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It's a bargain hunters' market as house sales plummet

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  • It's a bargain hunters' market as house sales plummet

    It's a bargain hunters' market as house sales plummet

    • By Nicola Webber
    • From: Herald Sun
    • May 21, 2011 12:00AM



    Auction clearance rates have slumped in Melbourne and Sydney / File



    • Auction clearance rates at lows not seen since GFC
    • Great time for bargain hunters, say real estate experts
    • Sydney home sales hammered


    BARGAIN-hunting home buyers face a bumper two weeks, with 1665 properties going under the hammer.

    Auction clearance rates are at lows not seen since the global financial crisis, with vendors shaving prices to get sales.
    In Melbourne, Clayton is emerging as a best-buy suburb, with only one in three houses selling at auction.
    Real Estate Institute of Victoria spokesman Robert Larocca said a month of Melbourne auction clearance rates below 60 per cent and a lot of properties for sale meant this was likely to be the best two weeks for buyers in a couple of years.
    He said last weekend's clearance rate of 53 per cent was Melbourne's lowest since November 2008.
    "Many auctions are being negotiated in the kitchen afterwards," he said.
    But people remain keen to use the auction system, with 780 properties under the hammer this weekend and 885 next weekend.
    Mr Larocca said Clayton had a clearance rate of only 36.4 per cent, making it good for bargain hunters.
    "They are likely to face less competition and have a better opportunity for snapping up a bargain," he said.
    Century 21 Wilson Pride Clayton director Con Katos said $500,000 could buy a property with enough room to build a separate unit.
    He said proximity to Monash Medical Centre and Monash University made Clayton popular with property investors.
    "Although the auction clearance rate is low, there are a lot of properties selling afterwards," he said.
    Meanwhile, a new RP Data report reveals Melbourne sellers are dropping their prices an average 6.5 per cent to find a buyer.
    This means a property advertised for $500,000 could be discounted $32,500.
    "For potential buyers, the news is much more positive because buyers now hold the power and can really begin to negotiate and pick up a property at a reduced price," RP Data's Cameron Kusher said.
    "There's one way to find out if a man is honest-ask him. If he says 'yes,' you know he is a crook." Groucho Marx

  • #2
    Auction rates 'misleading'

    Auction rates 'misleading'

    • Jodie Minus and Sallie Don
    • From: The Australian
    • May 23, 2011 12:00AM





    THE real estate industry needs urgent reforms and independent audits to prevent the continued publication of misleading data about house prices and auction clearance rates, a leading property analyst has said.

    Louis Christopher, from SQM Research, said the industry continued to talk up sales and publish misleading statistics, despite Australian Bureau of Statistics data showing house prices were falling nationwide.
    "I find it amazing and quite ironic that so much expense and effort has been put into cleaning up the financial planning industry, but most of the problems are actually occurring on the real estate side," Mr Christopher told The Australian.
    "We need to see a similar clean-up of the real estate industry, where agents need official qualifications and reporting bodies need to be independently audited if they are going to be used in the public sphere."
    According to Australian Property Monitors statistics released yesterday, the auction clearance rate in Sydney on Saturday was 61.1 per cent, up from 57.6 per cent on the previous week's figures.


    In Melbourne, APM showed the auction clearance rate as 59.1 per cent for Saturday, compared to 54.5 a week ago.
    But Mr Christopher said statistics from housing research companies, such as APM, RP Data and the Real Estate Institute of Victoria, had grown increasingly unreliable.
    "APM came out and said that in Sydney the clearance rate was (61.1) per cent this weekend, but the reality was that with the total listed for auction, compared to the number sold . . . you get a clearance rate in the 40s," Mr Christopher said.
    But APM's Andrew Wilson defended the data and said all results were "pretty much in the same ball park".


    Source
    Squadly dinky do!

    Comment


    • #3
      Auction rates 'misleading'

      Auction rates 'misleading'

      • Jodie Minus and Sallie Don
      • From: The Australian
      • May 23, 2011 12:00AM





      THE real estate industry needs urgent reforms and independent audits to prevent the continued publication of misleading data about house prices and auction clearance rates, a leading property analyst has said.

      Louis Christopher, from SQM Research, said the industry continued to talk up sales and publish misleading statistics, despite Australian Bureau of Statistics data showing house prices were falling nationwide.
      "I find it amazing and quite ironic that so much expense and effort has been put into cleaning up the financial planning industry, but most of the problems are actually occurring on the real estate side," Mr Christopher told The Australian.
      "We need to see a similar clean-up of the real estate industry, where agents need official qualifications and reporting bodies need to be independently audited if they are going to be used in the public sphere."
      According to Australian Property Monitors statistics released yesterday, the auction clearance rate in Sydney on Saturday was 61.1 per cent, up from 57.6 per cent on the previous week's figures.


      In Melbourne, APM showed the auction clearance rate as 59.1 per cent for Saturday, compared to 54.5 a week ago.
      But Mr Christopher said statistics from housing research companies, such as APM, RP Data and the Real Estate Institute of Victoria, had grown increasingly unreliable.
      "APM came out and said that in Sydney the clearance rate was (61.1) per cent this weekend, but the reality was that with the total listed for auction, compared to the number sold . . . you get a clearance rate in the 40s," Mr Christopher said.
      But APM's Andrew Wilson defended the data and said all results were "pretty much in the same ball park".


      Source
      Squadly dinky do!

