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Post by Mrs H on Feb 7, 2008 11:58:54 GMT -1
Hi Tom & Jules Meh not great. Dream cottage offer has been rejected and I cannot afford the price they want for it. my offer still stands Which is? Afternoon Kev
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Post by CmonYouSpurs on Feb 7, 2008 12:00:40 GMT -1
Eoin wants you to live under his toadstool ;D
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Post by Travis on Feb 7, 2008 12:01:51 GMT -1
Hi Tom & Jules Meh not great. Dream cottage offer has been rejected and I cannot afford the price they want for it. Hello Laura. That's a real pisser about the cottage. Any room for negotiation?
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Post by Mrs H on Feb 7, 2008 12:02:25 GMT -1
Eoin wants you to live under his toadstool ;D I always knew he was a gnome! ;D
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Post by thales on Feb 7, 2008 12:03:27 GMT -1
my offer still stands Which is? Afternoon Kev to pay a visit to the owner and convince to accept your offer
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Post by thales on Feb 7, 2008 12:04:44 GMT -1
Eoin wants you to live under his toadstool ;D I always knew he was a gnome! ;D
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Post by Mrs H on Feb 7, 2008 12:05:01 GMT -1
Hi Tom & Jules Meh not great. Dream cottage offer has been rejected and I cannot afford the price they want for it. Hello Laura. That's a real pisser about the cottage. Any room for negotiation? Hi No room for negotiation. She seems to have seen the pound signs rather than the logistical nightmare her asking price couple offer her. They're in a least a 3 step chain and I can move tomorrow. For £4000 less I still think my offer is resonable.
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Post by Mrs H on Feb 7, 2008 12:05:58 GMT -1
Eoin can you take that picture off or I'm going to have to log of this thread?
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Post by jh1980 on Feb 7, 2008 12:09:45 GMT -1
£4,000 less is a tiny difference when talking about property. The Vendor should be glad she isn't in London - I offered £20k less than the asking price! If I was her I'd sell to the easy, no chain option before the arse falls out of the property market!!! Sorry to hear this H
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Post by Travis on Feb 7, 2008 12:09:58 GMT -1
Hello Laura. That's a real pisser about the cottage. Any room for negotiation? Hi No room for negotiation. She seems to have seen the pound signs rather than the logistical nightmare her asking price couple offer her. They're in a least a 3 step chain and I can move tomorrow. For £4000 less I still think my offer is resonable. I assume from everything you've said about the place that you're at the very limit of what you can afford too? Small consolation, but I notice that interest rates have just been cut by 0.25%.
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Post by thales on Feb 7, 2008 12:10:29 GMT -1
done
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Post by unkownperson on Feb 7, 2008 12:12:40 GMT -1
Hi Tom & Jules Meh not great. Dream cottage offer has been rejected and I cannot afford the price they want for it. Not good thing... how mutch below was it?
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Post by Mrs H on Feb 7, 2008 12:17:07 GMT -1
£4,000 less is a tiny difference when talking about property. The Vendor should be glad she isn't in London - I offered £20k less than the asking price! If I was her I'd sell to the easy, no chain option before the arse falls out of the property market!!! Sorry to hear this H True £4000 is bog all in property terms but in terms of finding £4000 from one wage and an offer that's already top of your budget it may as well be £40,000.
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Post by CmonYouSpurs on Feb 7, 2008 12:20:20 GMT -1
£4,000 less is a tiny difference when talking about property. The Vendor should be glad she isn't in London - I offered £20k less than the asking price! If I was her I'd sell to the easy, no chain option before the arse falls out of the property market!!! Sorry to hear this H True £4000 is bog all in property terms but in terms of finding £4000 from one wage and an offer that's already top of your budget it may as well be £40,000. 4000 sounds a lot but it wouldnt add much to your monthly paynents
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Post by Travis on Feb 7, 2008 12:22:07 GMT -1
True £4000 is bog all in property terms but in terms of finding £4000 from one wage and an offer that's already top of your budget it may as well be £40,000. 4000 sounds a lot but it wouldnt add much to your monthly paynents About £26 a month I'd reckon, off the top off my head. ...over 25 years, I should add.
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Post by jh1980 on Feb 7, 2008 12:22:18 GMT -1
True £4000 is bog all in property terms but in terms of finding £4000 from one wage and an offer that's already top of your budget it may as well be £40,000. Yes hun, my point is this other woman should accept your offer, it would be a helluva lot easier for her - it's not in her interests to hold out just to get (for her) another £4k. I sympathise with you!
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Post by T C on Feb 7, 2008 12:22:49 GMT -1
que sera sera Mrs H....... if that cottage had your name on it
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Post by CmonYouSpurs on Feb 7, 2008 12:23:46 GMT -1
4000 sounds a lot but it wouldnt add much to your monthly paynents About £26 a month I'd reckon, off the top off my head. tbh not something youd notice (2 bottles of wine less a month) ;D
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Post by jh1980 on Feb 7, 2008 12:24:15 GMT -1
4000 sounds a lot but it wouldnt add much to your monthly paynents About £26 a month I'd reckon, off the top off my head. Depends on the Mortgage lender's rules about maximum income stretches - and they will be more worried at the moment with the uncertainty in the market. Tis a shitter!
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Post by Travis on Feb 7, 2008 12:24:34 GMT -1
About £26 a month I'd reckon, off the top off my head. tbh not something youd notice (2 bottles of wine less a month) ;D I'd notice that!!
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