The Property Auctions Podcast

Two Recent Acquisitions With Huge Built-In Equity - How?

12 min · 3. apr. 2026
episode Two Recent Acquisitions With Huge Built-In Equity - How? cover

Beskrivelse

The current state of the auction market presents unprecedented opportunities for astute investors, as evidenced by a recent auction result [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/post/uk-property-auction-clearance-rates-april-2026] revealing a significant downturn in confidence, with only 46 out of 112 lots sold. As we delve into the intricacies of this episode, we shall examine a short lease acquisition and a complex Landlord and Tenant Act issue, both of which have yielded remarkable potential for savvy investors. [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/post/below-market-value-properties] We will also explore the experiences of two successful auction buyers who navigated challenges in a volatile environment, ultimately capitalising on properties that others overlooked. It is imperative to recognise that the best prospects often lie within properties that possess complexities, as they afford the greatest potential for value enhancement. Thus, we advocate for a strategic approach that encourages investors to eschew the conventional herd mentality in favour of addressing and resolving underlying issues to unlock significant value in their acquisitions. Takeaways: * The current auction market has experienced changes due to various external factors affecting buyer confidence. * Investors often overlook complex properties, missing opportunities that can yield significant value when addressed properly. * Successful property acquisition requires thorough legal advice and understanding of the specific challenges involved in the transaction. * Avoiding the herd mentality can lead to discovering undervalued properties that others may shy away from during auctions. The Property Auctions Podcast delves into the intricacies of the current auction market, providing invaluable insights into the evolving landscape that investors must navigate. Host Dominic Farrell [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/dominic-farrell], a recognised authority in UK property auctions and author of the UK's No.1 bestselling book on property auctions, articulates the nuances of recent auction outcomes, shedding light on the surprising dynamics at play. With 112 lots presented, a mere 46 sold, while 54 remained unsold, this stark contrast sets the stage for understanding the shifting tides within the market. Factors such as geopolitical tensions, rising mortgage rates, and inflation contribute to a palpable decline in buyer confidence, thus opening avenues for astute investors willing to engage with distressed assets. Farrell emphasizes the importance of research and due diligence for those seeking to capitalise on these market fluctuations, reiterating that the most lucrative opportunities often lie in properties that present complexities rather than in straightforward investments that attract fierce competition. He argues that understanding the underlying issues of a property, whether legal or structural, can lead to significant value enhancements, advocating for a strategic approach that prioritises problem-solving over conventional bidding wars. In a detailed exploration of specific case studies, the episode highlights two remarkable deals executed by members of Farrell's property auction mentorship group. The first involves a short lease property that, while overlooked by many due to its complexity, was acquired at an advantageous price after thorough negotiations. This acquisition showcases the potential for value creation through strategic lease extension negotiations and real estate development opportunities. The second case involves a freehold house with tenant-related complications that deterred other investors, exemplifying the concept of targeting properties that the broader market shuns. Farrell articulates that these instances not only validate the efficacy of his mentorship approach but also serve as a practical guide for listeners to identify similar opportunities amidst market uncertainty. He concludes with a compelling call to action for aspiring investors: to eschew herd mentality and to focus on properties with inherent challenges that can be resolved, thus unlocking substantial value in the process. The overarching theme of this episode encapsulates a profound understanding of the property auction landscape, urging listeners to adopt a discerning eye towards investment opportunities. Farrell posits that the market's current state, characterised by fear and uncertainty, is paradoxically fertile ground for skilled investors. By leveraging knowledge, preparation, and strategic guidance, individuals can navigate the complexities of the auction process to achieve remarkable outcomes. The podcast not only serves as a platform for sharing knowledge but also as an invitation for listeners to engage with the material actively, fostering a community of informed investors ready to embrace the forthcoming challenges and opportunities in the property auction sector. Companies mentioned in this episode: * Amazon.co.uk * Distressed Assets * Rightmove * Zoopla Links referenced in this episode: * amazon.co.uk [https://www.amazon.co.uk/Property-Auctions-Repossessions-Bankruptcies-Properties/dp/173935494X/ref=monarch_sidesheet_title] * youtube.com/@distressedassets [youtube.com/@distressedassets] * Distressed Assets [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/] * rightmove.co.uk [https://rightmove.co.uk] * zoopla.co.uk [https://zoopla.co.uk]

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episode Spotting a Fake Bargain at Auction using AI cover

