Should I be annoyed?
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1 | Hi all, So on one hand I got it a bit cheaper than what I was willing to pay at auction but on the other hand I bid against someone that didn’t have legitimate funds so the price was brought up. What do you guys think? House is unconditional, I have paid the deposit and we settle on the 22nd Jan. Edited by daz59 at 8:09 am, Tue 12 Jan daz59 - 2021-01-12 08:08:00 |
2 | A few things to dissect here. *Noting that the auctions excluded potential buyers so the price might even have gone higher. sparkychap - 2021-01-12 08:18:00 |
3 | As above, you have every right to be annoyed and to formally complain about the agent. As for the deal you struck with the vendor, no. Freedom of contract, meaning you had complete freedom to enter into the agreement on whatever terms you agreed or not to. Edited by johnston at 8:46 am, Tue 12 Jan johnston - 2021-01-12 08:46:00 |
4 | You didn't bid against someone with illigimate funds. That agreement was clearly conditional upon finance. johnston - 2021-01-12 08:50:00 |
5 | Both agents = Naughty Naughty superdave0_13 - 2021-01-12 08:55:00 |
6 | johnston wrote:
Thanks for the feedback. There are no conditions at auction. If his funds were locked by ird somthing dodgy must have been going on. He brought his “dodgy” money to auction. That of course is if the ird reason was true. Who knows. I understand the points regarding I shouldn’t have been told about the reason for the original buyer non settlement. daz59 - 2021-01-12 08:57:00 |
7 | What was the situation with the two agents? Did you employ your one? Were they competing agents from the same agency? A conjunctional sale? superdave0_13 - 2021-01-12 09:27:00 |
8 | superdave0_13 wrote:
Both worked for different companies. I didn’t pay him, but have been working with him to find a property for me. He will get his cut of commission from this sale. daz59 - 2021-01-12 09:40:00 |
9 | daz59 wrote:
It is not clear whether you were actually bidding at the auction. Were you? Did the original purchaser buy at the fall of the hammer? If the agent didn't present an auction bid please explain. Were you present? Or, are you referring to a pre-auction offer? johnston - 2021-01-12 11:12:00 |
10 | If the vendor gave up the deposit, either the purchaser was entitled to it or the vendor voluntarily returned it. Edited by johnston at 11:13 am, Tue 12 Jan johnston - 2021-01-12 11:13:00 |
11 | johnston wrote:
Auction opened at the reserve of 2.3m, I bid against the other guy, it sold at auction for 2.4m (i bid to 2.375m) buyer didnt settle so i got asked to put an offer in. Vendor kept the deposit. You may want to re-read my first post. Edited by daz59 at 11:32 am, Tue 12 Jan daz59 - 2021-01-12 11:31:00 |
12 | daz59 wrote:
So a conjunctional sale with the agents possibly in cahoots. superdave0_13 - 2021-01-12 11:46:00 |
13 | superdave0_13 wrote:
Would think unlikely. Agents didn’t know each other before this property. daz59 - 2021-01-12 12:03:00 |
14 | Maybe not, but if they are not presenting each others offers there is a problem. They got you up 60k so it's worthwhile doing. superdave0_13 - 2021-01-12 12:09:00 |
15 | superdave0_13 wrote:
Maybe, they did present my next offer of 2.35m, the vendors came back with 2.36m as i final offer they said. daz59 - 2021-01-12 12:14:00 |
16 | Oh well, It must be a fantastic house. Although not ideal, I hope that you can move in without too many concerns over the way the buying process went.... superdave0_13 - 2021-01-12 12:22:00 |
17 | Sounds ok to me, you got a good house you want. That is the end of the story. Move on. msigg - 2021-01-12 12:40:00 |
18 | daz59 wrote:
Which is contradictory to you posting apparently his 10% deposit was returned because of that. johnston - 2021-01-12 12:43:00 |
19 | Oh Hamilton agents, gotta luv em, everything the poster is thinking sounds just like them. gabbysnana - 2021-01-12 12:58:00 |
20 | johnston wrote:
My agent told me it was returned but when the vendor took us through the house yesterday the vendor said he kept the deposit. My writing is not the best sorry. daz59 - 2021-01-12 13:17:00 |
21 | superdave0_13 wrote:
It is a nice house. I just wanted input from what others would feel in this situation. daz59 - 2021-01-12 13:19:00 |
22 | daz59 wrote:
The agent had no right to disclose any aspect of the deposit to you. To answer your question, yes annoyed with the agent. No, not annoyed with your purchase. johnston - 2021-01-12 13:46:00 |
23 | Don't get mad... get even !! mechnificent - 2021-01-12 14:28:00 |
24 | daz59 wrote:
So the seller is paying you? That seems unusual. committed - 2021-01-12 15:55:00 |
