The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Market motivation

Online real estate auctions try to shake up sales with novel approach

- AMY SMART

An online auction for a luxury home in Abbotsford, B.C., is drawing attention for its novel approach, which some observers say has potential to inspire new sales even if it doesn’t have any notable impact on the housing landscape.

Bidding opens Tuesday on the 12-bedroom, 10-bath restored train power station known as the “Sumas Powerhouse,” which was previously listed for $5 million and has an assessed value of $2.2 million on B.C. Assessment.

It’s one of three properties in Canada listed on global firm Concierge Auction’s website. A news release says it’s targeting Chinese buyers and will be sold in cooperatio­n with Re/Max.

Scott Pate, a project sales manager with Concierge, said luxury real estate has been a buyers market for quite some time in both the United States and Canada and auctions are a way to give sellers more certainty.

“We’ll bring the market to this sale instead of the normal way of selling real estate, which is putting it on the market and waiting for an offer, which could take years and years,” he said. “The market is motivated because there’s a fear of missing out. This auction is going to end on a certain day ... so it creates a lot of interest.”

Real estate auctions are typical in Australia and New Zealand, but the model is less common in Canada. A real estate agent in Victoria tried the in-person auction approach in 2016 with a property in the city’s upscale Rockland neighbourh­ood, holding a public auction featuring a pianist playing a grand piano in the ballroom at the event.

But local media reported that although 60 people filled the room, only one was an interested buyer so the auction was cancelled. In 2017, the B.C. Supreme Court accepted a $1.8-million offer for the historic mansion in foreclosur­e.

Tom Davidoff, director of the University of British Columbia’s Centre for Urban Economics and Real Estate, said online auctions aren’t all that different from the way we buy and sell homes traditiona­lly in Canada, especially in cases where there are multiple interested buyers and a bidding war.

That could make it comfortabl­e for Canadian buyers to transition to the model.

“It certainly could be a direction the market could go. In segments where the market is slow today, people will try different approaches to move product, so it’s certainly possible,” he said.

But beyond creating another way for potential buyers to bid, he said he doesn’t believe there will be an impact on the market in terms of housing prices or competitio­n.

“This will have no impact on the market overall,” Davidoff said.

In Toronto, On the Block sells real estate both the traditiona­l way and through its online auction platform but doesn’t focus on luxury sales.

Co-founder Daniel Steinfeld said online auctions offer a way around some of the frustratio­ns that come with silent bidding wars under the traditiona­l system.

As part of the company’s model, buyers must sign agreements to make the value of their bids public while their identities remain protected. Real estate board regulation­s otherwise prohibit real estate agents from disclosing the substance of competing bids.

 ?? CP PHOTO/CONCIERGE AUCTIONS ?? A house at 39623 Old Yale Road in Abbotsford, B.C. is shown.
CP PHOTO/CONCIERGE AUCTIONS A house at 39623 Old Yale Road in Abbotsford, B.C. is shown.

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