The Gold Coast Bulletin

Buyers in value shortfall

- ALISTER THOMSON alister.thomson@news.com.au

APARTMENT buyers are having to find up to $60,000 to settle purchases because “highly conservati­ve” valuers are lowballing apartment prices in the wake of the royal commission into banking, says a real estate veteran.

Knight Frank’s head of project marketing Chris Litfin said homeowners were scrambling to make up the difference between the contract price and the conservati­ve valuations.

It can be years between a buyer signing a contract for an off-the-plan apartment and settlement being called, by which time the market can soften. Banks will generally lend 90 per cent of the loan-tovalue ratio (LVR), however buyers have to make up the difference if there is a shortfall between the valuation and purchase price.

In one case, a buyer for a unit in a Mermaid Beach building signed a contract for $590,000 and the valuation came back $70,000 lower at $520,000.

The buyer could not get finance before the settlement deadline, had his contract cancelled and lost the deposit.

Mr Litfin said some valuers were being highly conservati­ve in the wake of the royal commission on banking.

“I believe there is a disconnect between valuers and buyers,” he said.

“In our experience we are seeing buyers actively out there in the marketplac­e and their assessment of value is higher than what the valuers are reporting.

“We’re seeing valuations up to $60,000 lower than purchase prices in some cases.

“But mostly the buyers have been able to come up with the difference.”

However, Gold Coast valuers and mortgage brokers say this is an extreme example and most valuations have come back either above or close to the purchase price.

Herron Todd White director and valuer Tod Gillespie said valuations coming $60,000 below the purchase price were rare.

“I don’t remember the last time I saw a valuation that was $60,000 below purchase price,” he said.

“We’re seeing things that are $20,000 under but it is market dependent.”

He said the market had changed in the past two years, so buyers signing contracts in 2017 were experienci­ng a different environmen­t now. The unit market peaked two years ago but is declining now.

However, Mr Gillespie rejected accusation­s valuers were acting conservati­vely due to factors such as the royal commission.

“We’re interpreti­ng sales happening now. There is no external influence on how we do a valuation. We look at the market evidence.”

Mortgage broker James Hasselle, who runs Mortgage Choice offices in Miami and Burleigh Heads, said valuations had been strong for his customers buying off-the-plan in southern projects.

“We had five in Palm Beach settle at the beginning of the year, all valued up,” he said.

“The worst I had was an apartment contract for $576,000 where the valuation came back at $555,000.

“It is nothing like we had during the GFC with projects like the Hilton in Surfers Paradise where valuations were $100,000 below the purchase price.”

Mr Hasselle said there was always a risk when buying off the plan and people who did so must ensure they had something extra put away in case the developmen­t did not support the price they were paying.

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