Spotting a Fake Bargain at Auction using AI

Welcome back to the Property Auctions Podcast [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/property-auctions-podcast]. I am Dominic Farrell [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/dominic-farrell], the author of the UK’s No1 bestselling book about property auctions [https://www.amazon.co.uk/Property-Auctions-Repossessions-Bankruptcies-Properties/dp/173935494X], which is available on Amazon and other good book providers. This week I want to talk about something that catches out a lot of auction buyers, especially beginners, how to spot a fake bargain at auction. One of the biggest mistakes people make is confusing a low guide price with a bargain. They are not the same thing. A property can look cheap online, photograph well, be in decent condition, and still be completely overvalued. Equally, a property that does not look spectacular at first glance can be a genuine bargain if the numbers, seller motivation and timing are aligned. So in this episode I want to explain the difference between a real bargain and a fake bargain, using two examples from a very busy week we had last week. 1. The Real Bargain: Secured Before Auction I was out viewing auction properties on most days with some of my mentees [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/property-mentor]. Some had travelled from far afield, while others were local here in Liverpool [https://www.tunafishproperty.co.uk/]. We saw a lot of stock, spoke to agents, reviewed legal packs and ran the numbers. Two properties stood out. One was a fantastic bargain. The other looked like it might be a bargain, but once we did the homework, the due diligence, it clearly was not. Let’s start with the real bargain. On Monday, we secured a property before it even got to auction. While we were viewing it, an auction house was also there, presumably with a view to providing a valuation for the owner. So this property was almost certainly heading towards auction. The auction house was assessing it, and the owner was clearly considering that route. But we struck first. We were not the only interested party. Other people had seen it, and other offers were being made. But we secured it, and it is an absolutely fantastic deal for one of my mentees. I have no doubt that if that property had gone to live auction, it would have sold significantly higher. So why were we successful? It was not because we offered a ridiculous amount more than everyone else. We were in and around the same level as other interested parties. The difference was reputation. If you build a reputation for completing on properties [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/distressed-property-deals-track-record], if you have longevity in the market, and if agents know that when you make an offer you are serious, that matters. Remember, agents make their money when properties sell. They do not make their money when someone makes a big offer and then disappears. They do not make their money when a buyer ties a property up for two or three months, only for the sale to fall through. And if that happens, the agent may lose the instruction altogether, because the owner gets frustrated and decides to send the property to auction anyway. So from an agent’s point of view, certainty has value. A buyer who can actually complete is worth more than a buyer who merely talks a good game. That is an important lesson in auction property. Speed, certainty and reputation can turn you into the preferred buyer, even when your offer is similar to someone else’s. That first property was a real bargain because the price worked, the timing worked, and the seller had a reason to move before auction. We will probably never know exactly why they chose us, and not the auction route. 2. The Fake Bargain: It Looked Good on the Surface Now compare that with the second property. This one is the fake bargain. We went to view it, and on the surface it looked very good. It was in very good condition. It was in a reasonable letting area. It looked like the kind of property that would appeal to many new and inexperienced investors. You could easily look at the photos, look at the guide price, and think, “That looks like a deal.” That is exactly where people get caught out. They make a decision with their eyes before they have done the work with the numbers. Clean kitchen. Decent bathroom. Good condition. Reasonable letting area. Low guide price. Therefore, it must be a bargain. But that is not how auction buying works. A property can be clean, tidy and lettable, and still be overpriced. It can look easy and still be a bad buy. And this one, without any shadow of a doubt, was not a bargain. Even at the guide price, it was overvalued. So how did we know? We knew because we ran the due diligence properly. 3. How We Knew: Due Diligence and AI For us, part of that process now involves using artificial intelligence, or AI [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/post/how-to-use-ai-for-property-auctions]. We use Claude, and we have trained it to produce the information we need from auction legal packs and property data. You can then cross reference the findings using other AI, such as ChatGPT and Gemini. I should be clear. AI does not replace a solicitor. It does not replace experience. And it certainly does not mean you stop thinking. But it is a fantastic tool for organising information quickly and highlighting the areas that need attention. Our process is structured. First, it tells us what documents are included in the auction pack. Then it tells us what documents are missing. Quite often, the missing documents are the most important part. Most people only read what is in front of them. The better question is, what should be here that is not here? Is the lease missing? Is there no management pack? Are the service charge details unclear? Are there title restrictions, rights of way, planning issues or building regulation gaps? Do the special conditions add unexpected costs? These things matter, because at auction, once the hammer falls, you are committed. You do not have the same room to renegotiate as you might in a normal private treaty purchase. Our AI review also looks at title issues, area intelligence, comparable evidence and rental evidence. It produces red, amber and green signals, along with questions for the auction house and questions for the solicitor. We have also trained it to calculate a maximum bid based on the full cost picture. Purchase price, auction fees, legal costs, stamp duty if applicable, refurbishment, finance, holding costs, letting assumptions, comparable sales, rental demand and the margin required to make the risk worthwhile. The Claude model I have trained takes about nine minutes to produce the answer. After that, we get around fifteen pages of A4 with the data and analysis. It is only £20 per month for as many properties as you like. Yes, that is not a mistake, you heard it correctly, it is currently £20 per month, not £20 per property. On this particular property, the conclusion was clear. Even at the guide price, it was overvalued. That is a fake bargain. 