3Rs – Roots, Regeneration & Resilience
All the leaves are brown and the sky is grey
I stopped into an auction on a Winter's day.
• Overall market is weak (but not dead) with lots of price sensitive stock that is not attracting any interest from a shallow buyer pool.
• Today's evidence of this was 40% of auctions (39) we covered had no bidding. However when you hit the mark with an A-Grader meaning Position, Property AND Price then it can still fly.
• The Inner East is still Melbourne's Top End strongest market
• Bayside is a real battle of persistence, patience and price revision
• Stonnington overall very little action in terms of stock or bidders
What a Volcano - 7 Bidders @ Kew circa $4m
Mal James
Buy Sell Agent
0408 107 988
mal@james.net.au
Today, as we completed the second ‘100 Auction Market’ test of the year (2024 M2 May), the top-end market statistics validate our ongoing observations: it’s challenging for sellers at the top, but not impossible with the right approach—emphasizing patience, persistence, and price revisions. For buyers, particularly those looking to trade up, this represents a significant opportunity.
Additionally, we feature an article on the 3Rs: Roots, Regeneration, and Resilience.
This week’s edition includes a detailed analysis of the most significant auctions, highlighting the successful bid by our clients R&T, who secured a property for just over $7 million at 13 Fairview, Glen Iris.
We conclude this segment—the last Market News for a few weeks—with comprehensive statistics and a key analysis of the auctions across the top-end markets of Bayside, Boroondara, and Stonnington.
The 3Rs – Roots, Regeneration, and Resilience
It’s been an interesting week, one at the crossroads of change, one tinged with a tear but also filled with excitement and positives.
For the past 8 years, I’ve worked with an incredible man in Africa named Letion. He has been instrumental in locating over 850 impoverished children who needed life-changing, and sometimes life-saving, surgeries, which our family business, James Buy Sell, funded. Letion is now branching out on his own. Good luck, Letion, and thank you for your resilience.
After nearly 14 years of partnership with Gina, from here on, we will operate separate businesses—Gina at GK Buy Sell (0457 835 255) and myself at James Buy Sell. However, we are and will continue to collaborate on future buying and buy sell clients, a venture that has already begun. It’s an exciting development and feels entirely appropriate for regenerating both our paths.
This Monday marks my last day at RMIT, where I’ve completed the requirements for a Master’s degree—my first. My mother would have been proud. Despite some challenges within tertiary education, it was exhilarating to be intellectually stimulated anew, diving into Design Thinking, Management Innovation, and Blockchain with Professor Ashton De Silva at RMIT. Amusingly, I first enrolled in a business degree at RMIT in 1977 and didn’t pass, making my graduation in 2025 perhaps a record of somewhat!
This week feels akin to being at Richmond Station, where various paths converge. As one moves through, myriad new journeys unfold—whether you’re arriving from the City Loop, Flinders Street, or the MCG. One might then embark on a train to Glen Waverley, Frankston/Pakenham, or Sandy lines, each leading to distinctly different destinies.
Standing at a station looking forward – James Buy Sell and now Shelter by the bay will continue to fund child surgeries in the Sub-sahara and is about to embark on helping build one of the few children’s hospitals in Africa at Selian, Arusha in Tanzania. Concurrently, I’m exploring a startup in some form of crypto/blockchain/AI with fellow students Austern and Louis from distant parts of Asia. Additionally, a new venture Shelter by the bay with Zali Reynolds—a formidable real estate agent under 40—along with Simone, Melina, and Sam, who bring a refreshing energy to selling Top End homes in the bay area – that refreshing new energy is FEB: Female led, Ethical foundation and Buyer focussed – and yes, it is getting colder during those Elwood morning swims.
I’m one of the luckiest humans going around – lucky as I have never been smart enough to amass large amounts of wealth and so I really have to get out of bed every morning with a sense of purpose – lucky in that for whatever reason family very early on was imprinted in my DNA as most important AND lucky because for the last 33 years I have lived in the one place and it’s a place that I feel totally connected to – Brighton North in Warleigh Grove. When you travel and see the world – Brighton North is really lucky!
There is something to be said for a new home and a move… but there is something that also should be boasted about at dinner parties. Roots – it’s the value of roots, deep roots… living in the one place you love for a very long time, a place that you feel connected to as many of our indigenous peoples do, that you have seen your children grow up in and your parents move on from… gives you and your entire family a wonderful emotional stability and that’s worth cracking some Bolly (I’ve gone French) over, from time to time. There is nothing quite like good roots!
So, this week as we initiated, fought, and bought 13 Fairview Glen Iris for repeat clients (R&T) in a volcano EOI shootout, north of $7m, at the home late on a Friday night, 5 days before the close… it reinforced Roots and Regeneration with the 3rd R – Resilience.
