Property buyer FOMO eases as lockdowns end, more listings hit the market
Updated: Nov 17, 2021
Fear of missing out among potential property buyers is starting to ease as more homes are listed for sale this spring. But buyers hoping to pick up a bargain might have another think coming, with bullish prices still being achieved for the most sought-after homes.
“That’s [FOMO] definitely settled down, without a doubt,” said Peter Kelaher, director of PK Property Buyer’s agents in Sydney. “Buyers are fatigued, there’s been a natural attrition in the marketplace.”
He said clear distinctions had emerged between A-grade properties that were “boiling”, B-grade (“simmering”) and C-grade (“lukewarm”), compared to the autumn when buyers were paying a premium even for properties on main roads or with inherent problems.
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There had also been a fear of missing out during lockdown when buyers were stuck at home trawling listings websites, but that had shifted as people could now move around and make travel plans, he said. With buyers distracted from their property search, sellers were keen to sell prior but he expects another tick up in the market from February when buyers return refreshed from the summer break.
OH Property principal buyers agent Henny Stier is seeing a shift in the market, with some buyers keen to get in before Christmas but other auctions drawing only one bidder or passing in. While A-grade homes are selling fast, at very strong prices, she is now receiving emails advertising price adjustments of 5 to 10 per cent for C or D-grade homes.
“People’s salaries haven’t gone up 25 per cent or 30 per cent in a year. The market has, but people’s salaries haven’t,” she said. “The numbers at open for inspections are much lower. A lot of people have better things to do now on a Saturday.”Rather than FOMO from buyers, she now sees it from sellers.
“They’re realising, ‘we might have missed the market’. Vendors are usually three months behind everyone else,” she said. “The agents are telling me they are getting into so many appraisals.”
Michelle May, of the eponymous buyer’s agency, has seen fewer bidders at auctions, but still big results for standout homes. One on the weekend had a guide of $3 million and sold for $4.03 million. “The craziness has been dampened down somewhat because there is more stock,” she said.
“Obviously, the buyer pool gets a little bit shallower [before Christmas] which is great, instead of 17 registered bidders you have five. With five it’s still going to be a strong auction but the craziness is not going to take hold as much.” In Melbourne, which exited lockdown more recently, Wakelin Property Advisors director Jarrod McCabe is seeing a few worries about missing out, but not to the same extent as earlier this year. “From a buyer’s perspective, the first two to three weeks after the lockdown eased things felt very manic and there was a lot of tension and a lot of desperation,” he said.
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*Elizabeth Radman (Domain.Com.Au November 2021)
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