4. Why Guide Prices Are Dangerous, and the Warning Signs Now, this is an important distinction. A fake bargain is not always a bad property. Sometimes it is. Sometimes the condition is poor, the legal pack is alarming, or there are title problems, lease issues, planning problems or hidden costs. But often, a fake bargain is simply a decent property at the wrong price. That was the case here. The property was in good condition. It was in a reasonable letting area. It would probably rent. But once we checked the comparable evidence, rental evidence, costs and likely resale value, the numbers did not work. And if the numbers do not work at the guide price, it is not a bargain. It is just marketing. That is why guide prices are so dangerous. The guide price is not your valuation. It is not your maximum bid. It is not proof of value. Its job is to generate interest, get people through the door, create momentum and make buyers feel they might be about to get a deal. It appeals to the herd. Your job is to ignore the emotion and focus on evidence. You must be a disciplined investor. Don’t ask, “Is it cheap compared with the guide?” Ask, “Does it work compared with the evidence?” So how do you spot a fake bargain? There are four warning signs. The first warning sign is that the guide price is doing all the work. If the only reason you are excited is because the guide price looks low, be careful. A real bargain still looks interesting after you have checked the comparables, rent, condition, title and costs. A fake bargain looks good before the work is done and worse afterwards. The second warning sign is when the property looks better than the numbers. A tidy property can make people feel safe. It photographs well. It looks tenant ready. It seems less risky than a property needing work. But a nice property at the wrong price is still the wrong price. The third warning sign is missing information. If important documents are missing from the legal pack, you need to know why. Missing information is not a small issue. It may be where the real risk is hiding. The fourth warning sign is when the deal only works if everything goes perfectly. If your numbers depend on achieving the top rent, doing the refurbishment cheaply, finding a tenant immediately, getting finance easily, and selling later at the top end of the market, that is not a bargain. That is a gamble. A real bargain has margin for things to go wrong. A fake bargain needs everything to go right. 5. What To Do With a Fake Bargain: The Unsold List So what do you do when you find one? This is where people often make another mistake. They either get emotionally attached and bid anyway, or they dismiss it completely and never look at it again. I think there is a third option. Put it on your unsold list. The unsold list does exactly what it says on the tin. If the property does not sell at auction, you go back afterwards and make an offer at a level that actually works. Not at the guide price. Not at the seller’s unrealistic price. At the price where it becomes a genuine bargain. This is where a fake bargain can sometimes become a real bargain. Before the auction, the seller may be confident. They may believe the guide price is right. They may think the auction room will create competition and push the price up. But if the property does not sell, the psychology changes. The market has spoken. The seller now has new information. And suddenly, they may be more open to a realistic conversation. That is why understanding the seller matters. Who are they? Why are they selling? What pressure might they be under? Are they paying off debts? Are they moving home? Are they clearing an estate? Are they buying something else? Have they already mentally spent the money? Once a property fails to sell, the seller may be far more willing to listen. And if you have already viewed it, reviewed the legal pack, checked the comparables, and calculated your maximum bid, you are ready to move quickly. That is a major advantage. Most people start thinking after the auction. Professional buyers have already done the work before the auction. So when a lot is unsold, they can call the auctioneer and say, “We have viewed the property. We have reviewed the pack. We are interested, but not at that level. Here is where we can be.” That is much more powerful than ringing up vaguely and asking, “What is the best price?” You are specific. You are credible. You are ready to perform. And again, reputation matters. Just as with the property we secured before auction, agents and auctioneers value certainty. If they know you can complete, your offer carries more weight. So the lesson from last week is not simply “buy before auction” or “buy after auction.” The lesson is to understand value properly. Sometimes the real bargain is the property you secure before it reaches auction. Sometimes it is the unsold lot that nobody wanted at the wrong price, but which becomes attractive at the right price. And sometimes the thing that looks like a bargain is not a bargain at all. It is just a property with a clever guide price. So before you bid, ask yourself a few questions. Have I read the legal pack? Do I know what documents are missing? Have I checked the title? Have I looked at sold comparable evidence? Have I checked rental evidence? Have I allowed for auction fees, legal costs and special conditions? Have I included finance and holding costs? Have I set a maximum bid based on evidence, not emotion? And most importantly, would I still think this was a bargain if the guide price was not there? That is the key question. Because if the whole deal depends on the guide price making you feel excited, you probably have not found a bargain. You have found bait. A real bargain survives due diligence. A fake bargain disappears under scrutiny. That is one of the biggest differences between amateurs and professionals at auction. Amateurs look for cheap. Professionals look for value. Amateurs get excited by the guide price. Professionals get interested when the evidence supports the price. Amateurs bid because they do not want to miss out. Professionals bid because they know exactly where the deal works, and they stop when it does not. So the next time you see an auction property that looks too good to be true, do not dismiss it immediately, but do not believe it immediately either. Do the work. Read the pack. Find what is missing. Check the comps. Check the rent. Understand the seller. Set your maximum bid. And if it is too expensive, let it go through the room. Put it on your unsold list. Then, if it fails to sell, go back with the number that turns it from a fake bargain into a real one. Because the goal is not to buy something. The goal is to buy well. And there is a very big difference. Thanks for listening, and I’ll see you in the next episode. Takeaways: * A low guide price does not necessarily indicate a bargain; thorough due diligence is essential. * A genuine bargain arises when the timing, seller motivation, and pricing align effectively. * Fake bargains can appear attractive but often fail upon close scrutiny of the numbers. * Professionals prioritize evidence and value over the emotional allure of low guide prices. * Missing documents in an auction legal pack can signal hidden risks that must be addressed before bidding. * Understanding the seller's motivations can provide crucial insights that affect negotiation after an auction. Links referenced in this episode: * distressedassets.co.uk [https://distressedassets.co.uk] * amazon.co.uk [https://amazon.co.uk] Companies mentioned in this episode: * Amazon * ChatGPT * Gemini * distressedassets.co.uk