Resilience: R & T’s and their young family have been on the trail for a few years and now finally their life will be on a more settled trajectory, as they transition from a wonderful, but now too small Gascoigne off-market, we (Gina and I) bought for them half a dozen years ago, to a grand forever family home with all the emotive bells, whistles, drums, flutes, and any other sensory feelings you could wish for in a great house, a great home. They had the resilience to never give up on their dream and then when they found it, the resilience to fight as hard as they could to get it. Resilience.
The full story next time showing how a Top End volcano works and how trading up from a smaller to a forever family home is fertile ground in today’s market. For buyers, it could be the 3R’s when buying well Roots, Regeneration, and Resilience and for sellers it could be those things plus Patience, Persistence, and Price Respect or Revision. For buy/sellers it could be all of the above.
Can I finish with something warm, of course, I can, I’m writing this piece. The New York Times – The Daily, had a podcast on the Whales Alphabet last week. It’s worth a listen in front of a warm fire with a glass of relaxing tonic, perhaps with a partner or child nearby, as you think of life as something always changing, something surprisingly new and old, and something inherently good.
Until next we meet, as I will take a few weeks off from writing to focus on James Buy Sell clients, so until then and on the King’s Birthday… Go Pies.
Our Clients Bought - Volcano EOI Private Auction
Auction Report: $7M+ Volcano at 13 Fairview, Glen Iris — Masterfully handled by the Tomlinson clan of Rae, James, and Hugh from Marshall White, this property was acquired by Gina of GK Buy Sell and myself of James Buy Sell on behalf of our clients last night in a four-bidder volcano auction.
We considered the quote conservative yet understandable given the current market, emphasizing the 3Ps: persistence, patience, and price respect or revision, with an initial range of approximately $5.9m to $6.5m.
Our clients, R&T, along with Gina and myself, had thoroughly reviewed the property and were aligned in our assessment. This led to two Expression of Interest (EOI) strategy meetings, followed by legal reviews, ratings checks, and pest and building inspections. Subsequently, we presented a $6.5m offer 48 hours ago, five days before the EOI deadline. This offer was initially rejected but initiated further negotiations as anticipated, and two additional offers of $6.6m resulted in the property being placed on the market for a private auction, which was set with five hours’ notice on Friday evening at the property.
After dark, with four parties present—three in person and one via phone—the auction commenced under James Tomlinson’s leadership. Bids were made in increments of $50,000 and $25,000 until our clients secured the property for just over $7m. Although four bidders participated, which was advantageous for the seller, the overall bidding was somewhat subdued. Compared to one and three years ago, when the market was more robust, this property would have fetched significantly more. This underscores our current advice: now is an opportune time to trade up, as more modestly priced homes will sell if priced correctly, and the gap to upscale properties is narrower than it has been recently and might be soon.
13 Fairview Glen Iris. James Home Rating Comments
Few would rate this as cutting edge, but many will really like it.
All of us can find fault, and we are no exception, but no one who bids will think of those as they sail past where they hoped, where they wanted, and finally where they felt comfortable buying.
But someone will buy this, and they will have in their head to do this and then that and ……..but gut feel is they won’t, in the end, change much. Well, not if they’re smart, for this home has appeal—not from a showroom or a book or an aloof opinion of greatness—but because it feels good.
And why does it feel good? Because from little child to the boss spouse, there is something to connect to.
Position – well, in our mind, Fairview is THE street in Glen Iris. But you know what? It’s not just in our mind – I remember several years ago being one of nine bidders and losing in a shootout at $9m across the road. Think about that……. yes, bigger land, but nine and $9m….. so, it’s not just Gina and I that rate Fairview….. there is a cohort of others.
That was the other side of the street…….. we like this side a lot better for multiple reasons. The home sits proudly on the street. This would simply not be the same look, sitting down across the asphalt….. it wouldn’t work. Sound ? It’s quieter in the back, on this side, away from the occasional freeway wind noise as you have a building largely shielding you.
To everywhere else from this location – freeway, rail, shops, park, schools….. it’s all good.
Property – Backyard, brilliant!! Three master bedroom opportunities and a way that allows togetherness for young ones and then separation for older children when sleeping. Living spaces – lots of them and study and quiet and loud places. Although the stairs are slightly narrow, they work, and I like the dual ends….. privacy, convenience, and really makes the upper beds a parents’ retreat.
Mal it’s a hotchpotch! Yep, it has that flavour………but some hotchpotches have character and make you feel a whole lot better than bland, bland, and more bland from a reno on a budget or an architect after an award. This reno ages well already…..this home works now and will continue to do in the decades to come.
And to Price…… it’s easy, whatever makes sense it will go for more, and it will do that because of street history, home feel, and the current price indication is designed to attract, not inform. Others will like this home as well and they will continue to like it in any market……this is a great family home.
'Round the Auction Grounds This Week
Biggest Auction: Almost $2m over reserve - but who is this guy?
