Property Price
How to Negotiate Property
Price
When you buy real estate overseas, it's
a lot like buying souvenirs at a local market; negotiating is expected. The property price will go up if you appear
too eager…unwittingly insult the vendor, and the whole deal may be off.
Irish-Romanian property
price
I was reminded of this when I was in Romania a few weeks ago. A
developer I work with told me about a deal he helped put together…which he had to watch fall apart. An Irish
developer, the story goes, planning a project near Bucharest, was in the market for a type of property (had been in
the market for two years, in fact). My Romanian contact had found a suitable property, and the price was
right.
Everything was set. The Irish developer’s local contacts lined up a
meeting between him and the land owner. Big mistake. I'm told the "lieutenants" do the deals in Romania. Bringing
in the final decision maker to meet the land owner wasn’t a good move.
Irish developers do business in a different way to Romanian land
owners.
This Irish developer sat at the table, and said “I want the property
and I’ll give you 30 million euro for it”. After all, that was the asking price. But when he saw how eager our
Irish friend was, the Romanian gentleman decided that 30 million euro was no longer the price. The price, he calmly
informed the room, was now higher. The Irish developer told the Romanian land owner what to do with his higher
price (in language nowhere near as polite as that) and stormed out of the room.
Too much interest inflates property
price

House in Romania, Europe |
Months of work went out the window in a matter of seconds because of cultural
differences. The Irish developer showed too much interest, and his normal business manner caused him to lose the
deal.
The same thing can happen with properties that cost far less than 30
million euro … especially in a hot market. You show too much interest and the asking price can go up right in front
of your eyes. Don’t show enough interest or try to keep the seller on the hook, and someone else (with less sense)
can come along and buy the property at an inflated price.
Whether or not you pay an inflated price to make the deal will mostly
depend on what the purpose of the purchase is--where does it fall on the primary residence to pure investment
continuum? Paying a premium for a property you like, a possible primary residence, can make sense. But the closer
it is to being a pure investment, the more you must assess whether the appreciation will continue…or will the
bubble burst.
Base your negotiation on local property
prices
Many buyers from wealthy Western countries think property is cheap
when they go into Third-World markets. They compare local prices to Hometown, USA prices, and like the difference.
What you should be thinking is how the local property price compares to other local prices, and negotiate from
there.

Wen buying a property overseas, check the local
pricing competition first
You should take the time to do your due diligence on local pricing.
There is nothing more irritating than to see a bunch of amateurs coming into a market, bidding up prices because
they have money and think they know what they are doing. With the U.S. market looking a bit thin, developers are
bouncing down to Latin America looking for land to develop. Many are acting like the Irish guy did in Romania, i.e.
coming down with a big ego and lots of cash. That is the worst combination. Although they are professionals in
their home state, they usually don’t know anything about the country they land in. They are amateurs in a
marketplace new to them.
Don’t act like an amateur. Do your due diligence, pay attention, and
don’t overpay just because the property price seems cheap to you.
Lief Simon
For International Living
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