Buyers Agent PrimePropertyBuyer
The age-old real estate adage of “You make your money when you buy, not when you sell” is as true today as it ever was.

As human beings we often ignore this tip and fall into the trap of buying without doing our homework first. The problem with this is that you may do exactly what the seller is hoping you will do – pay a price above the market value of the property.

The economy, market forces and other factors make it difficult to calculate the time it will take to recoup the cost of a premium you have paid, but even if you paid 10% over market value it could take two or more years.

Astute home buyers and investors do extensive research before they make a decision to buy. They will have established a market value in their heads, carefully balanced out the pros and cons, put their emotions to one side and made an informed decision on the maximum amount they are willing to pay.

There is an important element called “potential” involved in property purchases. It is not just what you see physically when you inspect a property but also what you believe can be done in future to improve it. This forms part of what adds value for you as a buyer and is particularly important when you decide to sell.

There are three key questions that buyers always need to ask:

  1. What is the seller’s motivation? The answer to this question helps to understand the urgency of the sale (or not) and impacts on the price the seller is willing to accept at any given time.
  2. How long has the property been on the market? This one helps to understand the reasons the property had not sold. Is it overpriced? Does it have major defects? Or has it just gone stale and the seller is now open to any reasonable offer as other buyers have shied away?
  3. What is the market value of the property? Doing your own research helps establish a value in your own mind based on recent comparable sales and current listings in the same area.

Of course the decision to purchase a property needs to be finely balanced between the buyer’s needs and wants. We would all love to own a home with a swimming pool, but do we really need one?

If you are a property buyer and have ticked all the above boxes before you purchase you will have the satisfaction of knowing that you are ahead of the game for years to come.

If you are time-poor or feel you don’t have the experience to buy a home or investment property yourself, engage a buyers’ agent. They have many years of know-how in successful property transactions and will take the stress and strain away from you. Their job is to act independently for you in your best interest and get you the best possible purchase price.

In New South Wales buyers’ agent fees vary from agency to agency but generally they charge an amount ranging between 1% and 3% of the purchase price. Every case is different and depends on a number of factors including the scope of the buyer’s brief (wish list), the resources involved, the geographic location, market conditions, etc.

The fee paid for a successful purchase should be regarded as an investment and it is always money well spent.

A final thought: "As the vendor will engage an agent to negotiate the highest possible price, why shouldn't the buyer engage one to negotiate the lowest?"

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Tim Mansfield is a 30-year global  veteran in the real estate industry and Founder and CEO of Sydney-based buyers’ agents PrimePropertyBuyer.You can follow Tim on Twitter by clicking here.

 
 
Tim Mansfield
I first worked in the property business selling villa plots on the island of Menorca in the Spanish Balearic Islands. I was 18 years old then and full of teenage enthusiasm. It didn’t work out.  The company went bust and I lost my job. I was devastated. I had worked so hard.

Not long after I met the owner of a big real estate agency in England and he said “Come and join us.” He gave me a one-way airline ticket from Menorca to London to start my new employment. They collapsed within a year and I lost my job again.

When I was twenty years old I got another job with a company in London named Marcus Leaver and they wanted to start a business in Spain. It was very cold winter that year in England and I spoke Spanish so I grabbed it.

The year was 1974 and General Franco was still the Dictator in those days. The Australian Embassy in Madrid at the time needed a new office and they engaged me to find one for them. I never did but became great friends with the Ambassador at the time.

Marcus Leaver went bust in Spain; so I joined the British Army for a while, did my bit and left for the lucky country in 1982.

In the late 80’s I was Sales Manager at Andrew Gibbons Real Estate in Sydney’s Double Bay. Our crowning glory in those days was the sale of the famous Point Piper waterfront home Paradis Sur Mer (also known as Toison d’Or) for $19.2m. I later worked for Colliers International and set up their Prestige Homes & Holdings Division. Here is a quote from an article written then "
Tim Mansfield, of Colliers, is confident that come September, when the spring flowers bloom, people will put their property on the market again. Trouble is they have to buy somewhere else."

Years later I worked in Dubai as Sales Director of a well-known property development company. What happened? They went bust after the bubble burst there in 2008.

I have failed many times in my life but I am not a failure. We all fail at one time or another along our path in life. We all make mistakes and that is part of being human.