Fortnight ago
Bidderman
2.0
Stock
Average
Clearance
76%
Auctions Attended
29
Volcanoes
17%
Ducks
14%
Last Week
Bidderman
1.3
Stock
Average
Clearance
53%
Auctions Attended
32
Volcanoes
16%
Ducks
28%
Today 2024 M2 Week 3
Bidderman
1.3
Stock
Average
Clearance
49%
Auctions Attended
39
Volcanoes
8%
Ducks
38%
Difference in TOP END Quarterly Markets
2023M4 Xmas
Bidderman
1.4
Stock
LOW
Clearance
58%
2024M1 Open
Bidderman
1.4
Stock
GOOD
Clearance
63%
2024M2 May
Bidderman
1.5
Stock
GOOD
Clearance
59%
Difference in TOP END Geographical Markets
Inner East has returned to be the strongest market
STONNINGTON
Stonnington Week 3 – 11 auctions
Clearance: 45%
Bidderman: 0.9
Overall – 18 auctions
Clearance: 44%
Bidderman: 1.1
MALVERN EAST, 13 Devonshire Road
SOI: $2,000,000 – $2,200,000
Sales Agent: Hugh Tomlinson – Marshall White
Before auction: $undisc
Bidders: 1
MALVERN EAST, 10 Nott Street
SOI: $3,750,000 – $4,000,000
Sales Agent: James Tomlinson – Marshall White
Before auction: $undisc
Bidders: 1
ARMADALE, 10 Hume Street
SOI: $3,250,000 – $3,500,000
Sales agent: David Volpato – Marshall White
Crowd: 20
Opening Bid: $3,250,000 VB
Passed in: $3,250,000 VB
Bidders: 0
The street stood quiet as the auction opened and closed on a vendor bid of $3,250,000
MALVERN EAST, 4 Anderson Street
SOI: $3,100,000 – $3,400,000
Sales agent: Kellie O’Neill – Jellis Craig
Crowd: 11
Opening Bid: $3,100,000 VB
Passed in: $3,300,000 VB
Bidders: 0
With a small crowd and no bids, the property was passed in to a vendor bid.
SOUTH YARRA, 19 Hope Street
SOI: $3,500,000 – $3,750,000
Sales agent: Nicholas Brooks – Marshall White
Crowd: 60
Opening Bid: $3,400,000
Passed in: $3,450,000 VB
Bidders: 1
One bidder adds to the opening vendor bid of $3,400,000 but the $50,000 rise isn’t enough to place the property on the market and it is passed in at $3,450,000.
TOORAK, 87 Mathoura Road
SOI: $2,800,000 – $3,000,000
Sales agent: Mark Harris – Marshall White
Crowd: 25
Opening Bid: $2,800,000 VB
Passed in: $2,800,000 VB
Bidders: 0
No initial bids were placed from the crowd so Mr long placed a vendor bid of $2,800,000. After a short break speaking with the vendors, he returned encouraging prospective buyers to get involved. With no bids being placed the property was formally passed in at $2,800,000.
PRAHRAN, 50 Lewisham Road
SOI: $2,500,000 – $2,700,000
Sales agent: James McCormack – Marshall White
Crowd: 20
Opening Bid: $2,500,000 VB
Passed in: $2,500,000 VB
Bidders: 0
No one bidding today in Lewisham Street. One potential buyer moved inside for post auction negotiations while the crowd mingled on the street.
ARMADALE, 17 Lambeth Avenue
SOI: $3,000,000 – $3,300,000
Sales agent: Carla Fetter – Jellis Craig
Crowd: 27
Opening Bid: $2,950,000 VB
On market: $3,110,000
Under Hammer: $3,203,000
Bidders: 2
Two relaxed looking bidders, side by side, swiftly traded bids. The property was purchased by Bidder 1 with no need for a mid-auction break
ARMADALE, 6 Sutherland Road
SOI: $2,200,000 – $2,400,000
Sales agent: Carla Fetter – Jellis Craig
Crowd: 30
Opening Bid: $2,250,000 VB
Passed in: $2,310,000
After auction: $2,380,000
Bidders: 2
People sprawled over the wide Armadale Street. After some bidding from the crowd and a half time break, the property passed in.
SOUTH YARRA, 26 Albion Street
SOI: $2,000,000 – $2,200,000
Sales agent: Matt Davis – Kay & Burton
Crowd: 20
Opening Bid: $2,000,000
On market: $2,220,000
Under Hammer: $2,335,000
Bidders: 3
Spirited bidding from the crowd led to no half time break and the property selling under the hammer.
MALVERN EAST, 306 Wattletree Road
SOI: $2,450,000 – $2,650,000
Sales agent: John Morrisby – Jellis Craig
Crowd: 15
Opening Bid: $2,350,000 VB
Passed in: $2,350,000 VB
Bidders: 0
A small crowd gathered in the front yard for the auction. Mr Morrisby placed a vendor bid which was matched by the lone bidder.
