Friday, September 20, 2024

Family triumphs at auction to pay $2.6m for Glen Iris home

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Three buyers, including a would-be first home buyer, attended the auction at 26 Duke Street but chose not to bid.

Biggin & Scott Richmond director and auctioneer Andrew Crotty called for an opening bid of $800,000. The late arrival, who had never before seen the house, made the single $800,000 bid. Crotty then sold the house at the price after conferring with the vendor.

He said that the new owner had viewed pictures of the property online before the auction. The buyer suggested they would undertake a renovation. They were relocating from Sydney.

The property had a quoted price range of $800,000 to $850,000.

“It represents what the value is in the market and I think everyone’s happy,” said Crotty.

In Greenvale, a family from Meadow Heights bought a five-bedroom house on a 2653-square-metre block for $1,607,000 in post-auction negotiations.

Three buyers participated in the auction at 30 Palamino Valley Court. Bidding began with a vendor bid at $1.5 million. After eight bids were made from the buyers, the auction slowed down and was passed in at $1.55 million.

The highest bidder was invited to negotiate with the vendor and bought the home. The sale was within the quoted price range of $1.5 to $1.65 million.

“The ones who were looking to do it would have all been moving from smaller homes to a larger home with a potential to do their own thing,” said Barry Plant Gladstone Park director and auctioneer Bill Karp.

“It needed to be completely refurbished, and the land had to be redone as well,” he said.

In Carrum, only one buyer participated in an auction for a townhouse near Carrum Beach that was passed in at $1,035,000.

The auction at 5B Millicent Avenue opened with a vendor bid at $990,000. The buyer, from Geelong, made a $1.01 million bid. After no other parties offered to bid, Ray White Chelsea director and auctioneer Shane O’Sughrue made a second vendor bid at $1.02 million.

The auction was passed in after the final bid at $1,035,000 from the owner-occupier. In post-auction negotiations, the buyer and vendor agreed to a sale price of $1,067,500.

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“Buyer sentiment is a bit soft,” said O’Sughrue. He said high interest rates had had an impact on the local market.

“By the end of the year, hopefully it kicks off again. But at the present, it’s been a little bit difficult.”

O’Sughrue had listed the home with a quoted price range of $990,000 to $1,085,000.

AMP chief economist Dr Shane Oliver said the Melbourne property market had continued to soften over the long weekend.

“Subdued demand and listings running above where they were a year ago, you’re seeing this continued weakness in clearance rates,” said Oliver.

“I suspect it’s all the result of the ongoing high level of interest rates.

“The basic picture is one of higher listings than the long weekend a year ago, and much weaker clearances, which is a sign that there are more distressed listings out there, and buyer demand is depressed.

“A long weekend can often cause distortions, but that said, it is consistent with the ongoing weakness we had been seeing.”

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