28. juni 202622 min
episode How to Set Your Maximum Bid at Auction — And Why the Guide Price Is Irrelevant cover

How to Set Your Maximum Bid at Auction — And Why the Guide Price Is Irrelevant

INTRODUCTION Welcome back to the Property Auctions Podcast with Dominic Farrell [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/dominic-farrell]from Distressed Assets [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/]. Today’s episode is about one of the most important skills in auction buying [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/buy-property-at-auction-uk]: setting your maximum bid. Not guessing it during the auction. Not adding a bit to the guide price. Not deciding while the clock is ticking and another bidder is pushing you higher. Setting it properly, in advance, based on the numbers, the risks, and the reality of what you are buying. Because here is the uncomfortable truth about property auctions: most people do not lose money because they bought a difficult property. They lose money because they paid the wrong price. A short lease, a sitting tenant, a messy legal pack, structural issues or a refurbishment project do not automatically make a property a bad deal. But they all have to be priced. Your maximum bid is not simply what you can afford. It is the highest price you can pay while still being properly compensated for the risk you are taking. That is the whole game. WHY THE GUIDE PRICE IS THE WRONG STARTING POINT One of the biggest mistakes new auction buyers make is treating the guide price as if it represents value. It does not. The guide price is a marketing number. It is designed to generate interest, encourage viewings, get people downloading legal packs and bring bidders into the room. Sometimes it is close to where the property might sell. Sometimes it is deliberately low to create competition. Sometimes it reflects a serious issue hidden in the legal pack. Sometimes it is simply not very useful. So the first rule is this: do not start with the guide price. Start with the end value. START WITH THE END VALUE Ask yourself: what will this property realistically be worth when my plan has been completed? That might mean the resale value after refurbishment. It might mean the investment value once let. It might mean the value after a lease extension, vacant possession, planning consent or a title issue being resolved. The key is to start at the end and work backwards. When you buy at auction, you are not just buying a property. You are buying a chain of costs, risks, delays and possible outcomes. Imagine a house listed with a guide price of £150,000. Similar refurbished houses nearby appear to sell for around £240,000. A beginner might think: “Great, there is £90,000 of margin.” But there is not. Between £150,000 and £240,000 sits the real world: stamp duty, auction fees, legal fees, finance costs, insurance, council tax, utilities, refurbishment, delays, unknowns, selling costs and your profit. So the question is not: “Can I buy this below what it might be worth?” The better question is: “After every cost, risk and delay, is there enough margin left to make this worth doing?” THE FIVE-PART MAXIMUM BID CALCULATION A sensible maximum bid usually comes down to five parts: 1. The end value. 2. The refurbishment cost. 3. Transaction and holding costs. 4. Risk allowance. 5. Required profit or margin. Once you know those numbers, you can work backwards to your maximum bid. 1. THE END VALUE This is where many auction calculations go wrong before they have even started. Buyers often use the highest comparable sale they can find. They pick the best house, in the best condition, on the best street, and use that as their future value. That is dangerous. Your end value should be realistic, not optimistic. Look at actual sold prices, not just asking prices. Compare like with like: property type, size, condition, location, parking, garden, lease length, layout and tenure. If the best comparable sold for £240,000 but had an extension, off-street parking and a larger plot, your property may not be worth £240,000 when finished. It might be worth £225,000 or £215,000. That difference can destroy the deal. A £15,000 overestimate on value comes straight out of your profit. In auctions, where margins are often thinner than people think, that can be the difference between a sensible purchase and an expensive lesson. So be conservative with the end value. Not fearful. Just realistic. 2. THE REFURBISHMENT COST The second number is the refurbishment cost. This is another area where buyers often undercook the numbers. They look at a tired property and say, “It needs about twenty grand spending on it.” But what does that actually include? A kitchen? Bathroom? Rewire? Boiler? Roof repairs? Damp works? Windows? Plastering? Flooring? Decoration? Waste removal? Structural repairs? Building control? Fire safety works? Leasehold consent? A refurbishment budget should not be a round number invented from the photos. It should be built from the work actually required. And if access is limited, the photos are poor, or there are signs of neglect, you need a larger contingency. Auction properties often come with surprises: leaks, rotten floors, old electrics, asbestos, damage from previous occupants or issues caused by the property being empty for too long. So when calculating your maximum bid, do not use the refurbishment cost you hope for. Use the refurbishment cost you can defend. 