BY THE BAY - BAYSIDE & PORT PHILLIP
Bayside Week 3 – 13 auctions
Clearance: 46%
Bidderman: 0.67
Overall – 42 auctions
Clearance: 60%
Bidderman: 1.1
BRIGHTON, 8 Byron Street
SOI: $2,600,000 – $2,800,000
Sales Agent: David Hart – Buxton
Before auction: $undisc
Bidders: 1
ALBERT PARK, 51 Greig Street
SOI: $3,100,000 – $3,400,000
Sales agent: Nicholas Hoo – Marshall White
Crowd: 100
Opening Bid: $3,100,000 VB
Passed in: $3,150,000 VB
After auction: $3,500,000
Bidders: 1
Nicholas Hoo opens with a vendor bid of $3,100,000. One bidder adds $50,000 and the home is passed in to him for further negotiation.
BRIGHTON EAST, 36 Baird Street
SOI: $4,600,000 – $4,800,000
Sales agent: Matthew Pillios – Kay & Burton
Crowd: 70
Opening Bid: $4,600,000 VB
Passed in: $4,650,000
Bidders: 1
A single bid was enough to be ushered inside.
HAMPTON, 100 Orlando Street
SOI: $3,000,000 – $3,300,000
Sales agent: Andy Nasr – Marshall White
Crowd: 50
Opening Bid: $3,100,000 VB
Passed in: $3,100,000 VB
Bidders: 0
Potential bidders held back and watched this one pass in on the opening vendor bid.
SOUTH MELBOURNE, 361 Conventry Street
SOI: $2,750,000 – $2,950,000
Sales agent: Oliver Bruce – Marshall White
Crowd: 67
Opening Bid: $2,800,000 VB
Passed in: $2,825,000
After auction: $undisc
Bidders: 1
This charming house that had started it’s life as a hotel in the heart of South Melbourne was opened on a vendor bid of $2,800,000. Although there was considerable interest during the inspection period, the property passed in at $2,825,000 with only one bid.
MIDDLE PARK, 47 Nimmo Street
SOI: $3,750,000 – $3,950,000
Sales agent: Nicholas Hoo – Marshall White
Crowd: 73
Opening Bid: $3,800,000
On market: $4,275,000
Under Hammer: $4,325,000
Bidders: 2
A strong opening bid of $3.8M started things off before 2 bidders competed to see the property being sold for $4.325M
HAMPTON, 1 Favril Street
SOI: $2,800,000 – $2,950,000
Sales agent: Jenny Dwyer – Belle
Crowd: 25
Opening Bid: $2,800,000 VB
Passed in: $2,800,000 VB
Bidders: 0
Without crowd participation, the property was passed in.
MIDDLE PARK, 66 Hambleton Street
SOI: $2,300,000 – $2,500,000
Sales agent: Oliver Bruce – Marshall White
Crowd: 42
Opening Bid: $2,400,000 VB
Passed in: $2,400,000 VB
Bidders: 0
The auction of this charming single fronted Victorian house in Middle Park, opened on a vendor bid of $2.4M. The lack of bids led to the property being passed in on the same bid.
HAMPTON, 59 Crisp Street
SOI: $4,600,000 – $4,900,000
Sales agent: Jenny Dwyer – Belle
Crowd: 25
Opening Bid: $4,600,000 VB
Passed in: $4,600,000 VB
Bidders: 0
A small group gather on the front lawn to watch the auction. Steve Tickell from Belle Property opens and closes the bidding with just the one vendor bid of $4,600,000.
BRIGHTON, 53 Hanby Street
SOI: $3,700,000 – $3,900,000
Sales agent: Guy St Leger – Buxton
Crowd: 50
Opening Bid: $3,900,000 VB
Passed in: $4,100,000
After auction: $undisc
Bidders: 2
Guy St Leger opens the bidding with a vendor bid of $3,900,000 and two bidders soon join in. They take the bidding to $4,100,000 and the home is passed in for further negotiation.
ALBERT PARK, 28 Dinsdale Street
SOI: $2,600,000 – $2,800,000
Sales agent: Oliver Bruce – Marshall White
Crowd: 39
Opening Bid: $2,700,000
Passed in: $2,700,000
After auction: $undisc
Bidders: 1
The auction of this double fronted Victorian home in the sought-after suburb of Albert Park took place in front of a modest crowd. Despite its appealing features and prime location, the auction witnessed limited engagement from potential buyers and was passed in on a single bid $2.7million
BRIGHTON, 146 Cochrane Street
SOI: $2,600,000 – $2,800,000
Sales agent: John Clarkson – Buxton
Crowd: 30
Opening Bid: $2,600,000 VB
Passed in: $2,600,000 VB
Bidders: 0
No crowd action resulted in the property being passed in on a vendor bid.
