Tuesday, 9 October 2012

Conveyancing complaints and fraud

The Legal Ombudsman has highlighted the benefits of good practice in handling conveyancing complaints; and the National Fraud Authority outlined a new approach to mortgage fraud
Conveyancing is the second most common type of legal service complained about to the Legal Ombudsman, members of the Conveyancing Association (CA) heard at their meeting last week.

Fifteen percent of the complaints received by the Legal Ombudsman concerned residential property transactions, lower only than family law.

Katie Leslie, senior projects manager for the Legal Ombudsman, was speaking at an All-Members Meeting of the CA in central London last Thursday.

She said: “Were the housing market in better shape we would expect to see conveyancing topping the list. Hidden costs and unclear rights and responsibilities relating to properties – such as the maintenance of footpaths or hedges – have the potential to alienate customers and lead them to seek the help of the Legal Ombudsman.
 

Monday, 17 September 2012

Panel selection greatest threat to conveyancing

Solicitors expect the main threat to their industry in the next year to come from lenders’ panel selection decisions, a survey from SearchFlow reveals.

More than half of conveyancing firms (51%) believe the recent controversy over panel management has caused lenders to worry more about fraud, and this will have a potential impact on business levels. But at the same time solicitors report that despite initial fears ABSs have not made an impact yet, with the threat of competition from ABSs (14%) ranked behind a weak property market (22%) and the increasing cost of insurance (15%).

When questioned as to how they plan to adapt to the arrival of ABSs almost half of conveyancers (48%) said they would be making no changes to their business, with 15% saying they would be increasing their marketing spend. Only 12% said they would change their practice areas and just 10% said they would begin to offer fixed fees.

Read more - http://www.mortgageintroducer.com/mortgages/244351/5/Industry_in_depth/Panel_selection_greatest_threat_to_conveyancing.htm

Monday, 6 August 2012

UK House Prices Fall 0.7% in July – Nationwide

he latest report by Nationwide suggests that house prices in the UK have fallen by 0.7% in July. The year-on-year decline amounted to 2.6%, which is the most significant decrease registered since 2009.

The average house price in July was 164,389 pounds, which compares to 165,738 pounds a month earlier. House prices in the UK are currently 13% below their peak in 2007.

Commenting on the latest figures, Robert Gardner, chief economist at Nationwide, said: "UK house prices declined for the fourth time in five months in July...The weaker price trend observed in recent quarters is unsurprising, given the disappointing performance of the wider economy. Indeed, the UK economy has contracted by 1.4 per cent over the past nine months, and is now 4.5 percentage points smaller than it was in Q1 2008."

National Property Database Launched in the UK

Today, on July 31st, Experian, UK credit agency, announced the launch of the first ever property database.

It covers all residential properties across the UK (in England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland). The aim of the database is to help banks, insurance companies and other financial institutions get comprehensive information about the financial circumstances of their customers, both new and existing.

With the help of the database, it becomes possible to compare house prices across various towns. For instance, it shows that house prices in London are 40-70% higher than in other regions. Also, flats in London constitute 45% of property stock, whereas in other regions this figure stands at 12%.

Friday, 6 July 2012

Average property price increases to £161k, Land Registry

Number of properties sold for more than £1m plunges 41 per cent while London house prices continue to rise fastest in UK.

Property prices have increased 0.5 per cent in the month of May, taking average house prices in England and Wales to £161,677, data from Land Registry have revealed.

The region in England and Wales which experienced the highest increase in its average property value over the last 12 months is London, unsurprisingly, with a movement of 7.7 per cent.

London also experienced the greatest monthly rise with an increase of 2.6 per cent.

Yorkshire & the Humber experienced the greatest annual price fall with a decrease of 3.9 per cent. The north east saw the most significant monthly price fall with a decrease of 1.9 per cent.
In addition, the most up-to-date figures available show that during March 2012, the number of completed house sales in England and Wales increased by 25 per cent to 58,609 compared with 46,742 in March 2011.

The number of properties sold in England and Wales for over £1m in March 2012 decreased by 41 per cent to 501 from 845 in March 2011.

