Sell my house Online (Online Estate Agent Kent)

You can sell your house and pay just 0.5% Commission. As Britains first truly online Estate Agent, with no expensive company cars or High street shops to maintain Kent Real Estate passes on the savings to you the customer. Choose us to sell your property and get superior marketing and full service for just 0.5 % Commission. Want to save even more then choose our D.I.Y service. You get the same marketing effort from us but you do most of the work. Sell from just 175 pounds.

Thursday, June 29, 2006

Online conveyancing exclusive


Your intrepid reporter has been given exclusive access to the latest in a series of initiatives, launched by those friendly chaps at Kent Real estate.co.uk

For years Home sellers have faced a barrage of costs involved in selling and buying their homes.
Kent Real Estate.co.uk have addressed the first problem (extortionate estate agents fees)
of selling your home. Now in a another break through initiative they aim to cut the costs of conveyancing and get rid of hidden costs so frequently found on final statements from your solictor after buying and selling homes.

Jane Atherton said its another breakthrough for consumers enabling families to more easily move to their dream home by having costs cut and no hidden fees down the road.


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join the sell your house online Revolution


Breaking news!
The good people at caxton printing press online have cranked up the presses and after the debacle last week of running out of ebooks due to mesrs cheatem and ripoff see previous articles
copies are now available.
Get your free chapter exclusively online here
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Tuesday, June 27, 2006

Could you use 50000 pounds interest free?


Did you know that the government wants to lend you 50000 pounds interest free to buy a house in Kent?

Called the Key Living initiative, it targets staff working in London, the south and east of England, including parts of East Anglia, where property prices are higher than in most other areas of the UK. Members of key groups can borrow up to £50,000 on an interest-free loan and add it to whatever they borrow when buying a property of their own choice or when purchasing a newly-built home from a housing association
It is being funded by the Housing Corporation with a budget of £690 million.employed in key occupations - such as nurses and other NHS staff, teachers, social workers, police officers and fire fighters .For more information go here

There has never been a better time to move to your dream home save even more by going here

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Saturday, June 24, 2006

Ebook sales Fraud

Report my I.mole

Best selling ebook on the market

How to sell your house online has reached incredible sales volume after just one week of hitting the shelves.

A spokesperson for online ebook publishing house caxton said 'we simply cant keep up with demand'

Intrigued by this I conducted a survey of local residents and found not one of them could get a copy of this book, and local stockist said supplies were non existent.

So further investigation by your intrepid reporter ensued....


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I was allowed to see reciepts by caxtons to verify their story of incredible sales and was astonished to find that the numbers were true, however when i asked for a list of customers , information was not so forthcoming. Useing every trick in the book (I bribed the cleaners) I found a memo that reported that several thousand copies had been despatched that day to one address, my own village of threadhampton!
The plot thickens.
having made my way home stopping for a pint at the local fox and cow i overheard mrs meddle complain that she couldnt park her bycycle in her usuall place outside the local etstate agents of cheatem and ripoff as there were several large card board boxes spilling onto the street outside.
um curious off i trot (after downing a delicious pint of local ale) and there i found it.
Right outside the shop of cheatem and ripoff several cardboardboxes marked caxtons printing press.
Springing inside I was able to interview mr cheatem of cheatem and ripoff about his boxes.
Why (always start with a a good question in journalism) do you have several thousands copies of How to Sell your house online? spilling onto the street from your shop and stopping people from parking their bikes?

Upon which i was bruskly bundled out of the shop by Mr ripoff saying they were just closing,
in the background one of the secretaries shouted "He Likes a good read"
So there you have it, another triumph of investigative reporting.
It seems that Mr Cheatem would rather the information in this book How to sell your house online not become common knowledge.
I wonder whats in it?

i.moleindependent investigative journalist

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Thursday, June 22, 2006

Medical officer warns House videos dangerous to health!