ELWOOD, 49 Shelley Street
SOI: $2,900,000 – $3,100,000
Sales agent: Torsten Kasper – Chisholm & Gamon
Crowd: 50
Opening Bid: $2,950,000 VB
Passed in: $3,000,000
Bidders: 0
Torsten Kasper opened with a vendor bid of $2,950,000, adds to it with a further vendor bid of $3,000,000 and closes the auction looking for interest in a more private setting.
Shelter by the bay Buyer Bank
We have a growing buyer pool at Shelter ByThe Bay. We are looking for homes for these buyers.
HAMPTON GOLDEN TRIANGLE: Looking for family home, budget $8m to $9m, land over 1400 sqm or room for a court.
HAMPTON - Zali Reynolds Shelter by the bay 0422 576 049
HAMPTON: Looking for family home, budget $3m to $4m.
HAMPTON - Zali Reynolds Shelter by the bay 0422 576 049
Brighton: Looking for family home - modern contemporary, can be a little dated, budget $8m.
BRIGHTON - Contact Mal James 0408 107 988
Brighton: Looking for family home - modern contemporary, up to $12m.
BRIGHTON - Contact Mal James 0408 107 988
BRIGHTON EAST: Local family loooking for a ready to move in bigger home with a budget of $5m - needs to be close to schools.
BRIGHTON EAST - Simone Clarke Shelter by the bay 0400 304 111
BRIGHTON EAST: Move in bigger home with a budget up $8m - Marriage Road Precinct.
BRIGHTON EAST - Simone Clarke Shelter by the bay 0400 304 111
BOROONDARA
Boroondara Week 3 – 15 auctions
Clearance: 60%
Bidderman: 2
Overall – 40 auctions
Clearance: 54%
Bidderman: 1.97
GLEN IRIS, 18 Britten Street
SOI: $2,700,000 – $2,900,000
Sales Agent: Fiona Ansell-Jones
Before auction: $undisc
Bidders: 1
SURREY HILLS, 8 Neath Street
SOI: $4,280,000 – $4,680,000
Sales Agent: Helen Yan – Ray White
Before auction: $undisc
Bidders: 1
HAWTHORN, 79 Manningtree Road
SOI: $2,700,000 – $2,900,000
Sales agent: Campbell Ward – Jellis Craig
Crowd: 50
Opening Bid: $2,700,000
On market: $3,000,000
Under Hammer: $3,250,000
Bidders: 3
At 10am sharp, the first bidder offered $2,700,000 – by 10:08am the hammer had come down, as a result of three bidders duking it out at a rapid fire pace, with the sale price being $3,250,000.
KEW, 10 Lytton Street
SOI: $6,150,000 – $6,750,000
Sales agent:
Crowd: 100
Opening Bid: $6,100,000
On market: $6,750,000
Under Hammer: $8,600,000
Bidders: 3
A big crowd, some big time bidding and street theatre made this an engaging auction. Blew well past the reserve.
HAWTHORN EAST, 3 Deanlea Court
SOI: $2,700,000 – $2,900,000
Sales agent: Grant Samuel – Kay & Burton
Crowd: 33
Opening Bid: $2,800,000
On market: $3,210,000
Under Hammer: $3,365,000
Bidders: 4
Four bidders revealed themselves at this head of the court position auction. Two carried it on the market and tussled until the last.
HAWTHORN, 8 The Boulevard
SOI: $3,600,000 – $3,900,000
Sales agent: Chris Daly – Jellis Craig
Crowd: 80
Opening Bid: $3,600,000
On market: $4,010,000
Under Hammer: $4,060,000
Bidders: 5
The bidding began with a $3,600,000 and was quickly followed by a bid of $3,650,000. Bids between the two parties continued until a 3rd bidder joined the race. A quick break took place with the bid at $3,880,000. Once Mr Ward returned the 4th and 5th bidders began placing quick bids ranging from $1,000 – $8,000. The property was finally sold under the hammer for $4,060,000.
CAMBERWELL, 19 Avenue Road
SOI: $2,050,000 – $2,250,000
Sales agent: Toby Parker – Belle
Crowd: 30
Opening Bid: $2,100,000 VB
Passed in: $2,100,000 VB
Bidders: 0
This auction started off quiet, and remained so throughout from auctioneer Toby Parker’s opening vendor bid; resulting in a pass-in.
GLEN IRIS, 8 Nyora Road
SOI: $3,600,000 – $3,900,000
Sales agent: Julian Badenach – Woodards
Crowd: 40
Opening Bid: $3,500,000 VB
Passed in: $3,500,000 VB
Bidders: 0
To start proceedings a vendor bid of $3,500,000 was placed, after a short break speaking with the vendors, and with no bids to follow, the property was quickly after passed in at $3,500,000.
