coopec
N/A
I did not get "that sort of money" by paying useless consultants large fees for information I can get elsewhere for free.
Mmmmm. I wonder how you made your money then? By doing dodgy deals?:
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I did not get "that sort of money" by paying useless consultants large fees for information I can get elsewhere for free.
Hi all,
Sorry if wrong area to post, but this seemed the closest to the nature of my question.
I am looking to buy a used motor boat (20-24m) worth 1.5-3m USD. All the listings I see are brokers. Broker = middleman. I don't know what cut they take but even if it's 5% of the price that still amounts to 75-150k USD in my price range.
What prevents me from finding out contact details of the yacht owner and contacting them with an offer directly? Is peer to peer selling for motor boats allowed, or does it still have to go through a broker?
Trying to see if I can save some decent $$ on my planned purchase.
Thanks.
Just be aware however, the broker does safeguard the money while the transaction is going on and checks the provenance, ie gets the paperwork in order, especially important over here with VAT paid proof being important.
But also be aware that - in the standard setup - the broker is employed by the seller, works for the seller, is paid by the seller, has a duty of care to the seller and has no responsibility whatsoever to the buyer. If I was every in the position of buying £1m for a boat I would have someone qualified working on my behalf as well. Otherwise it would be like buying a £1m house and relying on the seller's estate agent (not even a lawyer) to do all the paperwork.
I am also a bit irritated by some of the self-righteous responses of people here. Did not expect a yachting forum to have left-wing-tainted commentators. Yes, I can afford the boat, yes , i ask a reasonable question. Nobody in the right mind would not at least investigate how to save a good hundred thousand on a yacht purchase... Not even talking about asking the obscene questions of how I earned my money. Stick to counting yours please.
It's not left-wing. And I write this as fully-paid-up Ayn Rand / Von Mises toting libertarian.To bump this thread, yeah, obviously I would expect both the buyer (me) and the seller to use lawyers for the transaction, I am not delusional. And surveying done as well, which is crucial.
All I am saying is bypassing the broker and saving 5-10% of their cut, but of course having lawyers and surveyors participate.
I am also a bit irritated by some of the self-righteous responses of people here. Did not expect a yachting forum to have left-wing-tainted commentators. Yes, I can afford the boat, yes , i ask a reasonable question. Nobody in the right mind would not at least investigate how to save a good hundred thousand on a yacht purchase... Not even talking about asking the obscene questions of how I earned my money. Stick to counting yours please.
The assumption that left-wingness is a taint associated with honesty is an interesting one.I am also a bit irritated by some of the self-righteous responses of people here. Did not expect a yachting forum to have left-wing-tainted commentators
inducing a breach of contract (getting owner to deal with him directly having seen the boat with the broker) isn't this an actionable wrong... with a bit of luck he will succeed and a Broker will sue his A**!He's posted this in PBO. He's called "John Smith". And he's got £2m to spend but knows nothing about the business of buying or selling boats. Must be a wind up by a newly re-named ex-forumite...
Where's the popcorn.
With the last boat that I sold the Broker wanted an exclusive deal. Fine by me, but I insisted on putting a clause into the Brokerage agreement that should a member of my yacht make the purchase then no commission would be payable.
Broker reluctantly agreed and, guess what? Purchaser was a yacht club member that had heard on the Club "grapevine" that my boat was for sale.
One very unhappy broker but it did save me £3,600 in fees
Likewise, when I was thinking of listing my Jouster with Boatshed, they proposed a flat rate fee of about 15% of what I hoped to get for her, which wasn't very much. That seemed entirely fair to me, as they were in for the same amount of work as something much more expensive.One thing that I was told when I was in the business, broker fees on large and/or expensive yachts are negotiable and usually aren't the full 10% paid on sales in the low to mid six figure range.