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Sales rates at four major Barfoot & Thompson auctions ranged from 25% to 35% - more homes selling in negotiations immediately after being passed in

Property
Sales rates at four major Barfoot & Thompson auctions ranged from 25% to 35% - more homes selling in negotiations immediately after being passed in

Barfoot & Thompson sold 35% of properties under the hammer at three out of four of the agency's auctions monitored by interest.co.nz in the last week.

Clearance rates of just over a third were achieved at the company's main auctions on the North Shore, at Manukau and at the Friday morning auction at Shortland St in the CBD.

The Wednesday afternoon auction in the CBD achieved a clearance rate of 25% (see table below).

A noticeable feature at several of this week's auctions was a higher number of properties being postponed or withdrawn from sale after the Order of Sale had been published but before the auction commenced.

However there also appeared to be a higher than normal number of properties that were sold as a result of the private negotiations that occurred in the auction room immediately after the properties were passed in.

That suggests some vendors may be starting to accept that the market has softened recently and are prepared to be more realistic in their price expectations.

The full results of all four Barfoot & Thompson auctions monitored by interest.co.nz, with prices of the properties that sold and details of those that did not, can be found on our Auction/Sales Results page.

Results of Selected Barfoot & Thompson Auctions
Auction details Auctioned Sold*  Passed in No bids
Manukau Sports Bowl, 22 November 37 13 24 13
Shortland St, CBD, 23 November 52 13 39 20
Bruce Mason Centre, Takapuna, 24 November 49 17 32 19
Shortland St CBD , 25 November 17 6 11 7

*Sold means sold under the hammer. 

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4 Comments

However there also appeared to be a higher than normal number of properties that were sold as a result of the private negotiations that occurred in the auction room immediately after the properties were passed in.

The figures for this never seem to be given. Apparently these are still considered auction sales. It is interesting to see how many properties get no bids however it would be useful to know what a property bid up to before it was passed in.

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Would require legislation as it would go a long way to removing agency onbehalf shil bids that are used to push prices up by fully exposing the last genuine independant bid.

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Zach - you could look up the harcourts auction results and pull stats from that.
http://www.northshoreauctions.co.nz/index.php/results

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The days of being bloody minded and refusing to accept a lower offer may be coming to an end
The mood has changed possibly
My experience was very different 15 months ago demanding 25% more than the highest auction bid and receiving it a week later.
Good luck to any vendor today trying to hold out for 25% more.
Back to reality

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