SURREY HILLS, 6 Middlesex Road
SOI: $3,950,000 – $4,300,000
Sales agent: Mike Beardsley – Jellis Craig
Crowd: 75
Opening Bid: $4,200,000 VB
Passed in: $4,300,000 VB
Bidders: 0
It seems that the large crowd came to catch some autumn sun, not to place bids. The property was passed in and the crowd reluctantly dispersed.
CAMBERWELL, 13 St Johns Avenue
SOI: $3,100,000 – $3,400,000
Sales agent: Anthony Smith – Marshall White
Crowd: 60
Opening Bid: $3,100,000 VB
Passed in: $3,100,000 VB
Bidders: 0
Auctioneer Anthony Smith tried to encourage the crowd by opening with a vendor bid of $3,100,000, however this wasn’t enough to spark bidding activity, therefore the property was passed in.
HAWTHORN, 40 Illawarra Road
SOI: $3,500,000 – $3,800,000
Sales agent: Scott Patterson – Kay & Burton
Crowd:100
Opening Bid: $3,500,000
Passed in: $3,610,000
After auction: $undisc
Bidders: 1
Straight out of the gate, bidder 1 spoke up with $3,500,000, to a quiet crowd, so auctioneer Scott Patterson pitched in a vendor bid of $3,600,000. Apart from a $10,000 rise from the initial bidder, no further activity ensued, resulting in the property being passed in.
HAWTHORN, 41 Chrystobel Crescent
SOI: $6,500,000 – $7,000,000
Sales agent: Desiree Wakim – Marshall White
Crowd: 78
Opening Bid: $6,600,000
Passed in: $6,850,000
After auction: $undisc
Bidders: 2
Two bidders battled from the $6,600,000 opening bid. The lead buyer wanted to know if it was on the market at $6,820,000. It wasn’t and passed in to them soon after.
CANTERBURY, 50 Faversham Road
SOI: $3,500,000 – $3,850,00
Sales agent: Elsa Li – Buxton
Crowd: 40
Opening Bid: $3,300,000
Passed in: $3,345,000
Bidders: 2
An initial bid of $3,300,000 was placed and soon after a $25,000. The first bidder placed an additional $10,000 bid. The final offer of the auction from the second bidder for $3,345,000, the property was then passed at this price.
KEW, 6 Dean Street
SOI: $3,000,000 – $3,300,000
Sales agent: Sophie Su – Kay & Burton
Crowd: 0
Opening Bid: $3,000,000 VB
On market: $3,460,000
Under Hammer: $3,990,000
Bidders: 7
The $3,000,000 opening vendor bid seemed to belie the bidding war that was to come, with no less than seven bidders duking it out for the keys to this property, declared on the market at $3,460,000 and the hammer coming down at $3,990,000
BALWYN, 18 Chatfield Avenue
SOI: $5,500,000 – $6,050,000
Sales agent: Annabelle Feng – RT Edgar
Crowd: 78
Opening Bid: $5,400,000 VB
Passed in: $6,270,000
Bidders: 2
HAMPTON CLASSIC HOME FOR SALE NOW
4 Bedrooms, 3 Bathrooms, 2 Car Spaces
women in Bayside real estate who are making a difference
Shelter By The Bay: Simone Clarke (0400 304 111) Zali Reynolds (0422 576 049)
Two of Melbourne’s top real estate agents are working in Bayside. Congrats to Matthew Pillios of Kay and Burton at no 2 and perhaps even more impressive, as she is not one of the corporate big boys, at No 5 is Zali Reynolds of Shelter Real Estate. The full article can be found in Herald Sun May 17th – author Nathan Mawby. Congrats to the rest of the Top 5, great agents whom we have bought off a number of times Helen Yan, Carla Fetter and Sam Rigopoulos.
Definitions & Data Points
NEW TO JAMES BUY SELL? WELCOME – THE JARGON OF 4 SEASONS and 100 AUCTION TESTS: 100 Auction Test is where we randomly select Top End homes before they go to auction and then we turn up and report on all results, so as you can get a true picture of the current Inner Melbourne Top End Market. We do it 4 times a year in the major markets.
Opening Market M1 usually sets a direction till Easter (sometimes the whole year)
May Market M2 post Easter leading into Winter trends – capricious market usually.
Spring Market M3 is Footy Finals and Pre-Cup – a major buy sell season. Can see a market turnaround either way, coming out of winter.
Christmas Market M4 is from November till Santa comes. Often the hardest market to sell in, due to oversupply relative to unsatisfied demand.
Demand – Bidderman. How many bidders per auction? A very accurate measurement of market depth when taken over a wide sample. Number of Bidders / Number of Auctions.
1 bidder average – Falling Market. 2 bidders – Rising Market. 3 bidder average – On Fire
Supply – Stock Levels. It’s a nuanced opinion measurement, more so than scientific, as there can be a flood of unrenovated homes, but the market wants ready to move in.
