An EA makes a valuation based on what the current market points to. EA's were and obviously still are blamed for pushing the price up on property, when the fact of the matter is/was prices went up and people continued to pay the price and often beyond it. If you are in negative equity now it may seem plausible to try and lay the blame on others doorsteps, but in the cold light of day repsonsible adults should look at their own decision making processes and evaluate them accordingly.
ong,
I think the Law of Supply and Demand should be blamed.
It's not that long ago when Banks were criticised for their strict lending policies ("How do I stand for a Mortgage? You dont, you kneel"). Yes they lost the plot more recently, consumers also lost the plot ("I have to get on the property ladder").
So if consumers were queing to buy property (remember the photos?) and developers were building to meet the anticipated demand and banks were meeting the demand for mortgages and Estate Agents were seeking the best price for their clients (the house seller) etc, etc .... who is to blame?
Maybe its Architects..... for all the houses they designed and helped to get built, thus flooding the market????
The answer - we are all to blame for buying into the notion that we could sustain an economy built on selling houses (apartments) to each other. But then hindsight is always 20/20.
I'm not in negative equity.
I agree with your basic point, but note that its a well known fact that the man on top of the Clapham Omnibus is susceptible to marketing and in my opinion this marketing should be fair and reasonable.
I don't think that continuing to market higher and higher prices for property is either fair or reasonable at a time when comparative studies with similar properties in developed countries showed properties here was massively over-valued.
I think that people involved in the selling of property have a better-than-layperson's knowledge of the markets and should have a similarly competent knowledge of comparative values.
I think this places on them a duty of care to purchasers and its not good enough to be at the mercy of unqualified successes who take their 1.5% and don't even stand over what's in their brochures on a fitness-for-purpose basis, never mind giving fair value.
One reason its so easy to point the finger at Estate Agents is that the do have a proviliged position in the deal-making process and they are not the ordinary man on the Clapham Omnibus.
This goes far beyond the need for regulation of the profession and way into accountability and liability.
I agree that where competent professional balanced advice has been given then no blame should attach.
I think that the profession in relation to the buying and selling of property is biased in favour of the seller.
I foresee that this "natural" bias will lead to its opposite - the development of property-finding professionals.
FWIW
ONQ.
"I think that the profession in relation to the buying and selling of property is biased in favour of the seller."
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