How to Price a Wholesale Deal in a Slowing Market

How to Price a Wholesale Deal in a Slowing Market

Pricing in a hot market is easy.

Pricing in a slowing market separates professionals from amateurs.

When demand softens, buyers don’t disappear.

They get selective.

And if you’re still pricing based on peak comps, your deals will stall.

Let’s walk through how serious investors price when the market shifts.


Step 1: Stop Pricing Backward

Most wholesalers price like this:

ARV
– Rehab
– Investor profit
– Assignment fee
= Offer price

That works in an appreciating market.

It fails in a softening one.

In a slowing market, buyers price forward — not backward.

They ask:

  • What will this sell for 90–120 days from now?

  • Is inventory increasing?

  • Is buyer demand shrinking?

  • Are price reductions accelerating?

If you don’t model forward risk, you’re overpricing.

If you haven’t read this yet, start here:

How Investors Underwrite Wholesale Deals

That article explains how capital actually thinks.


Step 2: Study Active Listings (Not Just Sold Comps)

Sold comps show where the market was.

Active listings show where the market is going.

If:

  • Inventory is rising

  • DOM is increasing

  • Listings are reducing after 30 days

That’s downward pressure.

When that happens, compress ARV 3–7% minimum.

In aggressive slowdowns? 10%.

If your deal doesn’t survive ARV compression, it wasn’t strong.


Step 3: Watch Days on Market Trends

DOM is a leading indicator.

If average DOM moves:

From 18 days → 35 days
From 35 days → 60 days

Buyers start protecting themselves.

Longer DOM means:

  • More holding cost

  • More financing cost

  • More exposure to price drops

If the exit timeline extends, the purchase price must shrink.

This is often why wholesalers ask:

“Why isn’t my deal moving?”

If that sounds familiar, read:

Why Your Wholesale Deal Isn’t Selling

Most of the time, it’s timing and risk — not marketing.


Step 4: Understand Absorption Rate

Absorption rate measures how fast inventory is being purchased.

Example:

20 active listings
5 homes selling per month

That’s a 4-month supply.

The higher the months of inventory, the more leverage buyers have.

In a tightening market:

  • Buyers demand deeper margin

  • Lenders get stricter

  • Appraisals tighten

If absorption weakens, you must increase margin.

No exceptions.


Step 5: Increase Your Margin Requirement

In a hot market, buyers might accept:

10% margin on capital deployed.

In a softening market, they may require:

15–20%.

That means your contract price must adjust.

If you hold your fee rigid while buyers increase margin expectations, the deal dies.

This ties directly to pricing discipline covered here:

The 5 Pricing Mistakes New Wholesalers Make

Thin deals collapse first when markets slow.


Step 6: Forward Pricing Model Example

Let’s run a real adjustment.

Original assumptions:
ARV: $250,000
Rehab: $50,000
Target buyer profit: $25,000

Slowing market adjustment:
Compress ARV 5% → $237,500
Increase rehab buffer 10% → $55,000
Increase required profit → $35,000

Now reverse engineer purchase price.

You’ll notice something uncomfortable:

Your allowable offer drops significantly.

That’s reality.

Strong wholesalers adapt.

Weak wholesalers argue with the market.


The Hard Truth

In slowing markets:

Volume drops.
Standards rise.
Margin matters more.

If your deal only works when appreciation saves it, you’re not pricing correctly.

You’re speculating.


More Wholesale Deal Breakdowns

For additional underwriting and pricing breakdowns, explore:

Wholesale Deal Rescue Category

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