Clearance Price % – Many data points give exaggerated readings as agents choose to leave out the bad news (unsolds). We choose the sample before auction and track down every result. The higher the clearance rate, the more agreement between buyer and seller on price and if Bidderman is also strong this shows prices are rising.
Measurements: Under 60% falling. 60-70% some stability but easing if below 65% consistently. 70%-80% rising. 80%+ On fire.
GLOSSARY
PPP’s – All homes and all buyers have 3 characteristics. A good deal for a buyer is when their PPP’s match the homes PPP’s.
Position (land location) + Property (building) + Price = 3P’s. A buyer can adjust all three to get what they really, really want and to meet the market.
Whilst a home has 3 P’s, a seller has only 1 P they can adjust – Price. Although a good seller and agent can, prior to the sale, affect the P of Property through Presentation.
Overall there are 3P’s and Position is most often, the most important.
A-Graders – If the home’s PPP’s are desirable to many in the market we call that an A-Grader. However, it’s all the 3P’s that need to be desirable. You can have a great location, great building and be overpriced in which case you have only 2 desirable P’s – we call that a B-Grader. C-Graders have 1 or no desirable PPP’s and the only usual desirable P is Price – a weak one – this is why C-Graders are poor investments.
Volcanoes – When the market is hot you see increasing numbers of 4 or more bidders on homes. We call that a volcano. 1 or no bidders we call a duck.
Wounded Underbidders – Buyers who miss, go harder (more money) next time to avoid the hurt of missing out again. When there are multiple unhappy buyers, who have missed multiple times (wounded underbidders), the market rises quickly.
Cautious Buyers – Non-Bidders – Potential buyers who see lots of pass-ins, tend to not want to bid because their fear of overpaying is greater than their desire to buy and get out of the market.
Stales – Number and length of time a property remains unsold. The older the stale, the weaker the price (as a general rule). The more stales, the weaker the market as they clog up the market creating an oversupply.
Off-market – Homes that are for sale but are not advertised in the mainstream media like realestate.com.au. Over say $5 million there are considerably more homes off market than on market. More than ½ the homes we buy and sell are off-market.
Pre-market – Homes that some agents say are Off-market. Pre-market homes are homes coming to market but are not yet advertised and are often not really for sale at the moment.
On-market – usually refers to homes sold with major advertising say on Domain or realestate.com.au
Not for sale (and the 4 ducks) – there are many homes that are also said to be Off-market or Pre-market homes that are not really for sale. Why? Seller is testing the market. Agent is testing the market. Agent has no work. Seller wants a free valuation or some company.
For a home to be really for sale off-market, it needs to pass the 4 Duck Test.
- Agent Authority 2. Contract of Sale 3. Asking Price 4. Easy Access.
Good ól Boring Process – When you are cooking a cake – do you get your best results by making up the ingredients, the amounts and throwing them into together, hoping for the best? If you do great, but I’m not hungry. A good recipe is a good process. And in property a good recipe is 3 Questions starting with what do I really really want? If you can’t work that out, then engage a good agent. When you answer that question, you go to the 2nd and 3rd questions and make good decisions. Good decisions lead to good outcomes – for you.
Market Prices – Every price is supposedly a market price. It’s a lazy concept.
Market price is a living organism – lets imagine it’s like a human. The market is the blood, the circulatory system. The PPP’s are the bones, the skin, the main organs and we agents and agent marketing are the lipstick, perfume, clothes. All 3 – blood, bones and lipstick make up a price and its attractiveness, it’s not just the market.
Market Values – Values are opinions. All opinions have vested interests and biases. What the council, the bank, the agent, the buyer, the seller values a home at will all be different.
Last year two valuers came to a home I was looking to refinance – $4m home – 3 weeks apart the valuations were approx. $700,000 different – that’s qualified valuers – same criteria.
Market Value v Market Price – One is an opinion before the deal and one is the actual result after the deal.
Quote Range: It is thought to be an agent estimate of final price – it is not. See Quoting
Under the Hammer: is when a home is sold to a buyer under the auctioneer’s hammer that is on the street or in the home in front of crowd when we says sold – it can be just clapping his hands together – under the hammer refers to the old gavel now only sometimes used.
On the market: (different from on-market) is a colloquial term that an agent or auctioneer uses to state we are now at a level that it will be sold (now) even if there is no more bidding.
What affects markets?
Demand and Supply – yes sir re – that is what really affects markets.
Some Key Supply Variants
- Government restrictions
- Lag Times in supply of demand changes
- Builders and materials
Some Key Demand Variants
- Money – Bank credit and community wealth
- Overseas Buyers, Interstate Buyers, Migration
- Stock Markets and World Events
Predicting the Future
Economists, banking leaders and other market predictors are like horse race “experts” – entertaining but of little long-term value. In 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020 the pundits on where the market was going got it wrong, dead wrong 4 from 4. A coin toss should have got at least 2 from 4. The only pundit we listen to with respect, is the one that says they don’t really know.