      Comment


      • #4
        Auction rates 'misleading'

        Auction rates 'misleading'

        • Jodie Minus and Sallie Don
        • From: The Australian
        • May 23, 2011 12:00AM





        THE real estate industry needs urgent reforms and independent audits to prevent the continued publication of misleading data about house prices and auction clearance rates, a leading property analyst has said.

        Louis Christopher, from SQM Research, said the industry continued to talk up sales and publish misleading statistics, despite Australian Bureau of Statistics data showing house prices were falling nationwide.
        "I find it amazing and quite ironic that so much expense and effort has been put into cleaning up the financial planning industry, but most of the problems are actually occurring on the real estate side," Mr Christopher told The Australian.
        "We need to see a similar clean-up of the real estate industry, where agents need official qualifications and reporting bodies need to be independently audited if they are going to be used in the public sphere."
        According to Australian Property Monitors statistics released yesterday, the auction clearance rate in Sydney on Saturday was 61.1 per cent, up from 57.6 per cent on the previous week's figures.


        In Melbourne, APM showed the auction clearance rate as 59.1 per cent for Saturday, compared to 54.5 a week ago.
        But Mr Christopher said statistics from housing research companies, such as APM, RP Data and the Real Estate Institute of Victoria, had grown increasingly unreliable.
        "APM came out and said that in Sydney the clearance rate was (61.1) per cent this weekend, but the reality was that with the total listed for auction, compared to the number sold . . . you get a clearance rate in the 40s," Mr Christopher said.
        But APM's Andrew Wilson defended the data and said all results were "pretty much in the same ball park".


        Source
        Squadly dinky do!

        Comment


        • #5
          Tell us again Dave :-)

          Comment


          • #6
            Auction rates 'misleading'

            Auction rates 'misleading'

            • Jodie Minus and Sallie Don
            • From: The Australian
            • May 23, 2011 12:00AM





            THE real estate industry needs urgent reforms and independent audits to prevent the continued publication of misleading data about house prices and auction clearance rates, a leading property analyst has said.

            Louis Christopher, from SQM Research, said the industry continued to talk up sales and publish misleading statistics, despite Australian Bureau of Statistics data showing house prices were falling nationwide.
            "I find it amazing and quite ironic that so much expense and effort has been put into cleaning up the financial planning industry, but most of the problems are actually occurring on the real estate side," Mr Christopher told The Australian.
            "We need to see a similar clean-up of the real estate industry, where agents need official qualifications and reporting bodies need to be independently audited if they are going to be used in the public sphere."
            According to Australian Property Monitors statistics released yesterday, the auction clearance rate in Sydney on Saturday was 61.1 per cent, up from 57.6 per cent on the previous week's figures.


            In Melbourne, APM showed the auction clearance rate as 59.1 per cent for Saturday, compared to 54.5 a week ago.
            But Mr Christopher said statistics from housing research companies, such as APM, RP Data and the Real Estate Institute of Victoria, had grown increasingly unreliable.
            "APM came out and said that in Sydney the clearance rate was (61.1) per cent this weekend, but the reality was that with the total listed for auction, compared to the number sold . . . you get a clearance rate in the 40s," Mr Christopher said.
            But APM's Andrew Wilson defended the data and said all results were "pretty much in the same ball park".


            Source
            Squadly dinky do!

            Comment


            • #7
              Sorry, I was getting the text 'Database Error' and so didn't think it had posted. Moderators, can you please remove the surplus posts? Thanks.
              Squadly dinky do!

              Comment


              • #8
                There's some serious mischief afoot.
                Deleting all the duplicates (threads
                and posts) has us defeated, for now.

                Well, sometimes. Sometimes it works;
                sometimes it doesn't. Sometimes we
                can see it hasn't but it has and . . .

                Very frustrating.

                Some serious technical stuff needed
                tomorrow, I suspect. Don't be surprised
                if there's no PT Forums for a while.

                Perry
                Moderator

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by Davo36 View Post
                  Louis Christopher, from SQM Research, said the industry continued to talk up sales and publish misleading statistics, despite Australian Bureau of Statistics data showing house prices were falling nationwide.
                  "I find it amazing and quite ironic that so much expense and effort has been put into cleaning up the financial planning industry, but most of the problems are actually occurring on the real estate side," Mr Christopher told The Australian.
                  "We need to see a similar clean-up of the real estate industry, where agents need official qualifications and reporting bodies need to be independently audited if they are going to be used in the public sphere."
                  According to Australian Property Monitors statistics released yesterday, the auction clearance rate in Sydney on Saturday was 61.1 per cent, up from 57.6 per cent on the previous week's figures.


                  In Melbourne, APM showed the auction clearance rate as 59.1 per cent for Saturday, compared to 54.5 a week ago.
                  But Mr Christopher said statistics from housing research companies, such as APM, RP Data and the Real Estate Institute of Victoria, had grown increasingly unreliable.
                  "APM came out and said that in Sydney the clearance rate was (61.1) per cent this weekend, but the reality was that with the total listed for auction, compared to the number sold . . . you get a clearance rate in the 40s," Mr Christopher said.
                  But APM's Andrew Wilson defended the data and said all results were "pretty much in the same ball park".
                  Louis posts on AustralianPropertyForum.com as 'Black_Dragon' and he posted an update on this today...

                  Louis Christopher on Auction Clearance Rate Fudging

                  Seems APM are still revising the clearance rate figures downwards, by an average of 2.6% each week.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Yes, house sales are plummeting, but they are plummeting only in certain small areas of the region. NSW is definitely not one of those regions.

                    Comment

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