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Cordea Savills joins property fund rush

22/01/2024

Author:
Renata Watson

Cordea Savills, the funds arm of property services firm Savills, has launched the UK Income and Growth Fund to acquire prime assets in Britain’s recovering commercial property market. The fund is aiming to raise a total of 1 billion pounds over the next few years, and plans to deliver distributions to investors of over 5 per cent. ‘Despite uncertain prospects in the short term, we believe that UK prime commercial property is fairly priced and will perform well again once the occupational markets return to strength,’ fund director George Tindley said.

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5,500 empty council houses denied to desperate families

21/01/2024

Author:
Renata Watson

At least 5,500 properties owned by London’s authorities are unoccupied, more than 3,000 of which have been vacant for three months or more. This is despite 353,000 people across the city waiting to be housed. The figures, released under the Freedom of Information Act, created fury among campaigners. Duncan Shrubsole, of homelessness charity Crisis, said: ‘It’s scandalous to have so many properties empty and we would urge all local authorities to make sure they are using their council housing to maximum capacity.’ Councils today defended their position saying many of the houses were uninhabitable. Lambeth Living, which manages social housing for Lambeth council, has 1,090 properties empty, 848 for more than three months, and 18,000 households on its housing waiting list — 8,000 of those families of two or more. A spokeswoman said empty properties were usually awaiting repair, redecoration or re-letting.

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Windsor and Maidenhead council makes history with biggest ever cut in council tax

21/01/2024

Author:
Renata Watson

Windsor and Maidenhead council will announce today a four per cent cut in the charge from April. This will bring the average council tax for a band D property to £996 2010/11, down by £41 from 2009/10. The Local Government Association said that Windsor and Maidenhead’s tax cut was the biggest ever. Most councils are set to increase the charge by between 2.5 per cent and 3 per cent from April. The RPI measure of inflation is currently 2.4 per cent. The local authority has cut more than £1million off the local authority’s budget between 2009/10 and 2010/11 - and handed the saving directly onto council tax payers. Windsor and Maidenhead councillors said they were hoping that the radical overhaul of its finances could form a blueprint for other councils across the UK to cut council tax. David Burbage, the council’s leader, said: ‘We are showing that council tax can go down as well as up. For too long council tax bills have inexorably risen, and there is no correlation between high council tax and good services.’

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Mortgage costs leap as Skipton Building Society lifts rate

21/01/2024

Author:
Renata Watson

Tens of thousands of borrowers face a shock jump in mortgage payments after Skipton Building Society confirmed plans to raise its standard variable rate from 3.5 per cent to 4.95 per cent. The move, to take effect from 1 March, will raise mortgage repayments by up to 40 per cent for some borrowers, adding almost £200 a month to repayments on a £150,000 interest-only loan. Skipton, Britain’s fifth-largest building society, with 100,000 borrowers, previously had guaranteed that its variable rate would not rise while Bank of England base rate stayed at 0.5 per cent, but it has cited a clause in its loans’ small print allowing it to ignore the promise in ‘exceptional circumstances’. Skipton has blamed its decision on ‘unprecedented’ competition in the savings market from National Savings & Investments (NS&I), the Treasury-backed savings provider, and state- controlled banks. Experts say that other building societies are likely to follow suit and raise interest rates for homeowners on an SVR, the ‘revert’ rate that borrowers switch to when a mortgage deal ends.

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House prices point to divided Britain

20/01/2024

Author:
Renata Watson

Fifty years ago, the average home cost £2,507 and one in seven had the loo outside. A half century on, the average home costs £162,085 but spare a thought for the two in every 1,000 households that still rely on an outside loo, according to research published by Halifax. The decade-by-decade data paints a picture of Britain today more divided than ever by regional house price differences. Halifax found that the region with the lowest prices in 1960 – Yorkshire and Humberside – remains the lowest, but said that every region in Britain has fallen further and further behind London. It said the difference was down to the rise in real earnings, which have increased more in Greater London than in any other region. However, incomes have failed to keep pace with rampant property prices everywhere. Halifax found that prices rose by 273 per cent in real terms between 1959 and 2009. Over the same period, the growth in real earnings was 169 per cent.

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MoD faces criticism for 8000 empty homes

19/01/2024

Author:
Renata Watson

Almost 8000 homes for Armed Forces families are standing empty despite the Ministry of Defence spending £17m a year renting substitute properties. Figures showed there are currently 7889 unoccupied homes for service families in the UK, including 2077 that have been empty for more than a year. But the MoD has spent more than £88m since 2004 on renting homes where no suitable properties are available, with the bill for 2009 topping £17m. Liberal Democrat defence spokesman, Willie Rennie, who uncovered the figures, said: ‘It is scandalous that the Government is spending millions renting forces homes despite already having thousands of houses standing empty.’

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Miller banking on mortgage supply

14/01/2024

Author:
Renata Watson

The UK’s largest privately owned housebuilder said the availability of loans to homebuyers would be a crucial ingredient in a return to a stable housing market. Delivering an upbeat trading statement for the year to December 31, Miller Group, the Edinburgh based building, construction and property company, said it was seeing a gradual improvement in the housebuilding market in spite of a demanding economic environment. ‘Volumes are low but the demand has fallen a long way as the money to buy is not as readily available and the balance with supply is now much more in line,’ said Keith Miller, chief executive. ‘However, if we are to see any degree of long-term stability, it is crucial that the housing market gets a continuing supply of mortgages,’ he added.

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MPs attack £5bn government bill for ‘grotty’ new housing

13/01/2024

Author:
Renata Watson

The government risks repeating the mistakes of the postwar housing boom by wasting hundreds of millions of pounds on funding ‘grotty’ new homes, say MPs. The Homes and Communities Agency (HCA), which has an annual investment budget of more than £5bn, has admitted that 27 of the private-sector projects it has bailed out scored five or less out of 20 on the industry’s Building for Life benchmark, with two scoring just 1.5. Homes failed on a range of basic measures, including poor space standards and over-reliance on single-aspect dwellings; inflexibility; low sustainability standards; and poor compatibility with neighbouring properties.

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Record number of complaints against property professionals

13/01/2024

Author:
Renata Watson

The recession may have severely dented the property market, but new figures show it has also prompted a surge in official complaints against those who make their living from it – estate agents, lettings companies, developers and even surveyors show big rises. The Property Ombudsman Scheme (POS) – the best-known redress system for buyers, sellers and tenants – received well over 10,000 complaints last year, with those in the lettings sector of the market alone surging by 79 per cent since late 2008.

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Figures show blots on the landscape for house prices

12/01/2024

Author:
Renata Watson

House prices fell in the North and the West Midlands in December as market activity dampened, exposing those regions where the recovery has been weakest. According to the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS), last month’s figures showed five per cent more surveyors in the West Midlands reporting prices falling rather than rising, and seven per cent more in the North. The industry body added the East Midlands and Northern Ireland to its list of areas at risk of further immediate falls. Simon Rubinsohn, chief economist at RICS, said: ‘These regions have been among the weakest for months. The best we can say is that they have stabilised lately.’

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