Saturday, March 20, 2010

Crafty buyer secures the block lot

PROPERTY

A Queensland buyer has snapped up four luxury townhouses in a mortgagee sale handled by PRDnationwide New Farm. The Brisbane investor paid almost $6 million cash for the properties at 69 Kingsholme Street, New Farm, on Brisbane’s inner north.
Nick McGuire, director of PRDnationwide New Farm, said while the four townhouses were offered for sale separately, the buyer was eager to secure all four. “The developer had the properties on the market for one year through another agency who didn’t make a sale,” he said.
“The developer’s bank took possession and appointed me to sell the properties.” After 150 inspections, five auctions, 20 registered bidders, and 15 contracts the buyer was successful.
“The buyer wanted all four properties so he could control the body corporate and make repairs and alterations to the properties. The four town homes will provide a good passing income and represent a strategic piece of land for future capital growth,” he said. Mr McGuire said the dominant buying groups were Generation X and Baby Boomers.
“We undertook a thorough marketing campaign over four weeks and had in excess of 150 qualified buyers through the properties,” he said.
“We received 14 cash contracts prior to auction and had competitive bidding for all five auctions on the day.” The properties were passed in at auction but sold one week after. Jason Andrews, director of freelance auctioneering firm Jason Andrews Auctioneers, conducted the auctions.
“There was a room full of people with plenty of registered bidders very excited by these properties,” he said.
“There is huge interest in mortgagee sales as people are looking for a good buy and they always draw out a crowd,” he said. The townhouses range in size from 254sq up to a massive 510sq m spread over three or four bedrooms. They all feature roof terraces, city views and pools.
"The result was the cause of the pressure put on all buyers by the exhaustive marketing campaign and intense public display of activity,” Mr McGuire said.
“Everyone who wanted to buy had to deal, because they could all see the competition. It was a terrific result for all parties.”