3. TRANSACTION AND HOLDING COSTS The third number is transaction and holding costs. These are the quiet killers of auction profits. At auction, you may have an administration fee, buyer’s premium, search fees, legal fees and seller’s costs passed to the buyer through the special conditions. You may also need bridging finance if completion is too fast for standard mortgage lending. Then once you own the property, you have holding costs: interest, insurance, council tax, utilities, service charge, ground rent, security, maintenance and sometimes business rates. Time matters as well. A project expected to take three months can take six. A refinance can take longer than planned. A sale can fall through. A tenant issue can delay everything. If your numbers only work on a perfect timeline, they probably do not work. 4. RISK ALLOWANCE The fourth number is your risk allowance. This is where the legal pack becomes part of the bid. In the previous episode, we talked about using AI to help read an auction legal pack [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/post/how-to-use-ai-for-property-auctions]. Not as a replacement for a solicitor, but as a way of identifying issues quickly and knowing what questions to ask. Today we take that one step further. Once you identify the risks, you need to decide what they are worth. A legal risk is not just something to notice. It is something to price. If the special conditions pass extra costs to the buyer, that affects your bid. If the title has a restriction that needs resolving, that affects your bid. If there is a short lease, unclear access, missing rights of way, a restrictive covenant, rentcharge, absent freeholder, defective lease plan, planning issue or tenancy you do not fully understand, that affects your bid. Sometimes the risk means you walk away. Sometimes it means you reduce the price. That is the professional approach. You are not trying to find perfect properties at auction. Perfect properties rarely sell at distressed prices. You are trying to find mispriced risk. THREE TYPES OF LEGAL RISK A useful way to think about legal pack issues is to put them into three categories. * First: acceptable, and no major effect on the deal. * Second: acceptable, but only at a lower price. * Third: unacceptable, and you walk away. The mistake is treating every issue as acceptable because you want to buy the property. The opposite mistake is treating every issue as fatal because you are scared of complexity. Often, the opportunity is in the middle category: acceptable, but only at the right price. That is where experienced auction buyers can find value. 5. REQUIRED PROFIT OR MARGIN The fifth number is your required profit or margin. Many buyers leave this until last, or forget it completely. But your profit is not whatever happens to be left after the deal. Your profit is a cost of doing the deal. It is the return you require for taking the risk, using your capital, arranging finance, managing the project and dealing with uncertainty. If there is not enough profit in the deal, you should not do it. That might sound obvious, but auctions are emotional. People get excited. They want to win. They have researched the property, imagined the finished project and told themselves it is “the one”. Then they stretch. Another five thousand. Then another. Then another. Before they know it, the profit has gone. They have not bought an investment. They have bought themselves a job with risk attached. So decide your required profit before the auction starts. It might be a fixed amount, a percentage of total costs or a return on cash invested. The exact method depends on your strategy, but the number must be clear. If you do not know your minimum acceptable return, you cannot know your maximum bid. EXAMPLE: WORKING BACKWARDS TO A MAXIMUM BID Let’s put this together. You think the finished property will be worth £240,000. The works will cost £40,000. Stamp duty, legal costs, auction fees, finance, insurance, council tax, utilities and selling costs come to £25,000. You want a £30,000 profit. You include a £10,000 risk and contingency allowance. So we take the end value of £240,000. Subtract £40,000 for works. Subtract £25,000 for costs. Subtract £30,000 for profit. Subtract £10,000 for risk. That gives you £135,000. That is your maximum bid. Not £150,000 because that was the guide price. Not £160,000 because it still feels below market value. Not £170,000 because another bidder pushed you there. £135,000. Based on your assumptions, that is the highest price that still gives you the return you need. WHAT IF IT SELLS FOR MORE? Some listeners will be thinking: “But if the guide is £150,000, I will never buy it at £135,000.” Maybe not. And that is fine. The point is not to buy every property. The point is to buy the right property at the right price. If it sells for £165,000, that does not automatically mean you were wrong. Someone else may have a different plan, cheaper finance, a lower profit requirement or a reason to pay more. They may also have overpaid. You do not know. And more importantly, it does not matter. Your job is not to match the room. Your job is to protect your downside. Letting someone else overpay is not losing. It is discipline. WHY DISCIPLINE MATTERS AT AUCTION The auction environment is designed to create urgency. There is a countdown. There are other bidders. There is competition, scarcity and adrenaline. There is the feeling that if you do not bid now, the opportunity disappears. That pressure is real. That is why your maximum bid must be set before the auction, when you are calm, not during the auction when emotions are running. Set it after you have read the legal pack, spoken to your solicitor, checked the comparables, understood the finance, estimated the works and thought about what could go wrong. That calm version of you should set the bid. Not the emotional version watching the clock tick down. WRITE DOWN YOUR MAXIMUM BID Here is a simple practical rule: write your maximum bid down. Do not just keep it in your head. Write the number and the reason for it. For example: “Maximum bid: £135,000. Based on £240,000 GDV, £40,000 works, £25,000 costs, £10,000 risk allowance and £30,000 required profit.” That written note becomes your anchor. When the bidding reaches £136,000, you are out. Not because you cannot afford another thousand, but because the deal has moved outside your rules. And if your rules are sensible, breaking them is not ambition. It is indiscipline. WHEN YOUR MAXIMUM BID CAN CHANGE Your maximum bid can change before the auction, but only if the facts change. If your solicitor confirms an issue is less serious than expected, your contractor gives a lower and more reliable works estimate, you find stronger comparable evidence, or the seller answers a key question, then your bid may change. But emotion