Which area? Look at Foxton’s share price. Less than a third of what it was 5 years ago.
Chelsea. I get agents contacting me asking me if I want to sell on a weekly basis.
Which area? Look at Foxton’s share price. Less than a third of what it was 5 years ago.
That has no bearing on the market being good. If anything it’s a sign the market is ****.Chelsea. I get agents contacting me asking me if I want to sell on a weekly basis.
Yeah, that’s because they’re struggling to make sales and are looking for new kit. I had the same conversation with my brother about his flat in Chelsea. He didn’t believe me until he put it on the market. Hamptons over valued it to get the instruction and then quickly told him they needed to reduce the price as they hadn’t got any offers. You know a market is bad when agents are proactive. In a good market they don’t need to work to make money.Chelsea. I get agents contacting me asking me if I want to sell on a weekly basis.
This.That has no bearing on the market being good. If anything it’s a sign the market is ****.
Yeah, that’s because they’re struggling to make sales and are looking for new kit. I had the same conversation with my brother about his flat in Chelsea. He didn’t believe me until he put it on the market. Hamptons over valued it to get the instruction and then quickly told him they needed to reduce the price as they hadn’t got any offers. You know a market is bad when agents are proactive. In a good market they don’t need to work to make money.
You’ll never struggle to sell a house in a swanky part of London. Though the prices last time I checked had fallen about 1-2% last year I think some parts more.I go by what I’m told mate. I’m not there. They tell me the area is in demand, people want to live there.
SW3 is a very sought after area, they tell me, and there’s only a certain amount of property there.
Makes no odds to me as I’ve no intention of selling.
You’ll never struggle to sell a house in a swanky part of London. Though the prices last time I checked had fallen about 1-2% last year I think some parts more.
All true but the market is still ****. There are only a certain number of properties in the area but there also only a certain number of domestic buyers who can afford to live there. The discounted pound was supposedly going to keep the overseas investors interested but the market had overheated and investors don’t like uncertainty. The new taxes had already put them off and Brexit definitely didn’t help. Agents used to go to Hong Kong and do off plan sales exhibitions in a hotel ballroom and come back with a bucket load of sales. Those glory days are gone for the moment.I go by what I’m told mate. I’m not there. They tell me the area is in demand, people want to live there.
SW3 is a very sought after area, they tell me, and there’s only a certain amount of property there.
All true but the market is still ****. There are only a certain number of properties in the area but there also only a certain number of domestic buyers who can afford to live there. The discounted pound was supposedly going to keep the overseas investors interested but the market had overheated and investors don’t like uncertainty. The new taxes had already put them off and Brexit definitely didn’t help. Agents used to go to Hong Kong and do off plan sales exhibitions in a hotel ballroom and come back with a bucket load of sales. Those glory days are gone for the moment.
Any agent who tells you London has held up is lying to you.
They’re the ultimate liars. Their agents are private school kids who are so thick that their dads couldn’t get them a job in banking. As I said, look at their share price.Foxton’s are one of the agents who contact me regularly, telling me they’ve got good demand for property in the area. That’s what they’re claiming on their website too, saying actual sold prices have risen 7.57% in the last 2 years.
They’re the ultimate liars. Their agents are private school kids who are so thick that their dads couldn’t get them a job in banking. As I said, look at their share price.
Not so in London. The weak pound has supported and encouraged overseas investors, who have kept the market near its highs.
They are but if they’re saying prices have risen by that much then they’ve manipulated them somehow. Where’s that stat? I’ll take a look!I’m no expert, but surely you can’t fake actual sold prices? They’re a matter of record, surely?
If those figures are correct then I suspect they’ve cherry picked the dates so they can include one poor sales month as the base case and a strong sales month, possibly including a super sale ie a property that sold for £10m+, as the look everything is fabulous month. As I said, they’re known liars.
The economy is as flat as yer Nan’s tits, and the property market reflects that. There’s always regional variations and in ours the volume of new build activity has driven a price uplift locally, but generally things are flat. Consumer confidence doesn’t appear to have had the lift expected after the election and I think it’s going to be a tough year tbh.
What and you’d believe an estate agent? It’s in their interest to pretend the market hasn’t turned to ****. There have been a number of factors stagnating the market. Brexit being one of them.
And that’s coming from an ex estate agent. What an absolute chiselling ****’s profession, no wonder you wanted out.