International property sales: don’t forget the exchange rate!
If you’re selling property outside your home country it’s easy to fall into the trap of pricing it in the local currency and then forgetting about it.
That usually works fine if property sales in the foreign country move at a fairly brisk pace but often they move at a much more sedate pace than you are accustomed to. Whilst exchange rates between the major currencies rarely move quickly they do move and over a period of many months the price translated back into your home currency can change quite substantially.
For example, take a property that you wanted to sell for £60,000 at the start of 2007 and you therefore priced it at EUR 90,000 (£60,641). By the start of 2008 you could sell that property for EUR 85,000 and pick up £62,553. You might think that a year is a long time to have a property on sale but in many European markets property sales proceed at a very sedate pace and it’s not unusual to have a house for sale for quite an extended period before you find a buyer.
If you are counting in your home currency it can often pay to check whether or not you can lower the local price but still collect the same amount of money as obviously it can speed up the sale of the property.
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