Read More - http://www.ftadviser.com/2012/07/02/mortgages/mortgage-data/average-property-price-increases-to-k-land-registry-KZuEZirwxSnyae9RuT3SZI/article.html

Monday, 18 June 2012

CML issues new instructions for conveyancers

CML’s new conveyancing rules will take effect in England and Wales from 2 July.


The Council of Mortgage Lenders has today (12 June) issued a new set of instructions for conveyancers acting for lenders under separate representation conveyancing transactions in England and Wales.
Following extensive consultation and development, the new instructions are designed to apply when a solicitor or licensed conveyancer is acting only for a lender, rather than for both lender and borrower, in house purchase transactions.
The new instructions will form a new part of the CML lenders’ handbook for conveyancers, and will take effect in England and Wales from 2 July.

Read More - http://www.ftadviser.com/2012/06/12/mortgages/mortgage-data/cml-issues-new-instructions-for-conveyancers-AGdZaS5aUJv1WJrzCBFfFM/article.html

Monday, 14 May 2012

House prices fall at fastest pace for six months in April - RICS

House prices fell at their fastest pace for six months in April as a temporary boost from a tax holiday and unseasonally warm weather in March faded, a survey showed on Tuesday.

The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors' (RICS) seasonally adjusted house price balance fell to -19 from a slightly downwardly revised -11 in March, substantially undershooting economists' forecasts for a -10 reading.

London was again the only part of the country where house prices rose, albeit at the slowest rate since mid-2011.

And for the first time since September, home sales declined.

House prices had earlier been supported by an exemption for first-time buyers from a transaction tax on homes worth less than 250,000 pounds which expired in late March, as well as by unusually warm weather which boosted viewings.

Read More - http://uk.reuters.com/article/2012/05/08/uk-house-prices-idUKBRE8470B220120508

Monday, 16 April 2012

Property asking prices hit all-time high but soaring London masks misery elsewhere, says Rightmove

House sellers are asking more for their homes than at the peak of the housing market prior to the recession, Rightmove has claimed.

Average asking prices rose 2.9 per cent between March and April to £243,737, according to the Rightmove House Price Index. That is £1,327 more than the last peak in May 2008 when the average was £242,410.

The average is being skewed by London's irrepressible housing market. Since the last peak in 2008, London prices are 14.9 per cent higher, compared with a 4.3 per cent fall in that time for the rest of the country excluding the capital.

The only other region to have registered asking price rises in the period since May 2008 is the South West, where asking prices are 2.3 per cent higher. The South East and East Anglia are almost there, just £810 and £2,489 off their previous peaks.

Miles Shipside, director of Rightmove comments: 'It has taken four years for new sellers to pitch their asking prices above their previous record. However, this is not a universal signal of a housing market recovery. The richest seams of housing market activity are concentrated around those with access to cash and finance, with a strong bias to the south and London in particular.


Read more: http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/mortgageshome/article-2130391/UK-house-prices-Asking-prices-hit-time-high-says-Rightmove.html#ixzz1sCeJR9n0

Tuesday, 13 March 2012

Property transactions at 18-month high as stamp duty holiday ends

Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors says estate agents expect stronger activity to translate into higher prices.

Property transactions are at their highest level for 18 months as first-time buyers seek to complete home purchases before the stamp duty holiday expires at the end of March.
The latest snapshot of the residential property market from the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors showed estate agents expecting stronger activity to translate into higher prices later this year.
For the first time in almost two years, Rics said its members were no longer expecting house prices to fall and were seeing transaction levels edge up.
Alan Collett, Rics's housing spokesman, said: "With the recent upturn in activity brought on by the end of the stamp duty holiday, it seems that a renewed sense of optimism may be slowly returning to the property market. Chartered surveyors' price predictions were more optimistic in almost every area of the country in February.
"However, with affordable mortgage finance still out of reach for many potential first-time buyers, it remains to be seen whether the more optimistic outlook for future sales can be sustained beyond the expiry of the stamp duty holiday."

