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Sunday, August 27, 2006

So you Want to move house?


If you are tring to get on the property ladder or desperate to move to a house with more space for the kids then read on.
We have a report for you this week which was originally aired on BBC TV and is a reminder of the pitfalls involved with dealing with estate agents.

We invite you to add your comments to this post and remind you that kentrealestate.co.uk was setup specifically to help combat these problems.

We offer a clear advantage to any one trying to sell their property without having to use an estate agent.
Investigation.
Lying to customers, faked signatures, false passports and dodgy deals with developers. An undercover investigation reveals the secret world of estate agents' dirty tricks. .........
My boss congratulates me on getting an offer on a flat that has been overvalued by £60,000. The newly-wed young couple viewing the property are stretched to their financial limit. But my manager is happy.
He takes me aside and explains how to convince a surveyor that the flat in London's fashionable Notting Hill is worth more than it is. He calls it "slightly simmering" - I call it cooking the books.
The scenario is not uncommon, in fact the manager himself boasts: "This kind of s*** happens all the time ... that's why we estate agents are here."
That night I head to the weekly sales meeting at Sloane Square. It's held at 7pm on a Friday night - when other people are relaxing in the pub. Heckled
Under-performers are heckled and those who have done the most deals are applauded and given champagne and £50. Young agents in Cheatems exchange high-fives as they swap tales of gazumping and over-valuing.
I'm unaccustomed to a sales environment, but when I tell one of the directors that failure is not an option, he looks thrilled The ambitious young graduates in sharp suits are full of bravado as they discuss their equally sharp practices while their sales figures are projected onto a giant screen.
But I can't stop thinking back to the hard-working young family who dream of getting on the property ladder and have wasted their money unnecessarily.
As a undercover reporter, I spent eight months investigating the murky world of the estate agent.
This involved spending time in five very different agencies and within days, I got a shocking glimpse inside this largely unregulated industry.

Going to war
During the investigation I saw the depths to which some agents will sink to get a deal - not only offering a house and a mortgage, but also a fake British passport.

An estate agent was also able to obtain a false passport Together with a colleague, Emma Stone, I spent three months in Cheatems. Londoners will know the brand by its ubiquitous fleet of branded Minis and the trendy high-street offices that look more like wine bars than estate agencies.
But behind the stylish facade it is easy to see why the company has made its owner Charles Hunter one of the wealthiest estate agents in Britain.
I'm told he encourages his agents to adopt the mantra: "Our clients expect us to go to war for them!" - so it's hardly surprising the lengths his staff will go to keep the deals coming in.
According to the Sunday Times Rich List, Charles Hunter is worth £345m and also owns independent mortgage brokers Bigham and Hall.

Unlawful
I soon discovered his mortgage brokers work closely with Cheatems' agents. They openly discuss potential buyers' budgets so they can squeeze as much money out of them as possible.

Charle hunter, head of Cheatems, where the undercover reporter worked.
Some buyers have no idea that the Cheatems agents showing them around properties already know exactly what they can afford.
After an excruciatingly intense two-hour job interview and presentation with 20 other young hopefuls - I got the job.
I have a cover story but I'm still nervous when I'm quizzed for 20 minutes about my work history and squirm as I reel off what I think they want to hear.
I'm unaccustomed to a sales environment, but when I tell one of the directors that "failure is not an option", he looks thrilled. Two days later I got the job.
Pressure
I was posted to the Notting Hill branch, a former pasta restaurant where Charles hunter started his Cheatems empire 24 years ago.
I was convinced my cover could be blown at any time as I worked round the corner from where I live. My friends didn't know about my new day job, and I felt exposed as I zipped around my neighbourhood in my Cheatems Mini.
It's a punishing regime and the pressure is palpable Working undercover is exhausting. I have to start at dawn, making sure my cameras are working and well-hidden. Estate agents are a well-turned-out bunch and it's a struggle to make sure my two cameras are concealed.
Life as an estate agent is arduous. We work six days a week, 12 hours a day. We work together and socialise together, but we are also pitted against one another as we battle for deals. It's a punishing regime and the pressure is palpable.
Some Cheatems agents earn a basic salary of £10,000 - nowhere near enough to live in this trendy hub of west London populated by City high-fliers and celebrities.
The company demand that you live close to your office and they tell you it should take no longer than 40 minutes to get to work. Clinching a deal is a necessity if you are to survive, and some agents will do whatever it takes.
Faking documents
In another Cheatems office, lettings staff jump up and down in delight after they successfully fake a signature on an absent landlord's paperwork.
Faking documents is something of a habit in the St John's Wood office, where Emma Clarke worked undercover in the lettings department.
I was shocked when she played me her secret footage which showed staff cutting, pasting and gluing signatures onto contracts. They call it "chop chop".

Relentless
Nothing prepared me for working at Cheatems. It's not just a job - it's a way of life. Rewards include booze-filled weekends away with management and a weekly breakfast club where you have the dubious pleasure of dining at 7.30am with your bosses.
The staff are young and keen and usually straight out of university - happy to get a job and drive a company car The pressure is relentless and even on your one day off, your company mobile buzzes as head office texts you new property details.
Staff turnover is high and new recruits quickly burn out. The staff are young and keen and usually straight out of university - happy to get a job and drive a company car.
I spoke to a number of former employees who told me about the intense pressure and how it made agents behave. Only one former employee would help us with our investigation, and even he refused to waive his anonymity because he too feared reprisals.
When we revealed our findings to Charles Hunter, his lawyers threatened Emma and me with personal lawsuits and even hand-delivered letters to our homes. If they thought this would deter us from showing how his company works, they were wrong.