A chief medical officer today voiced concerns over the latest gambit intoduced by Kent real Estate, video house tours.The officer was allegedly reported to comment 'this technology will stop people walking an equivalent of 10 miles every weekend that they would otherwise have spent viewing properties It may be good for consumers trying to find a dream home but at what cost to thier waistlines?'
Kent Real Estate announced today that Video tours would soon be an essential item on any sales brochure.
Senior sales director Jane Atherton said with video you can take clients through the front doors of several homes,without them leaving their armchairs.
She also added that the Medical officers comments were unfounded as their typical client, having found thir dream home online expended a similiar amount of calories jumping for joy.
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Without an estate agent and save thousands

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Tuesday, June 20, 2006

Death Of An Estate Agent


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DEATH OF AN ESTATE AGENT
The findings of a recent NOP survey show that estate agents are not overwhelmingly popular. Fractionally over half of all adults would expect to find a home through an estate agent - suggesting that half would seek to bypass an agent, if they were thinking of buying a home.Only one in seven people think that staff in estate agents are knowledgeable and fewer than one in 20 think that estate agents' fees are good value for money. Key Note's survey finding, that people are not wildly enthusiastic about estate agents, fits in with previous research. The estate agency sector still has a big task ahead of it, to convince the public that staff are knowledgeable and efficient, and provide a service that is well worth the fees charged.
Enter the full service online agencies .A plethora of FSBO sites(For sale by owner) has sprung up in the UK.
Most of these websites however have very little to offer the private seller.
Either through bad design, poor marketing or lack of any support to the seller or buyer.
Now there is a small company based in Kent aiming to change all that.
Welcome to Kent real Estate.co.uk
The first anomaly here is that two former Hong based estate agents run the site.
Husband and wife team Wayne and Jane Atherton.
During a recent interview, they likened themselves to the poacher turned gamekeeper.
We are acutely aware of the dim view that the public has of estate agents in the UK, brought about by poor service and extortionate prices.
We want to bring a professional service to buyers and sellers that is stress free and cheap. There is no commission to pay and the full service is only £175 pounds
We started with the website design, utilizing the latest technology, anyone can produce a stunning online brochure of their property in minutes.
Next we spoon feed clients with detailed insights into the valuation and negotiating secrets of estate agents .Armed with this valuable knowledge the average homeowner can comfortably go forth and conclude a sale without an estate agent.
Kent Real estate
Its clear then that Estate agents will have to evolve in order to compete with savvy property owners, keen to save commissions, or will the chapter end as in Millers play where the world simply stops buying from them?


If you have a story to tell about your estate agent experiences post comments here

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Kent and south england property Prices


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Latest prices june 2006
Average national asking prices rose by 0.8% (£1,613) in the last month. The annual
rate increased from 5.9% to 6.4%. This is in line with our revised 2006 forecast
announced last month, up from 5% to 8%.
The mini-boom in prices continues to be led by the south of the country. Indeed, falls in
many of the northern regions of England have now changed this from a southern-led
boom, to effectively a southern-only boom. One result is the reversal of the four year
trend of a narrowing gap between prices in the north and the south. .”In June 2002,
average prices in the South were double those in the north. The gap is now widening
again, having reached a turning point last September when the average property was
only 46% more expensive in the southern half of the country. The southern regions are
now over 55% more expensive as they return towards their long term supremacy. (See
chart 1)
The average annual rise in the south of the country now stands at 9.4%.The south’s
resurgence is led by increased demand for ‘top end’ properties, fuelled in part by cashrich
buyers from both the UK and abroad. Access to sources of money other than
mortgages based on earned income has meant that the south is less constrained by
traditional affordability parameters. Economic migration as the south became
comparatively more affordable and a shortage of suitable properties are also
contributing to the rise. Increases have been most marked in the Greater London
region, especially in the wealthier boroughs. Buyer affordability improved there after
prices fell by 1.3% in 2003 while the north of the country was booming. Greater London
sellers are now asking £33,106 (11.7%) more for their properties than a year ago. In
contrast, the lowest rise in a region of England is the North where sellers can ask only
£158 (0.1%) more.
Miles Shipside, Commercial Director of Rightmove comments “The buoyancy of the
southern economy and demand for quality property by affluent buyers are having the
effect of increasing homeowners’ net worth even further. With hindsight, the best time
to move from the north to the south and ‘bridge the gap’ was in September last year,
when the difference was at a four year low of 46%. Parts of the north are now being left
behind, as stretched affordability has limited sellers’ ability to increase prices in most
regions”
The average annual rise in the northern half of the country is 2.7%. With inflation
currently running at 2.2%, prices are close to a standstill in real terms. Affordability
seems to have reached its limits, and can only be improved by wage increases, a
reduction in interest rates or a fall in real house prices. With the next move in rates
anticipated to be upwards, housing activity in the regions further away from London
could be hardest hit.
An upward movement in interest rates would come at a time when the pace of price
rises is slowing due to seasonal factors, from 2% in May to 0.8% in June. This is a clear
sign that the recent rate of increase is not sustainable, and will slow in the second half
of 2006.
Miles Shipside adds “Demand and transaction levels are still healthy in the north despite
the slowdown in prices. Any upward movement in interest rates could put this in
jeopardy at a time of year when the market normally slows down

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Sunday, June 18, 2006

House prices on the rise?


