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20
Nov 2021
Property Gold is a monthly column written by independent property consultant, Alex Goldstein. With more than 17 years’ experience, Alex helps his clients to buy and sell residential property in some of the most desirable locations in Yorkshire and beyond. This month, Alex shares his advice on how buyers can put themselves in the best position - and it's not all about offering the highest price.
Ask any estate agent how many potential buyers come to them and say they are ‘cash’ and they will usually sigh and roll their eyes. This term is often thrown around quite nonchalantly and buyers need to be wary of their phrasing.
Cash in the eyes of an estate agent, really does mean cash. It is sitting in a UK bank account ready to be transferred to their solicitor. However, to some buyers it can mean part is from their savings account and the rest from their bank - in the form of a mortgage. Why is this a problem? Whilst having a mortgage isn’t an issue per se, it does mean that an agent (and their vendor client) have extra hoops to jump through, which usually creates time delays. This more prominent currently as lenders are being even more cautious, plus staff cutbacks and backlogs don’t help. So in other words, you are deemed to be a higher risk as a buyer.
Another misused phrase is ‘I am sold’. This could mean several things: ‘under offer’, ‘exchanged’ or ‘completed’. This one phrase with three possible interpretations, all of which have different meanings, can damage your reputation if misused. Being under offer (or sold subject to contract) is where you have agreed to accept an offer from a buyer and memorandums of sale have been issued. Having exchanged is the legally binding part and is what property professionals always push for, as there’s rarely any going back after this point. Completed means you are formally over the line and own the property.
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