x
By using this website, you agree to our use of cookies to enhance your experience.
Graham Awards

TODAY'S OTHER NEWS

Buying agent says 'guide prices' confuse valuations and purchasers

As the Easter sales weekend kicks off, the head of a prominent buying agency says estate agents confuse the true valuation of a home by attaching ‘guide prices’ or by calling for offers ‘in the region of’ or ‘in excess of’.

James Greenwood, managing director of Stacks Property Search and Acquisition, says valuing is an imprecise art at the best of times, and over-valuing can occur for a number of reasons.

“Estate agents can find themselves in a tricky position, trying to win an instruction when competing in some kind of beauty parade. Over valuing may be the only way they can take the instruction” he claims. 

Advertisement

“Alternatively, they may be pressurised by the vendor to put the property on the market at a higher price than they would otherwise recommend. The successful agent may then further confuse the situation by marketing the property ‘in the region of..’, ‘in excess of..’, or quoting a ‘guide price’” he adds.

Greenwood then says buyers in the current market should start their search by looking at properties that are on the market at 20 per cent more than their budget. 

“If they restrict their search to properties within their price boundaries, they won’t have had a chance to assess properties until the price comes down and falls within their bracket. By that time there will be plenty of buyers ahead of the game” he advises.

He then tells purchasers to “ask the agent how a value was arrived at” adding that they would be amazed at how often an agent bases an asking price on what the vendor wants. 

Greenwood therefore recommends buyers try to engage directly with the vendor to try to establish the circumstances behind the sale. 

“The best way of gaining useful information is to engage the vendor in conversation or to try and glean something helpful from the agent. There will of course be some reluctance to furnish you with all the crucial facts” claims Greenwood - who says those crucial facts include the length of time a property has been on the market, whether there have already been price reductions, and how much interest there has been.

  • icon

    Well I never. One can learn something new every day!

  • Owen Nato

    How do you suggest buyers engage ''directly'' with the vendor? *sigh*

  • James Robinson

    The man's a sage

  • icon

    the guy is clueless. the reason we use guide prices is to open the marketing to a wider audience therefore assuring the vendor we can aim to achieve the maximum price. the buyer do not need to then search 20% more than their budget allows. as well, history shows that if buyers are introduced to a property they really like they are more tempted to maximize their budget.

  • icon

    Blimey - this guy is really on the ball...

  • Simon Shinerock

    Note to self, ‘do opposite of what buyers agent suggests’

  • icon

    "James Greenwood, managing director of Stacks Property Search and Acquisition, says valuing is an imprecise art at the best of times....." Gives the answer in a nutshell. Can anyone say which is correct - £310,000 or £330,000?

  • Richard Copus

    Guide prices are a nightmare for purchasers. I have had more than one applicant refuse to look at properties with guide prices because they have made offers previously which have been accepted only to find that they have lost the house to someone who has offered more and been told by the agent that they have not been "gazumped" because it is a guide only and not an asking price. Any agent worth their salt will have a good idea the value of the property they are to market and will ask slightly above market value to encourage buyers and achieve as close as possible to that price. House hunters understand and accept this. For houses which are difficult to value they should be offered for sale by informal tender (sealed bids) or auctioned. I have just moved for the first time in ages and was one of the growing number of people who looked at properties with guide prices as a last resort. When house sellers realise that guide prices are reducing their marketplace they will start to disappear.

icon

Please login to comment

MovePal MovePal MovePal
sign up