Are we starting to see more distressed vendors than may have been reported?
BY CATHERINE CASHMORE
Australia wide, the delinquency rate has climbed from around 1.4 per cent to 1.79 per cent. It may be low in comparison to Europe and America, but it’s a figure the Reserve Bank of Australia should be paying close attention to because it seems there are other distressed vendors flying under the radar and trying to bail out before they get to the delinquency stage.
According to RP Data the average time Australians stay in their homes is 7.5 years, although in the established suburbs of Melbourne – close to the water and city – it’s 9.1 years. However there seem to be increasing numbers of vendors selling prime real estate after only one or two years of residence (something I’m seeing more and more often when I research the sales history of homes). In many cases these homes are struggling to sell, with days on market stretching into months as vendors try to achieve their ‘wish price’ (a return on investment) in flat conditions. These are often people who purchased when interest rates were low and now rates have climbed they find themselves labouring to make the repayments.
Investment in real estate is a long-term game plan, so trying to get a return on price one or two years down the line is a gamble no one should take, or be forced to take. Therefore in a flat market, with the possibility of interest rate rises rising on the horizon, paying the right price and insuring that decision by purchasing the right property, is not only important, it’s crucial! Pay too much in the first place and you’ll get no short-term capital growth. Choose a ‘lemon’ and if you need to sell in a soft market reducing the price will be the only way to do so.
So how do you know you’re paying the right price? Just because the papers are screaming ‘buyers’ market’ and the agent is giving you a ‘discount’ on the asking price, it doesn’t equate to a ‘bargain’. Drawing comparables against the weekend results in the paper won’t always help as they only list exact addresses for auction sales and many of those are now ‘undisclosed’. In fact, sales results won’t help you much at all unless you’ve been monitoring the market closely and assessing the individual properties listed – and furthermore, how do you know someone else didn’t over pay on the property you’re comparing against? I was recently asked to help with a report into vendor discounting, which is the amount the vendor discounts throughout the sales campaign in order to sell. It wasn’t hard to find examples, however it was much easier to find examples of advertised prices (private sale) which had been exceeded!
There are three numbers in real estate – what the vendor wants, what the market (you) is willing to pay and what a property’s reasonable market value is against comparable sales. Unless you’ve got a handle on all three you can’t negotiate effectively.
If you’re a current buyer who has little experience negotiating and find yourself judging a property’s value based on the quoted range, or ‘reserve’ price, rather than a solid base of knowledge, beware! Selling agents know all the tricks to con a buyer into paying more, from touting they have other offers on the table, to convincing them the ‘distressed’ vendor has ‘a very reasonable’ reserve.
And what about choosing the right property? Well, even in flat markets with well-publicised drops over any one year, there are those properties which buck the trend – the roses amongst the thorns – in locations with unique aspects that drive owner occupiers to stretch budgets. And these are the very properties investors need to target if they’re going to prosper during boom and bust cycles.
A suburb-by-suburb look through Melbourne highlights a few of these areas which are withstanding current conditions. Take, for example, Kew, located southeast of Melbourne’s CBD. Made up of roughly 70 per cent owner occupier, it’s already seen a 29 per cent jump during the first quarter in median value and a steady 74 per cent year to date clearance rate, according to the Real Estate Institute of Victoria. While this doesn’t guarantee every home in Kew will buck the downturn, you can be pretty sure that if you own a good well-positioned property that suits the buyer demographic of the area, it’s going to attract attention.
I would never advise someone to purchase a property unless they’re fully committed to a long term game plan, however what I would strongly advise is the essential need to get experienced advice before you risk becoming a distressed vendor.
Catherine Cashmore is a senior property adviser and buyer advocate for JPP Buyer Advocates – the largest dedicated buyer advocacy in Melbourne. With extensive experience in all matters regarding real estate, JPP successfully purchases and negotiates over $100m worth of property each year for clients. http://www.jpp.com.au

Great post Catherine! Very useful advice for potential buyers, investing in Australian property is always a great idea if you look at the constant rise in the tourism industry
Comment by Sydney — June 27, 2011 @ 9:43 pm
Thanks Sydney – it’s going to take more than the present dilemmas to stop good, well located Australian property, climbing in price.
Comment by Catherine Cashmore — June 28, 2011 @ 9:56 am
I like the way you stress long term. Property can be very forgiving if given sufficient time; very unforgiving if not.
Comment by Dave Ives — June 29, 2011 @ 8:37 am
Thanks Dave – Agree totally, I’m all for minimising risk and the best way to do that is with good financial planning, wise buying, and a plan for the long term.
Comment by Catherine Cashmore — June 29, 2011 @ 10:18 am
Low clearance rate tell us 2 things. The property is overpriced hence it is not selling or buyer confidence is not there. Perhaps a combination of both, with job uncertainty being the biggest factor.
Comment by Peter Z — July 13, 2012 @ 12:44 pm