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  • Zoned home sells for $700,000 above valuation

    Zoned home sells for $700,000 above valuation

    By Anne Gibson

    5:30 AM Wednesday May 25, 2011



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    One family, who had been looking for a house for two years, said the sale price for 6 Bishop St eliminated buyers without stacks of cash. Photo / Supplied



    Sky-high demand for Grammar-zone Auckland houses has resulted in soaring prices, with one $1 million home in Epsom selling for almost twice its valuation.
    Barfoot & Thompson agent Joss Goodall said the $1.73m sale of 6 Bishop St, near One Tree Hill, was one example of what happens when a scarcity combined with low interest rates and rising economic confidence.
    "It really started last year. Now, we've just had eight sales in the last three weeks," she said, citing a Greenlane townhouse with a capital value of just over $400,000 auctioned at $752,500.
    "There's a real shortage of listings so people are paying over the top if they want double-grammar zone," she said of houses in areas automatically allowing entry to Auckland Grammar School and Epsom Girls Grammar School.
    One Tree Hill and Onehunga were also "really starting to go".
    She said an Empire Rd, Epsom, house which two years ago went for $1.2 million sold for nearly $1.6 million.
    A house on The Drive sold for more than $2 million despite being on a busy thoroughfare, she said

    A do-up in Sandringham's Ward Tce went for $715,000 pre-auction, she said - well over expectations.
    Mt Eden, Epsom, Greenlane, Royal Oak, Sandringham, Eden Terrace, One Tree Hill and even Onehunga were all extremely popular, Mrs Goodall said, yet so few houses were going on the market that people were forced to pay so much.
    Real Estate Institute figures show 4987 unconditional sales nationally in April and 1854 in Auckland.
    The institute also noticed big price jumps from March's $470,000 in Auckland.
    "The Auckland region recorded a new all time high median house price in April of $479,500."
    Mrs Goodall said: "It's pretty hot. The central-Auckland market is not depressed. It's supply and demand and investors are back."
    She cited cheap money, rising rents and landlords holding auctions to get top-dollar.
    But one family who wanted the Bishop St house said the $1.7 million price tag breached standard bank lending criteria and eliminated buyers without stacks of cash.
    "This is just ridiculous. This is not the first time this has happened to us," the unnamed family said, adding that they had been looking for a house for two years.
    Valuers are also coming under fire for not keeping pace with a fast-changing market and the buyer said an Empire Rd house went $500,000 over valuation.
    "People think we are crazy for not being able to buy a house within two years but the prices these houses are going for is insane," the family said.
    Another couple told of similar problems in Herne Bay, where they struggled for 18 months to buy and eventually doubled their price range and paid about $1.9 million for a nice but basic family home.

  • #2
    It would be interesting to find out whom purchased the house featured in the article for $700k over the valuation. I suspect money from Asia...to be more specific... Mainland China money.

    Anyone have the inside scoop?

    Shane

    Comment


    • #3
      Not sure on that one Shane, but went along to inspect a property close to ours. Not bad, but not in the best part of Westmere/Grey Lynn sold for just under $1.2m at auction and well above CV and what I thought it would sell for. Agents are sniffing around but you would be mad to lose your 'foot in the door' now and face what I believe will be a few more years of solid growth in central areas.

      Comment


      • #4
        A crusty old property valuer told me once "One Swallow does not a summer make".

        Comment


        • #5
          The ripple effect has started?

          Comment


          • #6
            Westmere/Grey Lynn sold for just under $1.2m at auction
            Was that the old mill road?

            I was also suprised by that one - but there seems to be a recurring theme in Westmere - of suprising results - suprising on the upside.

            Comment


            • #7
              I wonder if the purchaser in Old Mill Road will start to complain about noise from speedway and concerts at Western Springs and wait for it... animals at the zoo...

              Comment


              • #8
                Another couple told of similar problems in Herne Bay, where they struggled for 18 months to buy and eventually doubled their price range and paid about $1.9 million for a nice but basic family home.
                Those poor souls. $1.9 million can buy you a lot, even in that part of town. No doubt they absolutely insisted of sweeping views of the Waitemata as well.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Those moaners need to go and live on the chathams.
                  Speedway is only in summer - only a couple of times a month on saturdays - and finishes before 10pm.

                  If they were moaning about the Robbie Williams concerts - perhaps I could understand that....

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by AMR View Post
                    The ripple effect has started?
                    Need relaxed lending for that to happen imo

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Need relaxed lending for that to happen imo
                      Lending criteria has been/is being relaxed.

                      Generally (wider NZ) people are still not confident to start borrowing again.

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                      • #12
                        the banks would rather to lend a million over 30 years to someone earning $100,000+ a year

                        than $100,000 to each of 10 beneficiaries

                        and the lesson of the sub-prime crisis

                        is that they are probably right

                        so those few well paid people who go shopping for the best places in the best areas without objecting to a lifetime of debt slavery

                        get what they want

                        others have to make their compromises now

                        rather than later
                        Last edited by eri; 26-05-2011, 12:39 PM.
                        have you defeated them?
                        your demons

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by eri View Post
                          the banks would rather to lend a million over 30 years to someone earning $100,000+ a year

                          than $100,000 to each of 10 beneficiaries

                          and the lesson of the sub-prime crisis

                          is that they are probably right

                          so those few well paid people who go shopping for the best places in the best areas without objecting to a lifetime of debt slavery

                          get what they want

                          others have to make their compromises now

                          rather than later
                          Someone on a $100k should not be leant more than $500k imo

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            me neither

                            but the banks don't see it like that

                            i'd prefer 20% down

                            or sod off

                            none of this crap would've happened

                            if decent deposits were the rule

                            and not the exception
                            have you defeated them?
                            your demons

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by SwissKiwi View Post
                              Was that the old mill road?

                              I was also suprised by that one - but there seems to be a recurring theme in Westmere - of suprising results - suprising on the upside.
                              Hi Swiss. Yes that was the one. With Savage Ave down the road and it being a busy street we were surprised also.

                              Comment

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