should not change the number. Not because you like the property. Not because you have already spent time on it. Not because you have told someone about it. Not because the bidding is close and you think you may as well go one more. Only facts should move the bid. DO NOT BID ON THE BEST-CASE SCENARIO Another common mistake is calculating the maximum bid based on the best-case scenario. The works go smoothly. The market stays strong. Finance is cheap. The sale is quick. The legal issue is resolved without delay. That is not a maximum bid. That is a fantasy bid. A proper maximum bid is based on a realistic case, with enough margin to survive problems. You do not need to assume everything will go wrong. If you do, you will never buy anything. But you should assume something will go wrong. The boiler costs more. The tenant takes longer to leave. The lender asks more questions. The council is slow. A buyer renegotiates. The roof is worse than expected. Something happens. Your margin is what protects you when it does. If your plan only makes money when everything goes perfectly, it is not a robust investment. It is a bet on perfection. And perfection is rare in distressed property. DIFFERENT BUYERS HAVE DIFFERENT MAXIMUM BIDS The same property can have different values to different buyers. A developer, landlord, trader, owner-occupier and neighbour may all have different maximum bids. The developer needs a profit after works and resale. The landlord may focus on rent, yield and refinance value. The trader may see a quick margin by solving a legal issue. The owner-occupier may accept a lower financial return because they want to live there. The neighbour may pay a premium because the property has special value to them. This is why you cannot simply look at what someone else paid and assume they were right. Their circumstances may be completely different. You need to calculate your number based on your strategy. For a flip, you work backwards from resale value. For a buy-to-let, you may work from rent, yield, mortgage stress testing and refinance value. For a lease extension play, you need to understand the premium, costs, timescale and uplift. For a tenanted property, you need to understand the tenancy, rent, arrears and possession risk. The method stays the same: end value, costs, risks, required return, maximum bid. TURNING THE LEGAL PACK INTO A BID Many buyers read the legal pack as a pass-or-fail exercise. They ask: “Is the legal pack okay?” A better set of questions would be: * What obligations am I taking on? * What costs are being transferred to me? * What could delay completion, resale, letting or finance? * What would a lender dislike? * What would a future buyer’s solicitor raise? * What would it cost to fix this? * How long would it take? * And does the price compensate me for that? The legal pack is not separate from the bid. It is part of the bid. If the special conditions add £5,000 of seller’s costs, that is £5,000 less you can bid. If the lease has only 62 years remaining, that affects value, financeability and your exit. If there is no clear right of access, that may affect whether the property is mortgageable or saleable. If there is a tenant in occupation and the paperwork is incomplete, that affects control, timing, income and possession risk. The legal pack tells you where money might leak out of the deal. Your bid needs to plug those leaks. PRE-AUCTION MAXIMUM BID CHECKLIST Before bidding, you should be able to answer the following questions. * What is my realistic end value? * What evidence supports that value? * What is my works budget? * What are my purchase costs? * What extra costs are hidden in the special conditions? * What are my finance and holding costs? * How long could I realistically be holding the property? * What are the legal risks? * What are the physical risks? * What are the planning, tenancy, leasehold or title risks? * What is my exit strategy? * What is my required profit? And finally: what is my maximum bid? If you cannot answer those questions, you are not ready to bid. You do not need perfect certainty. You will never have that. But you do need enough clarity to know what price makes sense. At auction, the contract is binding. Once the hammer falls, or once the online auction ends and you are the successful bidder, you are committed. That is why the work has to be done before the bid, not after. KEY TAKEAWAY The guide price is not your starting point. The property’s value, costs, risks and required return are your starting point. Your maximum bid is the result of those numbers. And once you have that number, your job is to respect it. Successful auction buyers are not the people who win the most lots. They are the people who buy the right lots at the right price. Sometimes that means bidding confidently. Sometimes it means negotiating after a property fails to sell. And sometimes it means doing the work, watching the auction and walking away. Walking away from a bad deal is not wasted effort. It is part of the process. Every property you analyse makes you sharper. Every legal pack you read makes you faster. Every auction you watch teaches you where the market really is. And when the right property appears at the right price, you are ready. You know your number. You understand the risk. You can move quickly. And you can bid with confidence because you are not guessing. That is the difference between speculating and investing. CLOSING The auction does not reward the person who wants the property most. It rewards the person who understands the risk and prices it properly. Thanks for listening to the Property Auctions Podcast [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/property-auctions-podcast] from Distressed Assets. As always, this episode is for general information only. It is not legal, financial, tax or investment advice. Before bidding at auction, speak to qualified professionals, including a solicitor and, where appropriate, a surveyor, broker or tax adviser. Visit DistressedAssets.co.uk for more auction insights, distressed property opportunities and practical guidance for investors. I’ll see you in the next episode.

