The Upside of Selling Adjacent Properties With Your Neighbour
Kanebridge News
Share Button

The Upside of Selling Adjacent Properties With Your Neighbour

Savvy sellers can earn more together than they would have alone in this rip-roaring market

By Kirsten Craze
Mon, Aug 16, 2021 1:24pmGrey Clock 6 min

Land is Sydney’s hottest commodity right now as demand for quality property soars and supply remains stagnant. With developers willing to pay top dollar for sizable land parcels, some savvy neighbours can earn more together than they would have alone in a market tipped in their favour.

In Sydney south, three neighbours in Miranda recently combined their addresses to make close to $2 million each—approximately $500,000 more than the median house price in the suburb and well above the original $5.3 million price guide.

In Kurraba Point, an exclusive harbour-front peninsula in Sydney’s Lower North Shore, one family, which began acquiring individual houses and apartment buildings in the 1980s, finally got their payday in March when four lots sold together for $60 million.

An amalgamation of several properties in Sydney’s waterfront suburb of Kurraba Point took more than 40 years to accumulate, but achieved $60 million in a single sale in early 2021.

Selling agent Tim Foote of Belle Property Mosman said the grand 4240sqm waterfront landholding is governed by favourable planning controls allowing for luxury residences or a high density development.

“Off the back of that sale we’ve had a number of people approach us who are talking about getting together with neighbours and seeing whether there’s an uplift in the value of their property by consolidating surrounding properties,” Mr. Foote said.

He said today’s booming market conditions can work for, or against, neighbours choosing to come together to sell so gauging the market is important.

“It’s tricky because it’s all about that gap between market value of the property as is, and market value after it has been developed. So when a market is rising like it is at the moment it means your underlying value is going up so then everyone involved will want to be sure that the developed value is going up more. It’s not necessarily the case that a strong market is a good time to do it, because that’s the beauty of property as an asset class—over time it generally appreciates anyway,” Mr. Foote said.

Vendors Have Strength in Numbers

Though vendors may believe they can achieve top dollar by selling alone in today’s booming housing market, there is more price power in joining together, according to Antonio Mercuri, principal and director of GV Property Group, who negotiates with multiple apartment building owners in the sought-after beachside suburbs of Queensland, where inventory remains limited and land is scarce. Mr. Mercuri said apartment buildings have their own nuances separate from amalgamating neighbouring houses.

“Apartments in a block of six we sold in Coolangatta would have been worth between $800,000 to $1 million, but they each got over $2 million. Another, in Broadbeach, a block of seven, would have been worth anywhere from $450,000 to $550,000 and they all got about $900,000 each,” he said of recent amalgamated building sales on the Gold Coast in Queensland’s south.

“So it often depends on the zoning and what’s achievable on the land. Sometimes owners are able to achieve well over retail value, and in some cases double if not more,” he said.

When people come together with a common goal it makes sense to form a democratic order, Mr. Foote added.

“When you’re dealing with a lot of people you need to have good leadership, and people need to be comfortable. You need someone who’s going to lead the charge, but you also need to have consensus within the group. Get things formalized by having a lawyer who’s got expertise in this area and set up the relationship amongst the neighbours professionally,” he said.

For neighbours considering pooling their properties, Mr. Foote said potential vendors need to do their homework and bide their time.

“You need to be aware that with deals like these, there are a whole bunch of moving parts. You need to have expertise and be patient—it’s not unusual that these deals can take three to five years or more,” he added.

Seven neighbours in Sydney’s Pennant Hills have come together to make the most of a booming local property market.

Understand the Zoning

As with most real estate deals, location plays a vital role in how successful an amalgamated sale will be, Mr. Foote said.

“Zoning is important, but the tricky thing is you can’t bank on it because you’re reliant on the governing body,” he said, adding that a zoning regulation change or U-turn on a planning decision at the local council level could dramatically alter a seller or developer’s plans moving forward.

“Political will and local sentiment can change, then the sale either gets delayed—and for both the developers and property owners the clock’s ticking—then suddenly you’re three or five years down the track and you’re then told it’s another three or five years away or it’s not going to happen at all,” he said.

Owners should factor in that there are planning and political risks.

“I suppose it’s why developers do what they do because they manage the risk and sometimes that goes well, sometimes it goes terribly. There’s always a risk-reward balance, so if it looks like there’s high reward then there’s probably high risk as well,” he added.

 

What Developers Really Want

Developers are drawn to amalgamated sales where the numbers stack up.

“Every project has to be profitable, and if you’re trying to beat a developer down and eat up their profit, they’re not going to buy from you,” said Ian Ugarte, an advocate for affordable housing and co-founder of Small Is The New Big, a business built on educating people how to create micro-apartments and multi-density accommodation to address an emerging rental crisis across Australia’s biggest cities.

“The sorts of properties developers find most attractive are properties which, when merged, will enable them to increase the density on that block. Obviously, properties in areas approved for units (with medium or high-density zoning) are often the most attractive,” he said.

“And while some property owners will sell for a reasonable price, others will ‘hold out’ and ask for a price the developer might not be able to reach, potentially risking the entire sale,” he said.

Mr. Ugarte warned that such stalling tactics can cost owners dearly.

“I’ve seen a development where one of the property owners ‘held out’ in an effort to get more money than their neighbours, and upsetting the developer so much in the process they simply built a horse-shoe development around the still-standing shack,” he said.

In 2016, 62 neighbours in Frenchs Forest in Sydney’s luxury leafy north failed in their years-long hope to secure a $200 million windfall. Sellers would have secured an average of $3 million each, despite the median house price in the area at the time being $1.36 million.

