Install
openclaw skills install @mohitagw15856/comparative-market-analysisBuild a comparative market analysis (CMA) to price a property. Use when asked to do a CMA, a comparative market analysis, price a home, or estimate a property's value from comparables. Produces a structured CMA — the subject property, selected comparables with adjustments, an estimated value range, market context, and a pricing recommendation with rationale — for a real-estate professional to review. Not a formal appraisal.
openclaw skills install @mohitagw15856/comparative-market-analysisA CMA prices a home the way the market actually values it: against recent, similar, nearby sales — adjusted for the differences. This skill structures that analysis so the number is defensible: the comparables chosen and why, the adjustments made, the resulting range, and a pricing recommendation tied to the seller's goal.
Note: this is a pricing-analysis aid for a real-estate professional, not a formal appraisal or financial/legal advice. It works from the comparables and figures you provide; valuation depends on local market data and professional judgement. Never invent comp sales or prices — use the data given or mark it to source.
Given a subject property and a few comps, build the CMA anyway — structure the analysis, apply reasoned adjustments, and give a range, marking any figure to source (confirm with MLS/records). Where comps are missing, explain what to pull rather than inventing sales. Never fabricate comparable prices.
Ask for these only if they aren't already provided (else mark to source):
1. Subject property — the key attributes summarised.
2. Comparables — a table of the comps used, with adjustments toward the subject:
| Comp | Sold price | Date | Beds/Baths | Size | Key differences | Adjustment | Adjusted price |
|---|
Explain the adjustment logic (e.g. +/- for size, condition, extra bath, garage, view) — directionally and why.
3. Market context — the trend, inventory, and absorption, and what it means for pricing now.
4. Estimated value range — a supported range from the adjusted comps (not a single false-precision number), with the most-likely figure.
5. Pricing recommendation — a list price tied to the goal (e.g. price at market for speed, slightly under for multiple offers, at the top of range to test) — with the trade-off of each.
6. Caveats — data to confirm, and a note that a formal appraisal/agent review is needed.
Real-estate valuation practice — comparable-sales analysis with feature adjustments, market-context weighting, and goal-aligned pricing (CMA, not a formal appraisal).