21. juni 202635 min
episode Property Auction Legal Packs: The AI Method That Catches Costly Risks cover

Property Auction Legal Packs: The AI Method That Catches Costly Risks

The Property Auctions Podcast [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/property-auctions-podcast] delves into the transformative impact of artificial intelligence on the property investment landscape, specifically highlighting its application in auction [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/buy-property-at-auction-uk] settings. The episode presents a compelling narrative on how AI tools, particularly large language models, have made comprehensive legal analysis accessible and affordable for private investors. By summarising extensive legal packs in mere seconds, AI not only saves valuable time but also surfaces critical information that could easily be overlooked by human analysis. Dominic Farrell [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/dominic-farrell] emphasises that although AI serves as a powerful tool for filtering information, it is essential for investors to continue consulting qualified solicitors to ensure thorough understanding and mitigate risks associated with potential inaccuracies in AI outputs. The discussion expands to cover the broader implications of AI's accessibility, suggesting that it dismantles the traditional information asymmetry that favored institutional investors, thereby fostering a more equitable investment environment. The episode concludes with practical advice on how to effectively incorporate AI into one’s auction strategy, ensuring that investors can capitalise on this revolutionary technology while maintaining a responsible approach to decision-making. Takeaways: * The advent of AI has democratised access to serious research, previously reserved for those with substantial financial resources, making it available to private investors at minimal costs. * AI excels in filtering and sifting through extensive legal packs with remarkable speed, identifying critical clauses and risks that may be overlooked by human readers. * Despite its capabilities, AI should be regarded as a preliminary tool; the final decision to bid must be grounded in a solicitor's comprehensive report on the analysed documents. * Investors must be vigilant, as no AI system is infallible; human oversight is essential to mitigate potential errors that could lead to significant financial losses. * The shift in the property auction landscape allows individual investors to compete on equal footing with institutional buyers, fundamentally altering the economics of property investment. * Effective use of AI technology enables investors to analyze a greater number of lots efficiently, transforming the bidding process into one that is both rapid and informed. Links referenced in this episode: * Property Auctions: Repossessions, Bankruptcies and Bargain Properties: The Expert's Guide To Success In All Market Conditions [https://www.amazon.co.uk/Property-Auctions-Repossessions-Bankruptcies-Properties/dp/173935494X] * distressedassets.co.uk [https://distressedassets.co.uk] * distressedassets.co.uk/property-auction-courses [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/property-auction-courses] * How to use AI for Property Auctions [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/post/how-to-use-ai-for-property-auctions] Companies mentioned in this episode: * OpenAI * Anthropic * Harvey * Lagora

7. maj 202610 min
episode A Tale of Two Cities: The Auction Market Is Softening — Here Is Why I Am Getting Ready to Buy cover

A Tale of Two Cities: The Auction Market Is Softening — Here Is Why I Am Getting Ready to Buy