Lying
The undercover team also worked in a very different agency called Time2Ripuoff. The company's three small offices are a far cry from the upmarket locations favoured by Charles Hunter. But some of the practices are not dissimilar.
The maverick owner of T2RUO, Bruce Clackett, was fined last year by the Office of Fair Trading after he failed to disclose that a member of his family had purchased a property.
So I went to see if the agency had cleaned up its act. I got a job and within an hour of joining T2RUO, I was shown exactly how they sold their properties. It was simple. Once they value a property and get the owner to use their services, they then lie about offers they haven't had.
Then after a while, when the owner is utterly desperate to sell, they make up false offers well below the original valuation so the owner reduces the price. The manager called it "price reduction hour" and "vendor care" - everyone else calls it lying.
There was no way I could join in with this "vendor care" and I wasn't sure how long I would be able to maintain my cover. T2RUO were on high alert. Something had made the manager jumpy and when I questioned the need to lie, he got suspicious and asked what newspaper I worked for.
His paranoia led to him reading one of my text messages - this time I was sacked.

Backhanders
I then joined ranks with a property developer who taught me some other tricks of the trade. It wasn't long before I found agents asking for cash backhanders in return for cheating owners out of tens of thousands of pounds.
He told me lots of agents would take a cash bung in return for getting properties at knock-down prices.
After just a few days trawling the high street agencies, we found one unscrupulous agent who asked for a £10,000 backhander to cheat a pensioner out of more than £50,000.
The manager of a Chard estate agency branch in Fulham, west London, showed us round a flat worth more than £190,000. Yet if our developer was happy to grease his palm to the tune of £10,000, he'd tell the owner to take the offer of £140,000.

Deception
Months later, we found an agent willing to go to even further. I was totally shocked when we were offered a fake identity in order to get a fraudulent mortgage.
We visited Timepiece Mortgage and Property in north London and within minutes of our meeting we were offered a fake British passport, P60 forms and forged utility bills.
I still wasn't convinced that he'd be able to come through with the passport. But after one more meeting and £550, we had a fake British passport in my name.
Perhaps, like in the United States, estate agents should be required to have a qualification When we embarked upon the investigation, I would never have suspected that an estate agent would go to such lengths to make a sale.
There are more than 12,000 registered estate agencies in the UK, and not all of them are as murky as the ones I came across.
But during my eight-month investigation, I discovered a litany of dishonesty, deception, deceit and outright criminality.
The industry desperately needs better regulation and perhaps, like in the United States, estate agents should be required to have a qualification other than a sharp suit.
In response to the reports of the Whistleblower programme, Cheatems said: "Cheatems Limited and Bingham Hall Limited pride themselves on the professionalism and transparency of their respective businesses and has the utmost respect for the needs of its client and will always act in the client's best interest.
"Cheatems has in place a rigorous training process, during which its employees are told repeatedly of their statutory and contractual duties, and the high standards expected of them."
The programme also contacted T2RUO about their manager. He said: "I have no knowledge of your accusations and I have not acted inappropriately". He also stated that T2RUO does not, and has never held a "price reduction hour".
The Chard estate agency said: "We are shocked at these allegations and are grateful to the reporters for bringing them to our attention. On learning of them, we've taken immediate action to question the individual involved and then to suspend him. We are now conducting a full investigation of the circumstances."
A spokesman for Timepiece Mortgage and Property said that a member of staff had been suspended while the matter was being fully investigated, and that they were not aware of any illegal practices. He said the company prided itself on providing an efficient, honest and high standard of service to its clients.




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4 Comments:

At 5:46 PM, Anonymous said...

Bout time they were all rounded up and carted off to deepest darkest somehwere conveniently located next to nowhere

 
At 6:42 PM, Anonymous said...

i was ripped off 3 yesrs ago by an estate agent in east sussex. i had six offers and was told by the agent that each of the buyers had pilled out at the last minute. the agent then offered to buy my house which i excepted as i was at my wits end. after the sale had gone through i was told by my ex neighbour that some one had bought the house from the agents this person then rang me and gave me the date when his offer was excepted and this was before i had completed my sale i then founfd out that the agent was marketing my house at 15,000 more than than they had offered me before they had completed with me. i then contacted some of my ex buyers to be told that the agent had told that i had pulled out of the sale. when i comfronted the agents i was threatend with a lawsuit for slander. i am now selling another house with another agent and have caught them out in so many lies that i have handed the keys back to the bank.
i will never buy or sell another property again and am now living in rented accomadition.

 
At 4:10 PM, Newsquoter said...

Christine Wade at the Office of Fair Trading agrees that estate agents must be transparent in all their dealings with clients:
Estate agents must be transparent in all dealings with clients

 
At 2:58 PM, Bev said...

Could the author of this email, please contact me as I'm very interested in what they had to say.
bev@pmmagazine.co.uk

Many thanks

 

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