DonMacGregor
Sub Leader
- Joined
- May 13, 2021
- Messages
- 6,435
Here's a good one for you all:
There is a contract listed on a site (it is blocked, so I won't tell you the resort, points amount, UY, or the list price). The offer I made was at 90% of the list price, which is in line with the current market for that resort, contract size and points available, and the listing had been up for 21 days. The seller came back with a counter-offer that dropped their number by a whopping 2.5% and I told them to (politely) pound sand. I told the agent that they'd need to come down a good bit closer to meeting me in the middle, which they rejected. I wished the agent good luck.
I now see that the contract list price has actually been INCREASED by a couple of dollars per point, and it's now been sitting for a month and a half. Oh, and there are no points until 2025. I emailed the agent out of curiosity to ask if there was some mistake, and she said they had raised the price against her counsel, in order to "negotiate" back down to their original asking price (which, again, was too high to begin with).
Some real geniuses out there.
There is a contract listed on a site (it is blocked, so I won't tell you the resort, points amount, UY, or the list price). The offer I made was at 90% of the list price, which is in line with the current market for that resort, contract size and points available, and the listing had been up for 21 days. The seller came back with a counter-offer that dropped their number by a whopping 2.5% and I told them to (politely) pound sand. I told the agent that they'd need to come down a good bit closer to meeting me in the middle, which they rejected. I wished the agent good luck.
I now see that the contract list price has actually been INCREASED by a couple of dollars per point, and it's now been sitting for a month and a half. Oh, and there are no points until 2025. I emailed the agent out of curiosity to ask if there was some mistake, and she said they had raised the price against her counsel, in order to "negotiate" back down to their original asking price (which, again, was too high to begin with).
Some real geniuses out there.
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