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Em Morley

Leeds BS offer fee free product for TMA members

Published On: July 8, 2015 at 4:04 pm

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Leeds Building Society has moved to launch a unique, cost free, shared ownership product, aimed directly at registered advisers who the use TMA Mortgage Club.

As a result, TMA club members will be able to access an exclusive two-year cut- price shared ownership mortgage. The offer is available up to a maximum of £500,000, with a 95% borrower share, at 3.89%, a discount of 1.8%. This offer comes with free standard valuation, free arrangement costs and a generous £300 cashback.[1]

When the two years are up, the rate will revert back to a 1% discount for another three years, with no repayment charges.

Solutions

‘We are constantly working with providers to ensure our club members can offer as many solutions as possible to their clients,’ said David Copland, director of TMA. ‘As the housing market changes affordability is key and products like this fee free, shared ownership one, which we have worked on with Leeds Building Society, become ever more important to ensure people in different situations are able to get onto the property ladder.’[1]

‘The Leeds is offering an excellent market leading deal, which is sure to be attractive to clients looking at shared ownership,’ Copland added.[1]

Leeds BS offer fee free product for TMA members

Leeds BS offer fee free product for TMA members

Louisa Sedgwick, head of intermediary distribution at Leeds Building Society said that the firm was, ‘delighted to work with TMA in strengthening a collective commitment to the DA mortgage broker. With the demand for shared ownership growing, given the diverse needs of today’s customers, this is an ideal solution for TMA members to offer to their clients.’[1]

[1] http://www.financialreporter.co.uk/mortgages/leeds-bs-launches-fee-free-exclusives-for-tma.html?utm_content=buffer63ad1&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer

 

 

Ex-Estate Agent Charged with 32 Offences

Published On: July 8, 2015 at 3:48 pm

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Ex-Estate Agent Charged with 32 Offences

Ex-Estate Agent Charged with 32 Offences

A former estate agent has been charged with multiple offences of fraud and money laundering, totalling hundreds of thousands of pounds.

Russell Baker, 57, of Newton Abbot, Devon, appeared at Torquay Magistrates’ Court on Monday 6th July.

The court was told that he was accused of 32 offences. Baker did not enter a plea.

He has been remanded on conditional bail until Friday 24th July, when a trial will take place at Exeter Crown Court.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Shelter Warns Against Rent Caps

Published On: July 8, 2015 at 2:52 pm

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Britain is currently suffering a housing crisis, which has prominently been caused by a lack of new affordable homes. This has caused to record levels of private renters, as homeownership and social renting declines.

Private renting was once a “stepping-stone” for students and young professionals, but is now the only option for one in four households.

Renting can be positive for some. However, many must deal with high rents, short-term tenancies and unexpected fees or rent rises. Families are the worst affected, as regular moves and increasing rents causes problems for children and finances. For every £10 the average tenant earns, £4 goes on rent.

This is why, says homelessness charity Shelter’s Campbell Robb, more renters are joining Shelter’s campaign to demand improvements in the sector. Find out more here: http://england.shelter.org.uk/professional_resources/policy_and_research/policy_library/policy_library_folder/making_renting_fit_for_families_the_impact_of_different_forms_of_rent_regulation

Shelter Warns Against Rent Caps

Shelter Warns Against Rent Caps

Robb asks: “Why don’t we just cap rents?”

This seems like a simple way to make renting cheaper for Britain’s 11m renters. But the issue is often debated.

Some believe that any intervention in the market, however small, will cause landlords to leave. Others argue that rent caps will bring rents down immediately.

Shelter has decided to find out for itself if rent caps would work, and if not, what would?

“We just want what’s best for tenants – and it was clear they needed some evidence on this issue – so we commissioned Cambridge University to look at various forms of rent regulation and model their potential effects,” says Robb.

The University’s study delivered a clear conclusion. Rent caps may be an easy solution, but they could cause more issues for tenants.

Robb explains: “The researchers predict that driving down the cost of rents in this way will cause evictions to rise, conditions to get worse and make it a lot tougher for anyone on a low income – especially those on housing benefit – to find somewhere to live.”

However, the research also revealed that the market could cope with being more supportive of families. The University’s economic model shows that it would be safe to introduce longer-term tenancies, in which rents could only increase by inflation.

Shelter has proposed five-year tenancies, which are successfully used internationally, which would provide stability for families. Households could also plan their finances more easily under these terms.

Although, Robb warns, this would not solve the problem of high rents.

He says: “And here, sadly, there is no short cut. If we’re serious about wanting house prices and rents to be more affordable, then we have to be building more genuinely affordable homes.”

In the last five years, the budget for building affordable homes was reduced by over 60%.

“There is no way out of this affordability crisis without more homes,” urges Robb.

He continues: “As the charity for people experiencing bad housing or homelessness, our focus has always been on what delivers for tenants. We’re proud to continue that tradition of standing up for renters today.