Read More - http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2012/mar/13/rics-property-stamp-duty-holiday-ends?newsfeed=true

Thursday, 8 March 2012

House buyers ‘could pay twice’ with HSBC

SOLICITORS have slammed a bank’s decision to prevent mortgage lenders from using their chosen law firm.
HSBC mortgage customers will no longer be able to use a Cumbrian law firm for conveyancing, following changes to the way the bank runs its residential mortgage division.
New house buyers with an HSBC mortgage will now either have to agree to use one of the lender’s selected firms in another part of the country or pay twice to use their own solicitor.
A total of just 43 law firms will sit on HSBC’s panel for the whole of the UK, none of which are in Cumbria.
The Law Society, which represents solicitors, labelled the bank’s decision as absurd and said it limited consumer choice and could lead to delays in the home-buying process.
Sue Pyne, a partner and head of conveyance at solicitors Poole Townsend in Barrow, accused HSBC

Read more - http://www.nwemail.co.uk/news/house-buyers-could-pay-twice-with-hsbc-1.931366?referrerPath=news/

Wednesday, 29 February 2012

House buyers return in record numbers

Buyer interest in the housing market has recorded its strongest growth in five years.

The number of buyers registering with estate agents grew by 18pc in February, the highest figure since a 23pc rise in February 2007, Hometrack said.
But much of this was an "artificial boost", brought about by first-time buyers trying to beat a stamp duty holiday, the study said.
Despite the "seasonal pick-up", house prices remained flat for the second month in a row, with Greater London the only region to record any increase, a 0.1pc rise.
Estate agents and lenders have reported increased interest from first-time buyers as they rush to complete deals before the two-year stamp duty holiday for this sector of the market ends in March.
The greatest increases in first-time buyer numbers were reported in the South East, where they were up by 28pc, and the South West, which recorded a 22pc rise.

Article source - http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/borrowing/mortgages/9107765/House-buyers-return-in-record-numbers.html

Tuesday, 21 February 2012

SLC launches consultation for its lender panel solution

Following an initial preview of its lender panel proposition - SLC Quality Assured - back in November 2011, the Society of Licensed Conveyancers (SLC) has launched a consultation process.
Licensed conveyancers are invited to provide feedback on the solution currently proposed, so they can help shape the scheme, before it is launched later this year.
The SLC is launching an online survey among the conveyancing community this week, which will be distributed via the Council of Licensed Conveyancers (CLC). The survey will ask licensed conveyancers to submit their views on a number of aspects of the new SLC Quality Assured scheme – from proposed costings to the sharing of information and their desire to be part of the scheme.

Feedback
Feedback obtained from the survey will then be collated and presented back to the profession at a series of four regional meetings, which will be held across the country in March.
At each of these sessions, licensed conveyancers will be given an opportunity to express their views on the findings and to voice any additional concerns, ask questions and make suggestions.
The consultation process, which is due to be complete at the beginning of April, will allow the SLC and the CLC to refine what will become the final version of the lender panel solution, before taking it to lenders in the spring.

Tuesday, 14 February 2012

House prices edge up in January as first time buyers increase

House sales in the West Midlands edged up during January as an increased number of first time buyers looked to beat the stamp duty holiday, according to the Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors .

Some 35 per cent more surveyors across the region reported rises rather than falls in newly agreed sales since the beginning of the year, according to the latest RICS UK Housing Market survey.

From March 24, first time buyers will no longer be exempt from stamp duty on properties under £250,000 and some surveyors note this has produced an increase in activity at the lower end of the market.

In light of this, respondents in the West Midlands were cautiously optimistic about prospects in the near term, as a net balance of six per cent of surveyors predicted transaction levels to pick up over the coming three months.
This represents the strongest reading since August 2010.


Read More http://www.birminghampost.net/birmingham-business/birmingham-business-news/other-uk-business/2012/02/14/house-prices-edge-up-in-january-as-first-time-buyers-increase-65233-30328296/#ixzz1mMz033vd

Tuesday, 7 February 2012

Liverpool lawyers warn: tax relief to expire for first time buyers

Property solicitors are warning that first time buyers will no longer be able to take advantage of stamp duty land tax relief from next month (March).

