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High-profile husband-and-wife agents move to rival company

High-profile husband-and-wife agents move to rival company

Rupert and Annabel Wakley – both long-time stalwarts of Knight Frank’s country department – have moved over to the rival Jackson-Stops agency.

Rupert is to head up the Chipping Campden branch of Jackson-Stops, following 15 years at Knight Frank where he was most recently partner and office head of the Stow-on-the-Wold office in Gloucestershire.

Prior to that he spent eight years at the Knight Frank Stratford-upon-Avon office.

Meanwhile Annabel will be heading the Chipping Campden lettings operation for Jackson-Stops, having left her role as head of lettings for Knight Frank’s Stratford-upon-Avon office.

“We’re delighted to welcome Rupert Wakley to Jackson-Stops. His commitment and expertise in growing and developing offices within this region is impressive and we are looking forward to seeing Rupert, Annabel and the team continue to build on Jackson-Stops’ high-quality service in the area” says Jackson-Stops chairman Nick Leeming.

“Although a lot has changed in the last few months since Covid-19, I am looking forward to embracing our ‘new normal’ with Annabel and the team, building on our strong links with the local community, and continuing to share our knowledge and love of the Cotswolds with our clients and buyers alike” says Rupert Wakley.

Before establishing his career in the estate agency industry, Rupert Wakley was a professional jump jockey for 10 years, riding some 250 winners including Wandering Light, which he took to victory at the Cheltenham Festival.

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Rightmove to enhance online viewing features in roll-out to agents

 Rightmove to enhance online viewing features in roll-out to agents

Rightmove has contacted all member agents saying it has enhanced its automated online viewing feature first introduced in April.

As part of the government recommendations when re-opening the housing market, it urged the industry to maximise the use of virtual viewings.

Rightmove is now telling agents they can give vendors the opportunity to request an online viewing when they send a lead.

This option can in turn be used by the agent to send a link to a video hosted on their own website, or to have a video walkthrough using a video calling app.

A message to agents from Dave Anderson, agency and new homes director at the portal, says:

“We’ll be releasing this new feature over the next week. We’ll let you know as soon as it’s ready to use and we’ll give you a step by step guide on how to do it.

“We’re telling you in advance that this improved feature, included as part of your Rightmove membership, is coming soon so you can arrange to get new video content in whatever way you think will work best for you, your customers and the current government coronavirus guidance in your area.”

He says the initiative is part of Rightmove’s 10 point plan, released a fortnight ago.

Anderson adds in his note to agents: “We know that you have a lot on your plate at the moment – we hope that you’re able to make use of the improved Online Viewing features to cut down on the number of physical viewings you need to carry out and better prioritise your hottest leads.”

There was no reference to the long-term fees issue which has been a focus of agency anger in recent months, prompting the creating of the Say No To Rightmove campaign.

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Delay property tax change until market revives, experts tell government

Delay property tax change until market revives, experts tell government

A taxation institute is urging the government to delay Capital Gains Tax changes relating to housing transactions until the virus crisis ends.

The Chartered Institute of Taxation says the controversial measure about which it is concerned is in the current Finance Bill, which begins its committee stage in the House of Commons tomorrow.

Private Residence Relief enables most owner occupiers to sell their properties without being liable for CGT on any rise in their property’s value since they bought it.

Final period exemption means that – under the law currently in place – people do not pay CGT on gains made in the final 18 months of ownership, even if it was not their main residence during that period.

However, the Finance Bill aims to reduce that period (backdated to take effect from April 6 this year) to the final nine months of ownership for most people, with the exception of disabled persons or those in care homes.

The institute says it’s concerned that the evidence used by the Treasury for this reduction in the final period exemption arose before the Coronavirus crisis brought the housing market to a near standstill.

The Treasury has suggested an average selling time of approximately four and a half months – but the institute says this may no longer be realistic for properties in the process of being transacted, having been delayed by the virus crisis.

“We applaud the government’s desire to better target a tax exemption – we think all reliefs should be regularly and consultatively reviewed – but is now really the right time to be making this change to this relief?” asks Marc Selby, who chair’s the institute’s Property Taxes Committee.

“We’re concerned that the original assumption of an average time of four and a half months for selling a property is out of touch with the reality of the property market today because of the impact of COVID-19. We strongly suggest that the original evidence base needs review and that consideration should be given to delaying the squeeze in the final period exemption until the impact of COVID-19 on the property market is better understood” he adds.

The institute says it is a significant possibility that the market will remain slow for some time, with houses taking much longer to sell than expected at the time of the consultation, leaving some sellers with an unexpected tax liability because it takes longer than nine months to sell.

“Many homeowners who are trying to sell a former home may not be aware of the reduction to nine months. If this change goes ahead now, the new rules must be better communicated” adds Selby.

“Their introduction coincides with the new 30-day time limit running from the date of completion to report and pay CGT.

“The reduction in the final period of ownership exemption from 18 months to nine months combined with a 30 day time limit for reporting and paying tax on residential property gains means that the realisation of a chargeable gain is much more likely, particularly as the property market revives, and there is now much less time to establish CGT liability and pay the tax due.”

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Sales progression app now used by 1,000 agency branches

Sales progression app now used by 1,000 agency branches

PropTech supplier mio says it now has over 1,000 agency branches using its sales progression platform – and it’s recruited Countrywide to issue a testimonial for the service.

The mio app provides a picture of the property chain, with each milestone being checked off as it is completed.

“We empower agents to quickly understand the status of each transaction in a chain by deploying updates from conveyancers, mortgage brokers and surveyors. Our sales progression process is really simple to follow, and the integrated consumer app ensures that it’s easy to manage communication with buyers and sellers. These features are all designed to make sales progression easier and faster so it’s no surprise that we’re seeing a strong increase in interest in mio as businesses plan for the future” according to Emma Vigus, mio’s managing director.