“In this case, what works best for them isn’t rent caps. Caps could end up making the lives of tenants on low incomes much more difficult, not easier. But that doesn’t mean we don’t need change. Renting families deserve the stability to raise their children that others have and this research shows that the market can offer that, and continue to strive.”1

Housing is extremely expensive in the UK, but this needs to change. Longer-term tenancies will not put first time buyers on the property ladder. However, building more homes will help households buy and benefit those that rent.

1 http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/campbell-robb/rent-cap_b_7734332.html?utm_hp_ref=uk

High earners to lose subsidies

Published On: July 8, 2015 at 2:52 pm

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The first sole Conservative budget in nearly 20 years has been announced today, bringing with it bad news for high-earners living in council properties.

Previously, these tenants have received cheaper, subsidised rents, but changes in the outlined by Chancellor Osborne today will see big earners lose this advantage.

Changes

Under the new legislation, high-earners, those who earn in excess of £40,000 in London, or £30,000 outside of the capital, will lose their benefits and have to pay the total market rent.

This change of ruling, which Mr Osborne anticipates will save the taxpayer £250m per year, is aimed at tenants such as Frank Dobson. Mr Dobson served as a Cabinet Minister under Tony Blair and earned a six-figure salary, but still lives in a council flat in the capital.

High earners to lose subsidies

High earners to lose subsidies

The move comes on the heels of steps taken over the past five years, which have enabled housing associations to charge full market rents to tenants in receipt of incomes totalling more than £60,000.

Mr Osborne has also declared that the increased rental income that local authorities will receive as a result of the end of taxpayer-funded subsidies will be returned in full to the Treasury. This is turn will be used to reduce national debt.

 

 

Property Prices in London Suburbs Up Almost 20%

The Outer London boroughs of Barking and Dagenham, Brent, and Sutton have experienced property prices rising almost 20% in the past three months.

Property Prices in London Suburbs Up Almost 20%

Property Prices in London Suburbs Up Almost 20%

Prices in the Essex borough of Barking and Dagenham were up 19% in the last three months, compared with the same period last year. In Sutton, prices increased by 18% and Brent saw prices grow by 17%, according to Nationwide’s house price index for June.

House prices dropped by 0.2% in June, taking the annual rate of price growth to a two-year low. The market could be slowing down after a boost following the general election.

The average house price decreased to £195,055 last month, from £195,166.

Year-on-year prices rose by 3.3%, compared to 4.6% growth in May, the research found.

Chief Economist at Nationwide, Robert Gardner, says: “This maintains the gradual downward trend that has been in evidence since mid-2014.”

However, buyers will be pleased, as Gardner reports that wage growth is beginning to catch up with the pace of property price rises.

He elaborates: “House price growth continues to outpace earnings, but the gap is closing, helped by a pickup in annual wage growth, which moved up to 2.7% in the three months to April from 1.9% at the start of the year.”1

In the capital, property price growth has matched or beaten that around the UK in the last nine months and the annual rate of growth is the second highest in the country.

In a separate report covering the three months to the end of June, Nationwide revealed that the average house in London cost £429,711, a 7.3% rise on the previous year. However, the speed of growth had slowed significantly from the 12.7% recorded in 2014.

1 http://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/news/london-house-prices-property-in-suburbs-barking-brent-and-sutton-up-almost-20-in-three-months-10359915.html

 

NLA Warns of Higher PRS Costs

Published On: July 8, 2015 at 12:50 pm

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The National Landlords Association (NLA) has warned that costs in the private rental sector (PRS) could increase by £2.6 billion if buy-to-let mortgage interest payments are made non tax-deductible.

NLA Warns of Higher PRS Costs

NLA Warns of Higher PRS Costs

In a letter to the Chancellor ahead of today’s Budget, NLA CEO Richard Lambert said that non tax-deductible mortgage interest payments would not be good for the UK economy and would put added pressure on the cost of housing.

The letter also detailed the influences of landlords on the UK economy through their support of the housing industry and direct contributions in the form of tax.

Lambert wrote: “It has been suggested that private landlords receive too many ‘perks’ or reliefs which give them an unfair advantage compared to owner-occupiers, but this ignores the fact that letting residential property for profit is a business.

“No business pays tax on their gross turnover alone so why should landlords be treated any differently? Removing their ability to deduct legitimate costs before declaring their taxable profit would essentially force them to suck up one of the most significant expenses they face in being able to provide homes for others.”

Using data from the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML), the NLA predicts that costs in the PRS could grow by up to £2.6 billion if mortgage interest payments were reclassified as non tax-deductible. It believes that this would leave landlords with no other option than to increase rents.

Lambert concluded by pursuing “an unequivocal reassurance that the Government will continue to regard buy-to-let mortgage interest payments as a legitimate business cost and give landlords the confidence and certainty to invest for the future.”1

1 http://www.propertyreporter.co.uk/landlords/warning-issued-over-mortgage-interest-payments.html