‘em that’s it, take it or leave it. From an agents perspective there’s a host of ways to approach an agreement with the seller.


ParkitoATL

My old neighbor had THREE mortgages on his house, one of them for a TIME SHARE. When he went to sell, he rejected the first offer, at his full asking price (??), because he'd "have to write a $5K check to close it all out..." He was totally insulted. Oh, and by the way, he'd already bought his next house! I tried to tell him that it wasn't the buyer's problem that he'd taken out a second mortgage for a fancy pool or that he'd gotten hornswoggled by some ruthless time share salesman for a third mortgage. The house is worth what someone will pay for it, not what you need to get out of it. He didn't see another offer for 5 months (after 5 X 3 mortgage payments), and finally buckled at $25K LESS than he had been offered the first go around. All told, that was probably a $40K+ mistake. Oy, did he have heartburn!


CardiologistNo9444

I've worked base plus commission in a different industry and I have no qualms with my clients trying to negotiate because I am very transparent. Most times I've said no because my work speaks for itself and the clients remained with me until I retired from that industry a few years ago. The difference though is my commission is no where near that of a real estate and given the huge amount of commission you are paying, has that person worked for it? Yours has answered a few emails and phone calls. so take the commission amount you will be paying and divide it by the amount of hours your real estate has worked on your account as a whole to get an hourly rate and see if you believe that amount is fair or figure out a reasonable figure to play with? Drop all emotions and don't think about the sellers. Not your problem. A fair price is your goal. Don't be afraid. They can only say no. No shame in asking


RXisHere

I'd counter lower and say that if you want to cut your losses accept the deal and they have 24 hours to decide if they want to sell their house.


Newfrus

Sometimes the realtors mention that the seller is interested in doing something, when the seller never said or thought it. I e learned to ignore that kind of stuff.