Leading conveyancing lawyers at Merseyside firm Maxwell Hodge are advising that any transaction with an effective completion date of 25 March 2012 or later cannot benefit from First Time Buyer SDLT relief, irrespective of the date of any contract or agreement.

Maxwell Hodge’s residential property and conveyancing specialist Daphne Bridson says: “Time is running out for first time buyers to take advantange of stamp duty land tax relief, which can make a real difference for people trying to get their first step on the property ladder.”

Read More - http://www.clickliverpool.com/clocked/celeb-stories/1215196-tax-relief-to-expire-for-first-time-buyers.html

Thursday, 2 February 2012

Conveyancers face a rocky ride

Lenders’ panels lie behind one of the many challenges conveyancers will have to tackle in a year that looks like it will be the most demanding in a long time. And technology is another issue that could make or break solicitor firms.

It is difficult to believe there has ever been a more challenging time for property lawyers engaged in conveyancing. The market is operating at volumes that are less than half the accepted norm, the provision of the Legal Services Act - the so-called Tesco’s Law - is now a reality and mortgage lenders are adopting various ways of more closely managing the panels of conveyancers that they will allow to act for them.

Read More - http://www.mortgagestrategy.co.uk/lendingzone/conveyancers-face-a-rocky-ride/1045255.article

Friday, 27 January 2012

Property sales fall to lowest level for a year

But an unexpected surge in interest from potential homebuyers in December bodes well for the house market this year, estate agents said.
The typical number of house hunters registered per branch in December was 294, 32 more than the average figure for November, with viewings continuing right up until the Christmas break, the National Association of Estate Agents (NAEA) found.
The percentage of first-time buyers also rose to 21pc, continuing the increase since this section of the market hit its lowest proportion in nearly three years last autumn, although first-time buyers made up a quarter of the market during the same period last year.

Read More - http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/borrowing/mortgages/9024366/Property-sales-fall-to-lowest-level-for-a-year.html

Friday, 20 January 2012

Pity the poor conveyancer

Dwindling fees, higher insurance premiums, a flat property market - but at least the public like their high street conveyancer.


The legal element of buying a house is regarded as a necessary evil, the part that always slows the transaction down. This isn't necessarily true, of course. But conveyancing is proving to be just as much of a pain to the legal profession as it can be to the public.

Back in the 1960s conveyancing accounted for around half of the profession's income; now it is probably less than 10%, even though most legal practices in England and Wales register at least one dealing at the Land Registry each year. The recession is not the only thing to blame. Lawyers have not been slow to undercut each other and drive down fees, especially with a growing number of volume conveyancing operations that are able to process straightforward transactions in a systemised, low-cost manner.

Article source - http://www.guardian.co.uk/law/2012/jan/19/conveyancers-struggle-to-survive?newsfeed=true

Monday, 2 January 2012

Number of CQS firms reaches 1,000

The Law Society has awarded Conveyancing Quality Scheme (CQS) accreditation to the 1,000th firm to enter the scheme.
Less than a year after applications opened, nine-partner Coventry firm Penmans today became the 1,000th accredited CQS firm, bringing the total number of law firm branches with the CQS mark in England and Wales to 1,548. Applications are outstanding from a further 579 firms.
Law Society president John Wotton said: ‘Reaching 1,000 in less than a year is a milestone that far exceeds our expectations, but CQS is not just about numbers. It is about setting the bar for conveyancing, rebuilding confidence among lenders and making it easier for homebuyers to identify genuine quality when buying or selling a property.
‘Recent developments elsewhere in the conveyancing market show that the Law Society is leading the way and that others are now following.’
The 1,000th CQS accreditation coincides with a YouGov survey, conducted on behalf of insurer First Title, which shows that consumers are generally happy with the service they receive from conveyancing solicitors, but were cautious about buying the service from big brands.
Wotton said: ‘Consumers clearly attach value to the services that a smaller firm such as Penmans provides.’

Article source - http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/news/number-cqs-firms-reaches-1000