Owners Need to Read the Market

Bernadette Janson, founder of The School of Renovating, based in Sydney, bought an investment property in Sydney’s west several years ago with the plan to build townhouses on the lot.

“I was about to develop, but the council changed the zoning rules around the size of the frontage allowed so you could no longer build multiple homes on a single block in that area. I’d paid good money because of its development potential, so I had to think of my options. I could see if I packaged it up with a neighbouring property it would have more potential,” she said.

When her immediate neighbour decided to sell, Ms. Janson took action.

“Opportunities are like buses and it’s really knowing which one to jump on,” she said.

After paying market value of $950,000 for the neighbouring home, Ms. Janson sold it to a developer along with her property for $2.5 million.

“You really need to know the value of the property you’re going to sell, because people will pull all sorts of tricks to try and make you believe it’s not worth what you think it is,” she added.

Ms. Janson employed a professional property negotiator to broker the deal on her behalf, and added that a proficient team is important.

“You need to have really good people around you, particularly a lawyer, town planner and accountant. They’re key in helping you manage your risk and tax burden,” she said.

Reprinted by permission of Mansion Global. Copyright 2021 Dow Jones & Company. Inc. All Rights Reserved Worldwide. Original date of publication: August 15, 2021



MOST POPULAR
11 ACRES ROAD, KELLYVILLE, NSW

This stylish family home combines a classic palette and finishes with a flexible floorplan

35 North Street Windsor

Just 55 minutes from Sydney, make this your creative getaway located in the majestic Hawkesbury region.

Related Stories
Property
The new Australian housing model investors can’t get enough of
By Bronwyn Allen 03/05/2024
Property
The Exodus of China’s Wealthy to Japan
By MIHO INADA 03/05/2024
Property
Sydney Mansion Aims to Be the First Australian Home to Sell for More Than A$200 Million
By CASEY FARMER 02/05/2024
The new Australian housing model investors can’t get enough of

Savvy high net worth players from Australia and Asia are getting on board as the residential landscape shifts

By Bronwyn Allen
Fri, May 3, 2024 3 min

Build-to-rent (BTR) residential property has emerged as one of the key sectors of interest among institutional and private high-net-worth investors across the Asia-Pacific region, according to a new report from CBRE. In a survey of 500 investors, BTR recorded the strongest uptick in interest, particularly among investors targeting value-added strategies to achieve double-digit returns.

CBRE said the residential investment sector is set to attract more capital this year, with investors in Japan, Australia and mainland China the primary markets of focus for BTR development. BTR is different from regular apartment developments because the developer or investorowner retains the entire building for long-term rental income. Knight Frank forecasts that by 2030, about 55,000 dedicated BTR apartments will have been completed in Australia.

Knight Frank says BTR is a proven model in overseas markets and Australia is now following suit.

Investors are gravitating toward the residential sector because of the perception that it offers the ability to adjust rental income streams more quickly than other sectors in response to high inflation,” Knight Frank explained in a BTR report published in September 2023.

The report shows Melbourne has the most BTR apartments under construction, followed by Sydney. Most of them are one and two-bedroom apartments. The BTR sector is also growing in Canberra and Perth where land costs less and apartment rental yields are among the highest in the country at 5.1 percent and 6.1 percent, respectively, according to the latest CoreLogic data.

In BTR developments, there is typically a strong lifestyle emphasis to encourage renters to stay as long as possible. Developments often have proactive maintenance programs, concierges, add-on cleaning services for tenants, and amenities such as a gym, pool, yoga room, cinema, communal working spaces and outdoor barbecue and dining areas.

Some blocks allow tenants to switch apartments as their space needs change, many are pet-friendly and some even run social events for residents. However, such amenities and services can result in BTR properties being expensive to rent. Some developers and investors have been given subsidies to reserve a portion of BTR apartments as ‘affordable homes’ for local essential services workers.

Ray White chief economist Nerida Conisbee says Australian BTR is a long way behind the United States, where five percent of the country’s rental supply is owned by large companies. She says BTR is Australia’s “best betto raise rental supply amid today’s chronic shortage that has seen vacancy rates drop below 1% nationwide and rents skyrocket 40% over the past four years.

Nerida Conisbee says the BTR market is Australia’s ‘best bet’ for addressing the housing crisis.

Ms Conisbee says 84 percent of Australian rental homes are owned by private landlords, typically mum and dad investors, and nine percent are owned by governments. With Australia currently in the midst of a rental crisis, the question of who provides rental properties needs to be considered,” Ms Conisbee said. We have relied heavily on private landlords for almost all our rental properties but we may not be able to so readily in the future.” She points out that large companies can access and manage debt more easily than private landlords when interest rates are high.

The CBRE report shows that Asia-Pacific investors are also interested in other types of residential properties. These include student accommodation, particularly in high migration markets like Australia, and retirement communities in markets with ageing populations, such as Japan and Korea. Most Asia Pacific investors said they intended to increase or keep their real estate allocations the same this year, with more than 50 percent of Australian respondents intending to invest more.

MOST POPULAR
11 ACRES ROAD, KELLYVILLE, NSW

This stylish family home combines a classic palette and finishes with a flexible floorplan

35 North Street Windsor

Just 55 minutes from Sydney, make this your creative getaway located in the majestic Hawkesbury region.

Related Stories
Property 2024
Property
How Much House Can I Afford?
By Josh Bozin 12/04/2024
Money
Welcome to the Era of BadGPTs
By BELLE LIN 29/02/2024
Property
The Australian cities where luxury home values have more than doubled
By Bronwyn Allen 30/04/2024
0
    Your Cart
    Your cart is emptyReturn to Shop