Tag Archives: sales
Residential property sales in Scotland reach eight year high
The Scottish residential property market has recorded is highest January home sales in eight years and average prices also rose, according to the latest index figures. Sales in the first month of 2016 increased by 24% year on year with the biggest surge in Midlothian with a rise of 38% with flats and terraced houses driving the growth, the Your Move data shows. Average Scottish house prices increased by 0.8% in January to £171, 079, up from 0.3% the previous month. The strongest growth was in Stirling where property values have jumped 13.5% over the past year. Christine Campbell, Your Move managing director in Scotland, pointed out that transactions in Scotland easily outpaced sales south of the border, as England and Wales only saw a 1% rise over the same time period. She explained that the surge in Scottish home purchases has been propelled by second home and buy to let buyers eager to avoid paying the 3% Land and Buildings Transaction Tax (LBTT) surcharge which is being introduced from 01 April. She pointed out that as this tax hike was only announced in December’s Scottish Budget, January’s surge in sales may only be the tip of the iceberg. She also explained that the growth in Midlothian has been aided by the lower rate of LBTT on the purchase of cheaper properties, with flat and terraced house sales accounting for the largest rise. This trend can also be seen in Glasgow, which narrowly beat Edinburgh to become the area with the highest absolute increase in sales. The only areas in Scotland which have seen a decline in sales from November to January, compared to the previous three months are Aberdeen City and Aberdeenshire. In Aberdeen City sales have fallen by 11% in this time period, as a result of the oil crisis and the large proportion of expensive detached homes in city which are hit hardest by the LBBT. ‘January marks the sixth consecutive month of year-on-year growth in house prices, as the market finds a sturdy footing, putting the shaky start to 2015 behind it. The boost in property values has been driven by improving economic conditions, with employment in Scotland at an all-time high,’ said Campbell. ‘However, this stability may be under threat if the effects of the impending LBTT surcharge mirror those seen with the introduction of the original tax. There could soon be a swift peak in prices as investors rush to buy before the surcharge comes into force, followed by a dip in home values after the implementation of the surcharge,’ she warned. She reckons that the 13.5% or £24,508 year on year price growth in Stirling has been fuelled by Stirling Council’s programme to build 210 new properties in the area, with an additional investment of £9 million planned for 2016. ‘A further boost was provided by the recent sales of two million pound homes in the countryside close to the city, possibly as… Continue reading
London to get another 11 new housing zones
The Mayor of London has announced 11 new Housing Zones that will provide 24,554 new homes and create new neighbourhoods across the capital. An additional £200 million has been designated to the final 11 zones, which stretch from Havering to Kingston and Enfield and bring the total number planned in London to 31 which will see 77,000 new homes built. The aim is to boost housing supply, stimulate building and produce the new low cost homes London needs to meet its growing population. Some 34% of the 77,000 new homes will be affordable, alongside transformational regeneration of key town centres, train station hubs and housing estates. The Mayor made the announcement as he officially opened a new affordable housing development in the heart of London's West End. Trenchard House, spanning across Broadwick and Hopkins Street, is a former derelict Metropolitan Police hostel, on Greater London Authority acquired land released by the Mayor. The site has undergone a £54 million redevelopment to build 78 new homes, including 65 affordable one to three bedroom apartments. The affordable apartments are intermediate rent with some offered at 75% discount to market rates. Exact rents are based on resident's incomes, and many of them work night shifts in the theatres and bars surrounding Soho and will now be within walking distance of their jobs. The site, which had lain vacant for almost 13 years, is one of the 414 hectares of land transferred to the Mayor with every surplus site owned by City Hall now released for development. The intermediate homes are part of the 100,000 affordable homes the Mayor is on track to deliver by the end of his term. ‘Meeting the unprecedented demand for housing after 30 years of historic failure to build new homes is a critical issue affecting the capital. That is why I have led an enormous programme of regeneration with my 31 housing zones that will transform communities across London, creating nearly 80,000 new homes, plus new transport hubs and schools,’ said Johnson. ‘This new housing development in the heart of the West End is delivering a life line to hard working local people who were priced out of Soho and desperate to reside nearby their places of work. These apartments are just some of the 100,000 new affordable homes being delivered over my two mayoral terms,’ he explained. ‘This site forms part of more than 400 hectares of developable land the GLA inherited and which I have now released every inch of, to ensure as many homes as possible are built throughout London,’ he added. As part of the Mayor's commitment to double house building, London's Housing Zones will unlock regeneration on hundreds of hectares of brownfield land across the capital. The special status has been awarded to areas identified and packaged up by local authorities. It removes all unnecessary planning restrictions, combined with the funds to maximise development, and fast track homes and supporting infrastructure. Continue reading
Property lenders in UK ready for new European wide mortgage directive later this month
UK lenders are ahead of most of their European counterparts in implementing the mortgage credit directive (MCD), a process that is due to be formally completed on 21 March. With UK firms having been given the opportunity to adopt the revised rules up to six months early, many have chosen this option and are therefore already complying with the directive’s requirements. In practice, borrowers will notice few changes in the process of taking out a mortgage as we pass the MCD implementation date, according to the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML) which does not expect the move to have any significant effects on the market or on the availability of mortgages. However, in a report, the CML says that over time, borrowers may notice changes in the disclosure documents presented to them by lenders when they are considering taking out a new mortgage. Other changes as a result of the directive include the creation of a new class of consumer buy to let borrowing, sometimes abbreviated to CBTL, as well as modifications affecting foreign currency loans and second charge lending. It points out that in many ways, implementation of the directive in other European countries will align them with standards already applying in the UK, where the mortgage industry has been operating for the last two years under a system of enhanced consumer protection following the mortgage market review (MMR). Nonetheless, the UK, like other EU countries, is required to implement the MCD, which is intended to set minimum regulatory requirements across Europe. An assessment from the European Mortgage Federation (EMF) of how different countries were working towards implementation the directive said that the MMR in the UK already went beyond the core provisions of the MCD. The EMF also estimated that many firms in the UK were six months ahead of most of their European counterparts on implementation. Firms in Belgium and Denmark had also made rapid progress, and had almost completed the process of adopting the directive by last autumn. At that stage, the EMF was predicting that a handful of European states, including Finland, Latvia, Portugal, Slovenia and Malta, might not meet the 21 March deadline. But all of those countries were expected to have adopted the directive within four to eight weeks thereafter. Government, regulators and firms in the UK have all supported the adoption of the MCD, even though consumer protection in this country has already been comprehensively re-appraised and reinforced through the MMR and the directive does little in practice to extend protection for UK borrowers. The process of implementing the MCD has been overseen by HM Treasury, although the rules will be supervised by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA). The CML report also points out that the transition towards implementation of the MCD has been smoothed by the decision to give lenders a six month window, within which they have been able to adopt the directive’s measures to their own timetable. This means that firms have,… Continue reading