Saturday, March 31, 2018

REAL ESTATE

The trick the pros use to work out what a house will sell for

Feb 9, 9:19 AM
Daniel ButkovichAdvice Editor 

Missing out at auction is one of the most heartbreaking aspects of house-hunting almost every buyer faces.

After countless weekends inspecting properties, and hundreds of dollars spent on property reports, there are few things more disappointing than having your dreams dashed on auction day by someone with deeper pockets.

But the hard truth is, if you’re constantly getting beaten at every auction you attend, you were probably never in the running to begin with.

The key mistake most new buyers make is blindly relying on the real estate agent’s price guide, which can mislead them to think the property would sell within their budget.

Instead, buyers should use a method property professionals employ to estimate the value of a home, which helps narrow the search and prevents constant disappointment.

Why the price guide is irrelevant

The price guide provided in advertisements is based on the estimated result the agent has given to the vendor, which is derived from recent comparable sales.

If a house sells for more than the price guide, it’s not necessarily underquoting. An agent is only underquoting if the price guide is lower than the estimate given to the vendor, the reserve, or any offers received during the campaign that the vendor rejects.

All it takes for a property to sell well above the price guide is one emotional buyer, according to Sydney buyers’ agent and associate director of RPM Property, Kyah Johansson. “When it comes to auctions, it’s all about emotional money,” she said.

How to calculate the true price guide

The underlying value of a property is the land. When looking at houses to buy, land size should be the most important factor buyers consider, and the part of the listing to analyse first.

The size of the block is the key to estimating a property’s value, according to buyer’s agent Lauren Goudy from Rose & Jones.

“If you do some research on 10 comparable sales, and get the average square metre rate, it will be incredible how accurate it ends up being,” she said.

The best way to determine what a property is worth is to ignore the price guide and work out an estimated price per square metre for that property type, based on recently sold properties in the area with comparable block sizes and features, such as the number of bedrooms.

To calculate this number, simply divide the price a property sold for by its size, then do this for surrounding sales over the past six months to calculate an average square metre rate.

Multiply that average rate by the size of the property under consideration, and you’ll have your true price guide.

If every property you’re interested in falls outside your budget, work backwards and determine how many square metres you can afford, then search for properties by land size rather than price.

What else affects a property’s value?

While land size is the main factor, it’s not the only one, and according to Ms Johansson, the type of property will also affect the value.

“A freestanding home is far more valuable than a semi,” she said, adding that new or renovated properties are likely to sell for more than a rundown home. “If you’re trying to get more value, look for something that needs a bit more TLC,” she said.

Sought-after features, like parking in an inner-city area or landscaping, may boost the value. Wide or corner blocks, those with dual frontages and properties zoned for higher-density housing may be worth more, as they often have potential for redevelopment.

Ms Goudy said estimating a property’s value will help buyers decide which properties to pursue and the maximum price they are prepared to pay, which will empower them to bid confidently on auction day.

“The research will give you conviction on what you’re doing,” Ms Goudy said. “When you prepare yourself and you do all the research, you’re going to go into that auction feeling confident.”

How to avoid paying too much

For buyers who want to secure a property before auction, knowing what a property is worth can help determine a price to offer, but according to Ms Johansson, offers need to be strong.

“You obviously want to get the property for the best price you can, but to take it off auction, people need to put themselves in the owner’s shoes,” she said. “On the guide isn’t going to get their attention.”

Ms Goudy said it was easy to make mistakes at auction in the heat of the moment, but researching other suitable properties as a backup plan can avoid emotional decisions based on desperation.

“You don’t want to be standing there thinking ‘Should I throw another $5000 in?’ because you don’t know what else is on the market,” she said.

Princess St, Paddington


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Thursday, March 29, 2018

MBL Property Group Pty Ltd., also known as Ray White New Farm, and its agent Hamish Bowman, have received a notice of civil penalty in regard to a price advertised for a property in Fortitude Valley last October.

The marketing material for the property had the price as "from $645,000". But when a prospective customer made an offer over that price, Mr Bowman advised the consumer that vendors wanted offers over $749,000.

When the individual then complained online to Ray White New Farm, Mr Bowman again replied personally to the complaint, saying that the price was not deceptive because of the word "from". The agency itself did not respond.

The Queensland OFT was then contacted, and after investigating decided that the advertising violated Australian Consumer Law regarding false or misleading representations about land sales.

False or misleading advertising in any industry will not be tolerated, including "from" prices in real estate, said Brian Bauer, Executive Director of OFT.

"Advertised price ranges indicate to buyers if a property may be in their budget, and encourage them to view, assess, and make offers on the property. While competition can push a price higher than anticipated, Queenslanders have the right to expect that any prices advertised reflect what the vendor is prepared to accept.

“In this instance the marketed ‘from’ price was significantly below the price the vendor was looking for, and therefore was misleading.

“This result serves as a warning to other real estate agents that if they breach laws and industry regulations designed to protect consumers, the OFT will not hesitate to take action.”

(What happened to Craig Routledge, Acting Executive Director, from whom we've heard so much lately? Did Bauer fill an empty Executive post? We've seen no news so far.)

Mr Bowman was fined $2,160 and Ray White New Farm, as MBL Property Group Pty Ltd., was fined $10,800.

It should be noted that while OFT may issue a penalty notice based on reasonable grounds that consumer protection laws have been violated, payment of such civil penalty is not an admission of wrongdoing.


3/17-19 Magree St, Kallangur QLD 4503


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Saturday, March 17, 2018

REAL ESTATE

The Murdochs weren't keen on their neighbours' reno plans, but $4.4 million fixed that

Mar 17, 5:15 PM
Lucy MackenDomain Prestige Reporter 

When most people are faced with an unwelcome DA plan from the neighbours their only recourse is a firmly worded objection to council.

But not for media mogul Lachlan Murdoch and his wife Sarah.

When faced with the prospect of their neighbours adding a third storey and rooftop terrace to a home, which is set directly in front of their Bellevue Hill Georgian mansion, it appears the Murdochs took another course of action and bought the house – and the DA-approved plans with it – for $4.4 million.

The Murdochs had reportedly objected to the DA-approved plans of their neighbours, architect Leon Norman and his partner Roy Jones. And Norman and Jones had also been two of the most vocal opponents against the Murdochs’ own extensive renovation plans

Another $4.4 million to protect their view was probably a no-brainer for the billionaire family, who outlaid $23 million in 2009 to buy their Bellevue Hill home – the former French trade commissioner’s estate – and undertook an $11.67 million renovation of the 4097-square-metre property.

The purchase has not only expanded the News Corp executive co-chairman’s Le Manoir estate by 588 square metres, but will also remove any risk the DA plans will ever be built, if that’s the intention.

Norman and Jones, a former telco technical officer, listed their home in 2016 – complete with approved DA – with an asking price of more than $4 million ahead of a September auction.

Two weeks into the campaign, recalls Patrick Grove, of Raine & Horne Double Bay, “a woman just appeared out of nowhere and asked how much it would cost to buy the property and she exchanged the next day.

“We had our suspicions who she might be acting for, but we didn’t know for certain,” said Grove, who sold it with Paul Langsam.

Records show the $4.4 million sale settled in the name of Gisele Karame-Kemp at the time, and might never have been revealed as a Murdoch purchase except that ownership was officially transferred into the name of its true owners, Lachlan and Sarah Murdoch, last year. 

Meanwhile, Norman and Jones have since moved up the North Coast to Suffolk Park, where those same property records show they paid $2.25 million early last year for the beachside home of celebrity hairdresser Paul Guttenbeil.