My own failures are where I went wrong in life . . .  like stepping stones along the way. You can fail on your own, or you can fail with the help of others when you go through life.

If you are blessed by having a family; a wife and children that you love and they love you, hold onto them forever.

You can go bankrupt; you can nearly starve to death and live on cold and windy streets under lamplights. Even then you can retain your dignity.

Life is not all about money. It is about your kindness to others without judgement. It is about words of encouragement to keep them going. It is about holding another person’s hand in yours, and a hug or a kiss that makes you feel that special bond that holds us all together.

At the end of the day who can judge better if I failed or not? Those that helped or those that put me down along the way?

It is only me who can be the final Judge. I am the one who knows the real things that I did to help others in life and never said . . .

There are three things you can do. Nothing else really matters:


  1. Help others
  2. Never give up on your dreams
  3. Don’t let people put you down
 
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Article contributed by Tim Mansfield, a 30 year global veteran in the real estate industry and Founder and CEO of Sydney-based Buyers’ Agents PrimePropertyBuyer at www.primepropertybuyer.com  You can follow Tim on Twitter by clicking here


 
 
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What is the formula for success? It is quite simple. Keep on making mistakes.

You may think that failure is the enemy of success, but it is not true. You can be discouraged by failure or you can learn from your mistakes. So go ahead and make as many as you can. Just try to ensure they don’t hurt anyone along the way.

J.K Rowling, the author of Harry Potter once said “You might never fail on the scale that I did. But it is impossible to live without failing at something, unless you live so cautiously that you might as well not have lived at all - in which case, you fail by default.”

Your success in life as well as in work is actually built on your failures. They are the mechanism by which we learn, and they are the stepping stones that will get you to the place you want to be in the future. If you don't make mistakes (and learn by them) you will find it hard to succeed. To fail is to be human.

Achieving success is not something that happens overnight. You have to work hard at it; you have to have failed many times first, and you have to feel hungry and go through the bad times before it happens.

It is too easy to give up on your dreams when you have failed many times. These failures might include a regrettable comment you made in the office, the day you forgot your wedding anniversary, or the black day that your business collapsed.

So what? Life goes on and you control your own destiny. No one else can do it for you.

People will criticise you along the way, and they will do their best to put you down. Some see failure as a weakness, when in fact it is strength. Ignore them and concentrate on your own dreams and not theirs.

“It is not the critic who counts; nor the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better.”


- Theodore Roosevelt.


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Tim Mansfield is a 30-year global  veteran in the real estate industry and Founder and CEO of Sydney-based buyers’ agents PrimePropertyBuyer.You can follow Tim on Twitter by clicking here.

 
 
By Jonathan Chancellor Tuesday, 06 September 2011 

The NSW government will limit full stamp duty concessions to those buying new homes from January 1, 2012.  First-home buyers will no longer have their stamp duty fully subsidised by the state government unless they buy newly constructed homes.

See full article here: http://www.propertyobserver.com.au/residential/nsw-scraps-stamp-duty-concessions-for-existing-homes-from-2012/2011090651441

Note by Tim:

This is a low blow to young first-home buyers who have been saving funds to buy their own property and are now under urgent pressure to purchase before the end of this year in order to benefit from the Stamp Duty exemption. The immediate result will be a mad rush to buy anything they can get their hands on in a price range up to $600,000 where there is already a severe lack of stock on the market. Even in the range up to $500,000 they are competing with "downsizer's", their own siblings and thousands of cashed-up investors taking advantage of high rental returns.

As of 1st January next year they will still get the $7,000 first-home buyers grant if they purchase any property, but the Stamp Duty saving which has been such an attractive incentive to make their first home purchase of up to $17,990 (and which has largely driven property sales over the past two years) will no longer be there to help them. They will all be forced to purchase either brand new homes or 'off-plan' homes in order to be eligible, and this is a major problem on the horizon because there simply aren't enough new homes under construction in NSW to meet the demand.

It's not difficult to predict a boom in sales demand for first-home buyers starting right now until the end of the year. The immediate impact will be a rise in price expectations by vendor's and panic buying at inflated prices.

And what is worse is that beginning early next year we are sure to see a general slump in property sales as young buyers exit the market.

Fin