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May saw the strongest house price rises for two years, according to surveyors.

Figures from the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) show that 20 per cent more of its members reported a rise in house prices than a fall, compared to 15 per cent in April.....

Last month was also the 12th in a row in which buyer enquiries rose, with 22 per cent more surveyors reporting a rise than a fall, up from only five per cent in April.

This suggests that demand is unaffected by the recent stock market turbulence and speculation over interest rate rises.

The number of houses being put up for sale also rose significantly – by 18 per cent – prompted by factors including rises in unemployment, the implementation of regulations governing houses in multiple occupation (HMO), and a desire to sell before the arrival of home information packs (HIPs) in less than a year.

RICS spokesman Jeremy Leaf said: "The strength of the housing market suggests consumer confidence in the UK economy.

"Buyers are trading up the housing ladder and have blown dust from their wallets as interest rates remain stable. Prices of family homes continue to outpace flats for a third consecutive month.

"However, the upturn in the number of sellers will keep a lid on house price rises going into the second half of 2006. The cost of HIPs and new HMO legislation may encourage more people to sell before June 2007, while the fear of interest rate hikes and a volatile equities market is likely to have a cooling effect later in the year."

The RICS' survey follows the pattern of the FT Acadametrics and the Department for Communities and Local Government analyses in providing some cheer for the housing market.

Mortgage lenders Nationwide and Halifax, on the other hand, only recorded modest house price rises in May, suggesting the market was stalling

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HIP loophole plugged




Homeowners hoping to avoid paying for a home information pack (HIP) by putting their house up for sale before they become compulsory next year could be disappointed. The government has announced that properties put up for sale before June 1st 2007 will have a five-month period of grace where they do not need to have a home information pack. But, if the property is not sold by October 31st 2007 the owner will either have to fork out £600 - £700 for a home information pack, or take it off the market. The potential loophole was closed by new regulations laid before Parliament this week, in a move welcomed by the Association of Home Information Pack Providers (AHIPP). Mike Ockenden, director general of the AHIPP, said: "This will stop any companies making money from prospective house buyers by listing their houses as on the market prior to June 2007, in the belief that they would never need a HIP. "Any home without a HIP after June next year will be at a distinct disadvantage against properties that do have a HIP, containing a valuable home condition report, and vendors run the risk of not being able to sell as quickly or even at all. "As a buyer which house would you favour? One which has s free condition report to one that does not." However, the National Association of Estate Agents (NAEA) questioned whether the regulation was really necessary. Peter Bolton King, NAEA chief executive, said: "Buyers who wish to purchase a property from June next year will view some properties that have HIPs and other that do not. Buyers are likely to want to compare HIPs for every property they consider. "This demand may mean that sellers are forced to pay for HIPs whether or not they are legally required to." The regulations confirm that homeowners will have to wait for the pack to be compiled before they can market their property a process which estate agents claim could take up to 14 days for leasehold properties. "We remain bitterly disappointed that the government has not paid heed to our warning about the impact a delay in marketing will have on the housing market and the economy as a whole," Mr Bolton King added. "We remain gravely concerned that due to the amount of information required for leasehold properties, few will be able to be marketed before the 14-day period is up." The government is introducing home information packs, which will contain all the legal documents required for the sale of a property along with a report on the condition of the home, to cut the £350 million wasted each year when sales of properties fall through. "For too many people, buying or selling their home is still a real nightmare, with long delays and duplication," said housing minister Yvette Cooper. "People should be entitled to proper information at the beginning of the process. We know there are still vested interests who make money out of the current system and who are opposed to reform, but this is about getting a better deal for the consumer." However, research by the NAEA shows sellers are concerned by the time it takes to put a home information pack together and by the expense. The wait may lead homeowners to miss out on the property they wish to buy or may put them off from going for it altogether. "First day marketing is a fundamental right for every homeowner and its removal will have a huge impact," Mr Bolton King concluded.


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Sell Your House and Pay No Commission


This month heralds a new beginning in the property market in the UK.
For the first time home owners now have a real choice in how they sell their house.
Before now if you wanted to move home your choices were selling through an estate agent or trying desperately to advertise yourself in local papers or even an online ad.
See it here
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