25 | The (real estate qualified) person acting on behalf of a potential purchaser is referred to as 'The Buyer's Agent' https://www.settled.govt.nz/buying-a-home/finding-a-property At least the TA did not have to bid against some mystery offshore bidder, bidding through a 'tourette's like', hand waving, 'cellphone clamped to ear' agent on the other side of an auction room. serf407 - 2021-01-12 16:33:00 |
26 | serf407 wrote: the “buyer’s agent” was not a Buyer’s Agent. sparkychap - 2021-01-12 16:59:00 |
27 | serf407 wrote:
But here the agents were acting for the vendor. It is illegal to act for both parties in a transaction. johnston - 2021-01-12 17:17:00 |
28 | johnston wrote: everyday in everyday. gabbysnana - 2021-01-12 18:08:00 |
29 | committed wrote:
Unsure where you got the idea that the vendor is paying me. daz59 - 2021-01-12 18:30:00 |
30 | daz59 wrote:
The seller is paying your “agent”? I would’ve thought that if you were employing a buyers agent, you would be paying them. If the seller is paying them, then they’re a seller’s agent. committed - 2021-01-12 18:56:00 |
31 | johnston wrote:
Unless they had written authority (which is unlikely). superdave0_13 - 2021-01-12 18:59:00 |
32 | superdave0_13 wrote:
I doubt the first deposit had any bearing on the second agreement. johnston - 2021-01-12 19:35:00 |
33 | I wouldn't worry about it. (In this market) you got it 15k cheaper than you were willing to pay 10 weeks ago. I know you feel like you were bid up by someone without the money. But if it wasn't them, it would have been someone else; and perhaps you would have missed out altogether. Don't worry about it. You obviously like the place, and you've had another chance to consider making an offer. You've actually managed to have an offer accepted that was less than your earlier one; not many get that chance. theo35 - 2021-01-12 19:44:00 |
34 | committed wrote:
Both agents (mine and the vendors), get a cut of the commission from the sale of the property. No idea what proportion each agent gets. daz59 - 2021-01-12 20:53:00 |
35 | theo35 wrote:
Thanks, yea I guess that’s the best way to look at it. daz59 - 2021-01-12 20:54:00 |
36 | daz59 wrote:
Common in Hamilton I found. Weird when we moved here as I haven't experienced it elsewhere but yep both agents are paid out of the vendors commission. You can tell the houses that sell like this as they often have two different RE agency's signs with SOLD on them. hers.nz - 2021-01-12 21:49:00 |
37 | I would have offered $2.2m then let them stew on it for a week or two, and seen what they come back with then. Edited by mrcat1 at 10:30 pm, Tue 12 Jan mrcat1 - 2021-01-12 22:28:00 |
38 | daz59 wrote:
The irony is that if you had employed a buyers agent, one that you paid for, you may have been able to purchase the property for less than you did. https://wiseup.nz/buying-property/guide-to-buying-a-house/bu Edited by committed at 7:07 am, Wed 13 Jan committed - 2021-01-13 07:04:00 |
39 | hers.nz wrote:
I cannot see how that is legal or could be condoned by agencies. johnston - 2021-01-16 08:58:00 |
40 | daz59 wrote: In Hamilton, company gets 50% (They will have B2B deals on how that is split) the listing agent gets 25% and the selling agent gets 25%, some companies if it is split between the 2 companies, the listing agent gets 30% and selling agent 20%. gunnernz1 - 2021-01-16 09:11:00 |
41 | johnston wrote: Never seen it. Its always the listing company (Havent seen a general listing for years, do they still do them) gunnernz1 - 2021-01-16 09:15:00 |
42 | gunnernz1 wrote:
I have not seen it either. General listings are rare nowadays. Perhaps most often seen with new builds and over priced turkeys. johnston - 2021-01-16 11:15:00 |
43 | johnston wrote:
I wouldn't think so either but there was one property just down the road from me that had both "L" agencies sold signs on it in December. hers.nz - 2021-01-16 12:10:00 |
44 | daz59 wrote: I would have gone back in at 2.1m, and when they rejected it I would have said no. I made an offer on a house the first day it was on the market (3 doors down the road) and at 6 pm the agents knocked on the door and said they had another offer, that I should present my best offer. I did. At 6:30pm they knocked on the door again and said I was close, another 15K would clinch the deal. I asked them what part of "best offer" they didn't understand and told them to FOff. At 7pm they came back with the signed contract. gyrogearloose - 2021-01-16 19:09:00 |
45 | gyrogearloose wrote:
The agent is, of course, working for the seller. No surprises that they tried to get more money for their client. But, yes, in the OP's case, they may have been able to buy the property for less, especially if they had employed a buyer's agent. committed - 2021-01-17 11:18:00 |
46 | Not that there are many real buyers agents in NZ, apart from a few that operate for high paying overseas buyers. Plenty of fake ones at the likes of Harcourts. sparkychap - 2021-01-17 12:45:00 |