Cowgirl_Jessie
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Sep 13, 2016
- Messages
- 194
Fantastic; thank you!!
Fantastic; thank you!!
You are welcomeFantastic; thank you!!
Who was the listing broker? I offered $95 on a 100 pt AKV, buyer paying closing, Fidelity admin fee, and '20 maintenance fees. No 19 points. Anyway, supposedly the seller said the offer was so low, they didn't even consider it a real offer, so would not give a counter!! They had asked $112. That was March 23, and it still shows as sale pending on Fidelity. I wonder if they got full asking price, or what they took, and why it has not moved on.My wife and I just signed the contract for an AKV 100 point contract for $95 a point with no dues until 2021. I'm sure it may go lower in the future, but we were super happy with that price, especially in that point range. It's our first DVC purchase so and we really wanted to start with a nice, round 100 point contract. We initially came in very low around $80 a point and the initial contract was listed at $110.
Who was the listing broker? I offered $95 on a 100 pt AKV, buyer paying closing, Fidelity admin fee, and '20 maintenance fees. No 19 points. Anyway, supposedly the seller said the offer was so low, they didn't even consider it a real offer, so would not give a counter!! They had asked $112. That was March 23, and it still shows as sale pending on Fidelity. I wonder if they got full asking price, or what they took, and why it has not moved on.
Thank you. I really didn't think $95 was a lowball offer from $112, with me paying everything and it not being loaded, and with the pandemic, I thought it was quite reasonable, but it seemed like they were insulted.It really doesn't matter who the broker is. I made an offer several months ago on an AKV contract and the seller declined to counter. No big deal, and actually I appreciate the seller letting me know very clearly we are far apart and very unlikely to come to a deal.
Don't take it personally. It's just business. There are lots of contracts out there, and (almost) none of them are unicorns.
No actually, I think I saw their UY on the rofr thread, and it is not the same contract. But I do still wonder what they accepted on the contract I bid on, and why it has not moved on yet. After I saw GCFrost price on rofr thread, I looked and found several 100 pt AKV $95, so I guess it is not uncommon, and was reasonable as I thought. That should make me feel better, but it doesn't. It was the owner's response, which as striker1064 said, I should not take personally.Wasn’t the purpose of asking who the broker was to see if it was the same contract?
Therein lies the problem with some sellers. ALWAYS make a counter offer. You never know how much higher the buyer is willing to go. Maybe they are just lowballing to see if you're desperate and will sell at that price.It really doesn't matter who the broker is. I made an offer several months ago on an AKV contract and the seller declined to counter. No big deal, and actually I appreciate the seller letting me know very clearly we are far apart and very unlikely to come to a deal.
Don't take it personally. It's just business. There are lots of contracts out there, and (almost) none of them are unicorns.
Therein lies the problem with some sellers. ALWAYS make a counter offer.
Sure, if you're getting a lot of offers, don't counter on a really lowball one. I can't disagree with that.Strong disagree. As a former seller, I didn't counter every offer either. I was selling a PVB 150 point contract and had it listed for $140. I was more than willing to negotiate (and did eventually accept a lower offer), but one day I received an offer of $115 with me paying current year dues. I simply declined and moved on. No hard feelings - at the time there were a ton of PVB contracts for sale and even quite a few with the same UY, and my contract was just one of them. That buyer was looking for a steal and I wasn't desperate to sell, so it wasn't going to come from me. But I also knew I wasn't going to make it as low as that seller wanted.
It's ok to walk away. Not everything has to be a game. I read a lot of people here that get way too emotionally invested in their offers. You have to be robotic about it. DVC has been selling a long time and will continue to sell. That contract is not the only one. When I buy, I have a price in my head and I walk if I don't get it. Same when selling - I set my list price a little above what I'd reasonably take for it and I either get the offer I want or I don't. No big deal.
Sure, if you're getting a lot of offers, don't counter on a really lowball one. I can't disagree with that.
The one that ignored me is still sitting there 6 weeks later. I am pretty confident I would have come up to a price that would have been acceptable to them, but I have since purchased the same contract (#points and UY) elsewhere.
It doesn't make any difference. All I'm saying is that if you are trying to sell your contract, don't dismiss any offer, whether it is a lowball one or not. You never know who is just messing around and who is serious. Just because someone lowballs you to start doesn't mean they aren't willing to pay top dollar, possibly even your asking price.I didn't get a lot of offers. In fact, the $115/PT offer was the first I had gotten in weeks. I declined it because I wanted more. I was perfectly fine with sitting on the contract another 6, 8, even 20 weeks.
And look, you got the contract that you wanted at the price you wanted to pay. What difference does it make if that one contract you bid on didn't counter offer you and is still up for sale?
It doesn't make any difference. All I'm saying is that if you are trying to sell your contract, don't dismiss any offer, whether it is a lowball one or not. You never know who is just messing around and who is serious. Just because someone lowballs you to start doesn't mean they aren't willing to pay top dollar, possibly even your asking price.
As for the broker, ignoring an offer is a sure-fire way of losing that customer forever. You're not the only game in town.
Edit: what pisses me off is not that they didn't counter-offer, but that the broker never even bothered to reply.
VGC is like its own little world. I would be astounded if prices come down meaningfully there before they start selling the Disneyland Hotel DVC.We just put an offer in. We were debating what to do. When I talked to the agent, I checked what previous purchases of the same DVC were going for and ended up going for full price because of it. It matters on the property. Mine is VGC so harder to get b
For VGC, I think you pretty much need to offer full asking price and do it ASAP.We just put an offer in. We were debating what to do. When I talked to the agent, I checked what previous purchases of the same DVC were going for and ended up going for full price because of it. It matters on the property. Mine is VGC so harder to get b
For VGC, I think you pretty much need to offer full asking price and do it ASAP.
For VGC, I think you pretty much need to offer full asking price and do it ASAP.