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How much is 'proceedable' worth?

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Comments

  • badger09
    badger09 Posts: 11,698 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper
    badger09 said:
    wjr4 said:
    comeandgo said:
    Never ever first time buyer.
    Why is this? 
    Because, often due to inexperience (obviously as FTBs ;)) they can be very demanding over the tiniest detail, very very impatient, and very nervous. Some vendors avoid them like the plague, although not every FTB is the same  - just as not every vendor is the same.
    Most purchasers are inexperienced. A lot of people only move house 3-4 times in their lifetime, often 10-20 years between moves.

    Without FTBs, there would be some seriously long chains out there, taking months, or even years to complete. The longer the chains, the more likely they are to collapse. I'd rather have a FTB buying my house, compared to a downward chain, which would probably start with a FTB anyway. The chain is only as strong as it's weakest link.
    People own houses between buying and selling though, so they understand some of the language more and also that houses need maintaining.   

    We lost a FTB after 2 weeks because someone told them that we could build a house in the front garden of the house that we were selling to them.  🤷‍♀️

    jimbog said:
    Falafels said:


    If you read threads on here, you often see ftb's getting really worked up about issues which seasoned homeowners wouldn't think twice about. It all gets very wearing for the vendor.

    I had an important message from my FTB before exchange who had identified a 'serious roof issue'. 
    The slipped slate cost £45 to fix
    I rest my case.
  • Crashy_Time
    Crashy_Time Posts: 13,386 Forumite
    10,000 Posts Seventh Anniversary Name Dropper
    It would depend entirely on how quickly I needed to sell and how sensitive I was to dropping price. Context is everything.
    Also, bear in mind the FTB will probably come back and demand more off once the survey results come back and scare the pants off them.  Just read some of the "help with survey" threads on here......
    Exactly, the banks are definitely applying the brakes to silly lending now, and overall that is GREAT for society.
    I rather think it will be GREAT for investors, speculators and property investors. This is just a buying opportunity for profiteering without 'ordinary' people, who need a mortgage to be able to buy, competing.
    I don't agree with it, but that's the reality.

    So you think "investors" are going to step in and snap up all the property that ordinary people want to buy with a mortgage? Sometimes you have to step back and consider other alternatives beyond your own VI IMO.
    I think it will be the same as investors 'buying the dip' on the stock exchange. Make no mistake, there will never be cheap housing for all. Property as in investment is resilient. Quite possibly the most dependable asset to own. As I've said before, with low interest rates and an overheating stock market, property is seen as a safe investment. I am in the process of buying now. I got a good deal, but was waiting for the much predicted crash. It's been kicked down the road so many times, with extended stimulus provisions. It may end up as a myth, or at least much milder than has been predicted. There is still so much demand.
    I don`t, are you saying that you think "investors" are going to snap up all the property that ordinary people would want to buy with a mortgage?
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