The recent data regarding auction clearance rates has revealed a significant downturn, necessitating a reassessment of market dynamics. Notably, in March 2026, London experienced a clearance rate of 60%, which plummeted to 36% just a month later, indicating a material shift in market behavior. This trend is not isolated, as similar patterns have emerged in other cities, further substantiating the need for vigilance among investors. The underlying causes of this decline appear to stem from both macroeconomic conditions and domestic political instability, creating an environment where buyer confidence is waning. For motivated sellers facing financial pressures, this presents unique challenges, as they are compelled to transact in a market where buyer appetite is diminishing, thereby creating potential opportunities for discerning investors. Dominic Farrell [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/dominic-farrell]'s examination of the property auction market [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/buy-property-at-auction-uk] provides a comprehensive analysis of the recent downturn in clearance rates and its implications for both sellers and investors. Notably, he presents a compelling argument supported by statistics, illustrating a dramatic decrease in the percentage of lots sold at auction events across prominent cities. This decline is contextualized within a broader narrative concerning economic conditions, revealing that the challenges faced by sellers are multifaceted and deeply rooted in macroeconomic realities. Farrell articulates the distinction between lots that fail to attract any bids versus those that receive bids but do not meet reserve prices. This differentiation is paramount in understanding the underlying market forces at play, as it reflects varying degrees of buyer appetite and seller pricing strategies. As the podcast unfolds, it becomes apparent that the pressures exerted by rising interest rates, inflation, and political uncertainties are reshaping the landscape of property transactions. Sellers who remain inflexible in their pricing may find themselves increasingly isolated in a market that demands adaptability and realism. Moreover, the podcast addresses the critical notion of 'motivated sellers'—those compelled to sell due to financial necessity. Farrell emphasizes the urgency that characterizes this subset of sellers, as they navigate a market that is increasingly inhospitable to unrealistic price expectations. For investors, this scenario presents a unique opportunity to engage with distressed assets [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/distressed-property-uk], albeit with a cautionary reminder to discern between assets that are genuinely undervalued and those that are fraught with underlying issues. Throughout the discussion, Farrell's analytical rigor shines through, providing a roadmap for navigating a market in flux while advocating for a disciplined investment approach. Takeaways: * The significant decline in auction clearance rates indicates a material shift in market behavior. * Motivated sellers are facing challenges as the gap between their expectations and buyer appetite widens. * Understanding the difference between failed lots can provide insights into market sentiment and buyer interest. * Investors must remain disciplined and selective, avoiding impulsive decisions in a softening market environment. Links referenced in this episode: * Distressed Assets [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/] * Property Auction Courses with Dominic Farrell [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/property-auction-courses] * The Property Auction Professional [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/property-mentor]

21. apr. 202619 min
episode Why Successful Property Auction Investors Know When to Walk Away cover

Why Successful Property Auction Investors Know When to Walk Away

The pivotal theme of this discussion revolves around the imperative skill of knowing when to walk away from a property auction [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/propertyauctions]. We elucidate the notion that due diligence [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/property-auction-courses] serves as the cornerstone of success in property investment, underscoring the necessity of maintaining a disciplined approach, impervious to emotional or psychological attachments to auction lots. Dominic Farrell [https://www.distressedassets.co.uk/dominic-farrell] observes that from various property auctions across the UK, where he frequently witnesses amateur investors falter due to a lack of self-discipline, often precipitated by an attachment to the time and resources expended in their research endeavors. The psychology of sunk costs can cloud judgment, leading investors to make irrational decisions that ultimately result in financial detriment. Thus, we emphasize that the ability to detach oneself emotionally from a potential acquisition is paramount, enabling investors to adhere to their pre-established maximum bid and to navigate the auction landscape with both rigor and prudence. The discourse presented unfolds the intricate dynamics of successful property investment, particularly within the realm of auctions, where the capacity to exercise self-restraint is of paramount importance. Dominic asserts that the defining trait of successful investors lies in their unwavering ability to walk away when circumstances warrant such a decision. This process is predicated upon a foundation of rigorous due diligence—an exhaustive evaluation of market data, legal documentation, and refurbishment costs that culminates in an informed maximum bid. Emotional attachments, however, often prove to be the downfall of novice investors, who, despite their preparatory efforts, may find themselves ensnared in a psychological quagmire that clouds their judgment as the auction progresses. The episode intricately examines the psychological implications of the sunk cost fallacy, which can compel investors to remain fixated on properties that no longer meet their investment criteria. Dominic draws upon personal experiences with mentees who, despite logical assessments, grappled with the emotional ramifications of walking away from properties they had invested considerable time and effort in researching. The narrative illustrates the necessity for investors to cultivate emotional detachment and adhere to a disciplined approach, thus enabling them to make rational decisions that prioritize long-term success over immediate emotional gratification. In addition, I introduce a nuanced layer of due diligence—understanding the motivations behind auction properties. By adopting a methodical, investigative mindset akin to that of Sherlock Holmes, investors can discern the underlying reasons for an asset's auction status, thus revealing strategic opportunities for negotiation. This perspective not only enhances an investor's ability to navigate the auction landscape but also empowers them to make informed decisions that align with their financial objectives. In conclusion, the episode advocates for a rigorous, analytical approach to property auctions, underscoring the significance of emotional discipline in realizing investment success. Takeaways: * The paramount skill for successful auction investors is knowing precisely when to walk away from a property. * Emotional attachment to auction lots can lead to significant financial losses and clouded judgment. * Conducting thorough due diligence prior to bidding is essential for making informed investment decisions. * Understanding the true motivations behind why properties are sold at auction can provide critical insights. * Investors must avoid the psychological trap of sunk costs to maintain discipline in their bidding strategy. * Patience and a rigorous analytical approach are vital in navigating the competitive landscape of property auctions.

12. apr. 202615 min