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Online auctions ‘work for agents and vendors’ insists digital operator

An online auction platform which works with estate agents says this method of selling homes works, with four sales in one county in just one month.

Recently the HomeOwners’ Alliance produced a report highly critical of online auctions but now SDL Auctions, working in partnership with East Midlands agency Newton Fallowell, says four Lincolnshire properties “have flown out of the door in just one month.”

One bungalow within the four mentioned sold in just one week; the property is of non-standard construction, so the plot was offered with the potential for redevelopment, subject to planning permission and sold for £56,000.

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“This is further evidence of the growing momentum of online auction sales. Both vendors and buyers are attracted by the transparency of the process, the fixed timeline for the auction and the short completion time when the virtual hammer falls” says Jason Lee, national sales manager at SDL Auctions. 

Just over a year ago the platform began working with Newton Fallowell and Goodchilds; now the agency’s Mark Newton says: “Our partnership with SDL Auctions means we are utilising all methods of sale, reaching more potential buyers and driving the best possible price within a fixed time frame.

“This partnership means that we’re not like many estate agents who only sell property in one way – we listen to our vendors’ circumstances and offer the best advice for them and their property.”

The HomeOwners’ Alliance has accused estate agents of “milking buyers for profits” through online auctions, which the organisation describes as “murky”. It says online auctions - frequently called the Modern Method of Auction - are capitalising on a high level of fall-throughs in the current poor private treaty market.

But it says: “Our investigation suggests some high-street agents are still getting to grips with how this [reservation fee] works. This must be paid upfront by the winning bidder at the auction’s close by debit or credit card or bank transfer and can be anything upwards of 2.5 per cent + VAT. There is usually a minimum reservation fee of at least £5,000 + VAT.”

The HOA continues: “And it [the reservation fee] doesn’t usually form part of the overall price paid; it’s an add-on which goes straight to the auctioneers and estate agent.”

The alliance says that the reservation fee - even if shared equally between an estate agent and an auction platform - means the agent stands to receive more from the buyer than would be the case from a seller when using a traditional commission basis, particularly on lower-price properties. 

Estate Agent Today carried the HOA story here and a response by IAMSold here.

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  • Richard Copus

    The Homeowners Alliance is quite correct. The extremely high commission paid by purchasers under most of these online methods is unconscionable. It affects the amount the vendor will achieve for his property, it reduces bidders and sometimes means that a property does not sell because it does not quite reach its reserve. Most vendors are not told this when they sign up to a no fee contract and they are not told that the primary duty of care of the agent falls to the buyer and not the seller in these circumstances. It is hardly surprising that Trading Standards are currently looking into online models of auction. There is definitely a place for online auctions and they will grow but not in this way.

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