My blog has moved! Redirecting...

You should be automatically redirected. If not, visit http://rosskaplan.com and update your bookmarks.

Showing posts with label Abbott and Costello. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Abbott and Costello. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

RE's Most Confusing Terms

"Who's on First?" -- RE Edition

It's not quite as confusing as Abbott and Costello's "Who's on First?" routine . . . but it's not exactly clear either. Hopefully, the following definitions shed a little light on real estate's most confusing terms.

"Buyer's Agent": the agent who represents the Buyer.

"Listing Agent": the agent who represents the Seller.

"Selling Agent": what the Buyer's agent is called after the deal has closed.

"Sold sign" (in front of house): actually means "Pending." Once the house has sold -- i.e., title has transferred -- the sign is removed and the home becomes a "closed" sale.

"Pending": a home that is under contract, but hasn't closed yet.

"Sold, subject to inspection": precedes "Pending" status. Once any inspection issues have been resolved, the home becomes "pending."

"Broker": the company who the Agent or Realtor (synonyms) works for. Some are franchises, like RE/Max, others are not (Edina Realty).

"Preview": when a Realtor tours a home without a client along.

"Showing": when a Realtor tours a home with their client(s).

"Median Sales Price": middle value in a group. For example, if a $200k, $250k, $275k, $400k and $2M home all sell, the median sales price is $275k.

"Average Sales Price": in the previous example, the average sales price is $625k.

"Condo": an apartment that is owned.

"Highest and Best": Highest offer, best terms.

"Traditional sale": a normal or routine sale (vs. one that's "lender-mediated," i.e. a bank -- or many banks -- are involved).

S&P/Case-Shiller methodology: a complete mystery to everyone but them (but widely cited nonetheless).

If you want to know what a short sale is . . . call me (the term's a complete misnomer; personally, I prefer the term, "long sale").