Tag Archives: lending

Land owners in Scotland urged to register voluntarily for new mapping process

Registers of Scotland (RoS) is to work with Scottish Land and Estates to make sure that landowners in Scotland are part of the process that will see all privately owned land registered and mapped by 2024. The Scottish Government has asked RoS to complete the country’s land register by 2024 for privately owned land and property and by 2019 for publicly owned titles. At the moment, around 58% of all Scottish properties are on the register and around 27% of Scotland's land mass. Almost all the remaining properties are held on the General Register of Sasines. Property currently transfers from the Sasine to the Land Register through change in ownership, or by the owner voluntarily applying for registration. However from April next year this register will close to standard securities, such as a remortgage, and any change to title will automatically come on to the land register. Landowners are being urged to register their land voluntarily with officials pointing out that benefits will include clarity of title on the map based system, which provides greater certainty and security about what is owned. A voluntary registration also includes a state backed warranty of the information contained in the title deed. The Keeper of the Registers of Scotland has a new lever known as Keeper Induced Registration (KIR) where she can register land and property with no involvement of the owner. The details of how this process will work have yet to be finalised and a public consultation will be held later this year. ‘Our commitment is to take reasonable steps to ensure that ownership of land is visible and to ensure that landowners or their named representatives are accessible and contactable,’ said David Johnstone, chairman of Scottish Land and Estates. ‘As owners and managers of land, members are concerned about the process and professional costs of voluntary or keeper induced registration of title and in particular the impact of any changes from a practical perspective. In general, we are concerned to ensure the integrity and accuracy of the land register for landowners across Scotland and will continue to work closely with Registers of Scotland as it progresses this work to achieve its target,’ he explained. Charles Keegan, head of Land Register Completion at Registers of Scotland, said that when titles are added to the map based public register, RoS will provide a title sheet that provides greater clarity on what is owned and should make any future transactions quicker and easier. ‘We look forward to continuing to work with Scottish Land and Estates members going forward on registering their titles and would encourage anyone with an interest in voluntary registration to get in touch with the team,’ he added. Continue reading

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UK landlords prefer intermediaries and brokers for buy to let finance

UK landlords tend to use an intermediary or broker when it comes to arranging buy to let mortgages, new research has found. Some 69% chose this route while 13% arranged their most recent loan directly with a lender face to face, 12 with a lender over the telephone and 5% with a lender online, according to the report from the National Landlords Association (NLA). The research found the main reason given by 51% of landlords for using a broker was that they felt they were better placed to review products in the marketplace while 42% said that they had established a longstanding relationship with their broker. Of those who arranged their buy to let mortgage directly through a lender, 35% did so because they had an existing loan with them, and 27% did so because they already bank with them. ‘Brokers will be please to know that a large proportion of landlords chose to use them when arranging a buy to let mortgage and it shows that a good relationship goes a long way in business,’ said NLA chairman Carolyn Uphill. ‘These findings are interesting because, unlike most other products and services, completing transactions online is becoming more and more common. However, the variety of avenues to take when getting a buy to let mortgage can be time consuming and overwhelming and it’s difficult to know whether or not you have covered all bases, especially for those landlords that are new to the market,’ she explained. ‘This is why many put their faith in a broker and it reinforces that they are happy with the service they get,’ she added. Continue reading

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UK govt and mortgage industry to work to make home lending process more transparent

The UK government and the country’s mortgage industry have pledged to work together to make sure home lending is available for every stage of life from first time buyers to retirees. Following a meeting between the Economic Secretary to the Treasury, other government ministers and mortgage industry representatives, work is to be done to make lending more transparent. The meeting also discussed the measures that have already been taken to boost help for first time buyers such as Help to Buy and ISAs and how they can be taken forward. It comes at a time when advice given by lenders to borrowers has been found to be mixed in the aftermath of changes brought in last year. In particular there has been criticism of the new questionnaire that all applicants have to fill in so that lenders can ascertain that they can afford repayments with instances of people not revealing all their spending plans for fear of being rejected. A lot of older people and self-employed have also found it harder to get a mortgage. The Economic Secretary to the Treasury, Harriett Baldwin, revealed that since 2010 some 2.8 million mortgages have been advanced, worth a total of £444.5 billion, and by backing the government’s flagship Help to Buy schemes, the industry has helped nearly 100,000 people get onto or move up the housing ladder. ‘The government’s Help to Buy ISA which is due to launch later in the year will get young people on to the housing ladder, while our work on supporting lending to older people will make sure the mortgage market delivers for those who have worked hard all their life,’ she said. We are pleased that the real effect which the mortgage market can have on people’s lives is recognised within government. We take the industry’s responsibilities to borrowers very seriously,’ said Paul Smee, director general of the CML. ‘We hope the improvements we are making to the transparency of fees and charges will help make it easier for people to understand mortgage costs more easily, and will support the many benefits that a wide choice of mortgages brings to consumers,’ he added. Meanwhile, the CML is working with its members, who make up over 90% of lending business for homes in the UK, to improve the advice given to mortgage clients after a review by the financial watchdog, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) said that there is room for improvement. Smee pointed out that lenders have had a huge workload implementing comprehensive rule changes in April last year as a result of the mortgage market review (MMR). ‘Those changes have been introduced with little disruption for consumers or to the market more generally. But there was more to be done to refine the ways in which firms operate,’ he said. The FCA found that the quality of advice in the mortgage market was mixed. Some firms were engaging customers in focused and relevant discussions, leading to suitable recommendations based on… Continue reading

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