Rising / Falling / Easing – Humans are herd animals.
When there are a number of pass-ins the market eases. When combined with increasing stock coming on and more stales, the market falls more sharply.
Increasing numbers of wounded underbidders and less stock the market edges up – when wounded underbidders combine with loose bank lending and tight stock and increasing migration, then market prices begin to run away.
A home can easily be 5% more or less in a week (1 bidder drops away) and parts of the market can change by 5% in a month. A property can change by 10% during the length of an auction campaign. It is very similar to the ASX in terms of its variability – it’s just not as transparent.
Individual property prices are very fluid, they are far from fixed as many think and claim.
Market Conundrum – often the best time to buy or sell is when everybody else doesn’t want to – eg counter to the markets.
Buy or sell timing maxims we live by? Assuming it’s an A-grader. If you really, really like it, buy now. If you really, really like it never sell.
Which brings us back to Doe. Doe is dear, a female deer. This is why 10,000 people read Marketnews.com.au. It’s the only property thing that makes no sense (smiley face).
Underquoting – is when an advertised price (an agent quote) is below one of
- Agent estimates of value or
- A written buyer offer or
- The Vendor reserve
An agent quote is not a valuation, it is not a fixed sticker price – a quote is seen by my industry as a vehicle to attract bees (buyers) to the honey (home) and that’s ok, if legal.
However underquoting is unethical but widespread. Underquoting has been endemic in the last week of an auction campaign in the markets of 2015, 2016, 2019, 2020 and 2021 – a new falling market may be different.
Underquoting is a badge of honour for some selling agents – for god sake there is cheering from the rafters with every $1,000,000 over reserve. It’s celebrated not put into balance or condemned in the media. Please note sometimes genuine market forces create $1,000,000 over reserve when it’s not an underquote (celebrate then) – but when it is happening week in and week out and to the same people and same companies, then they must be very unlucky or incompetent agents or they are serial underquoters.
Underquoting can work in a rising market – work for the agent and seller that is, not the buyers.
Underquoting can hurt inexperienced buyers in 4 bidder auctions BUT
In many instances in falling markets and with B and C Graders it actually hurts the sellers – e.g. duck or 1 bidder auctions.
Underquoting is fixable with a buyer education program as to what a quote is and what it can and cannot do AND moveable (not fixed) step up and step down written legal quoting AND timely stated auction reserves say ? days out from an auction AND mostly an industry desire, but there is minimal desire within my industry or the CAV or the government.
Legal Step Quoting: A term we invented to explain moves/strategies in quoting. We used to have a problem with it, but now we see it as sensible practise on behalf of the seller – so long as it is down legally and actually done. Step quoting if done legally is simply moving the written quote during the campaign in line with offers, changing or firming vendor reserves and any changing agent’s opinion of likely value.
Illegal Step Quoting: Is when the agent has a written quote, then tells you a higher quote on the phone and then an even high quote after you offer.
Legal Quoting: It is legal (and we consider ethical and professional) for the agent to quote above the seller’s reserve providing it meets the other two key criteria.
Legal Quoting: When it’s on the market and unexpected market forces take it well past expectations. Our only argument is how often can that happen to one agent or agency before it becomes obviously illegal.
Quoting even with the best intentions (and we have them) is not a perfect science, just as market valuations and your buying estimates are not.
James Buy Sell Process – Ethical quoting brings more real buyers and sellers to you:
Early Campaign: We quote to attract buyers but not below what we reasonably think the home may go for. Where the seller has a firm price, we do not quote below that price either.
We suggest the seller keeps an open mind on reserve (early days) if their main focus is to sell.
If the seller has a firm fixed reserve and it’s too high, then not only will he or she be unlikely to sell but he or she will get no feedback on price and therefore he or she could compound the selling issue down the track – a double negative for selling – eventually getting a lower price.
Middle of Campaign: We may Step Quote (change the quote, preferably up, but sometimes down to more accurately represent the sellers thought on possible reserve and/or feedback from buyers and/or if we have had an offer than has not been accepted)
Advertised final week of Campaign: We genuinely try and have the quote reflecting a seller reserve and where James Buy Sell now thinks the majority of buyers are. Please note: it is not an exact science, and we cannot predict all buyers (often buyers do not tell the door agent anything or say lower amounts – both sides can be guilty of misrepresentations).
We care about buyers and our quoting reputation. If you do a building inspection in the last week of the campaign and the reserve ends up outside the quote, please ring us and we will probably refund any professional building inspections up to $600.
The current Underquoting enquiry’s timing relates to a forthcoming election, is running into a falling market where underquoting is less noticeable.
The best way to deal with underquoting (currently) is through your own quality research or a quality buyer agent or if selling then an ethical selling agent.