She says future enhancements to the service will focus on additional data on the platform to reduce re-keying by agents and improving connectivity between agents, mortgage brokers and conveyancers.

In testimonials issued by the company the managing director of Countrywide’s south west region, Stuart Lobb, says: “We have found the system of great benefit during these challenging times and we will continue to expand usage of mio as we emerge from lockdown”

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Downsizers should get stamp duty cuts just like first timers – call

Downsizers should get stamp duty cuts just like first timers - call

Family houses are under-occupied and only incentives to downsize can help improve the housing market – with a stamp duty cut being one of the most obvious.

That’s the thrust of a new report from the Centre for the Study of Financial Innovation, which says that if nothing is done there will be some 20m ‘surplus’ bedrooms by 2040, in homes occupied by the over-65s.

The growth in older households – over half of them one-person – is set to account for 36 per cent of the projected 3.7m increase in the number of UK households by 2040, it says.

The report says the current stamp duty regime “tends to jam up the housing market and can add significant costs to downsizing.”

It therefore calls on the government to ensure that so-called ‘last-time’ buyers are put on an equal footing with first time buyers with property purchases of up to £300,000 nil-banded for stamp duty.

The report also blames the housebuilding industry in part, saying there is a shortage of appropriate housing at affordable prices for downsizers; out also wants more independent financial guidance for older owners wishing to downsize.

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Mortgage holiday could add £1,331 to a mortgage, owners warned

Mortgage holiday could add £1,331 to a mortgage, owners warned

The financial services industry’s much-hyped mortgage holiday scheme, heavily endorsed by the government, could cost home owners hundreds of pounds in extra payments it is claimed.

On average, homeowners looking for help with their mortgage payments have an outstanding loan of £136,000 according to research by personal finance website money.co.uk.

Taking a three-month mortgage holiday would see their regular monthly payments jump by £11.21 to £720.22 and based on an average 21-year term, this would cost an additional £665.08 it adds.

With the scheme now extended to six months, the additional three month period could mean that it total £1,331.95 could be added to the full amount owed.

“Mortgage holidays have proved to be a lifeline for millions of homeowners, who would have otherwise struggled to meet their payments and may have faced losing their homes” explains Salman Haqqi, personal finance expert at the website.

“However, our findings show that payment holidays should be a short term fix. It’s important to remember that you will still owe the money and interest will continue to accrue while the deferred payments remain unpaid. And in most cases when a customer takes a three month payment holiday in a 21 year or 252 month mortgage, the end date of the mortgage doesn’t get automatically extended, so the customer now needs to pay back the mortgage in 249 months” he continues.

“As the nation gradually starts to open for business and furloughed workers are brought back, restarting mortgage payments should be a priority. And, if you are still able to make your payments in full, you should continue to do so.”

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Housing Secretary Jenrick in hot water again as he admits bias

Housing Secretary Jenrick in hot water again as he admits bias

Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick – accused by some of breaking the lockdown some weeks ago – is now in more hot water after the government accepted that a key planning decision he made was biased.

The controversy surrounds a £1 billion scheme on a former print works site in east London for 1,524 homes as well as shops, bars and offices; the approval was submitted by former newspaper tycoon Richard Desmond

Now the government has accepted that Jenrick acted unlawfully in a legal battle with Tower Hamlets council over the Desmond scheme.

In January, plans to build 1,524 homes on the site were approved by Jenrick despite a planning inspector recommending against granting permission.

In March, the council initiated legal action against Jenrick, alleging that the timing of the decision appeared to show bias in deciding to allow the appeal.

The council asked the court to order the government to disclose documents that it argued would show the Secretary of State was influenced by a desire to help the developer save money by avoiding the council’s revised Community Infrastructure Levy (CIL) charges.

Developers are obliged to pay CIL to help fund the delivery of local infrastructure projects that are needed to absorb the impact of growth.

The decision was made just one day before the council adopted changes to its CIL levels, which would mean the developer had to pay between £30m and £50m more to the council.

Faced with the prospect of having to release documentation relating to the decision, Jenrick has now chosen to allow the planning permission to be quashed, according to a council statement.

Tower Hamlets Mayor John Biggs says: “We may never know what emails and memos the Secretary of State received before making his decision and what influence they had, but his reluctance to disclose them speaks volumes.”

In July 2018, the council received a planning application to redevelop the former Westferry Printworks on the Isle of Dogs with 1,524 new homes, almost doubling the 722 homes previously approved in August 2016.

The scheme was to be delivered in a series of buildings ranging from nine to 46 storeys including five towers, some of which doubled the height of the previously approved proposal.

In March 2019, the developers lodged an appeal, arguing the council was taking too long to reach a decision on the application. Such an appeal would normally be decided by a planning inspector but in this case, it was called in by Jenrick.

Although its ability to decide on the application was taken away, the council’s Strategic Development Committee considered the proposals in May 2019 and determined that had it been able to do so, it would have refused permission.

Following a public inquiry held in August 2019, a planning inspector agreed with all but one of the council’s reasons for refusal and recommended to Jenrick that the developers’ appeal be dismissed.

But Jenrick chose instead to allow the appeal and grant permission. It was this decision that prompted the subsequent legal challenge.

Now the courts have agreed to a consent order quashing the decision, and the government is not contesting that decision.

Over the weekend the Housing Secretary was again in the headlines as the Dominic Cummings affair saw some newspapers resuscitate his own controversial movements during the lockdown.

At one Coronavirus daily press conference in April, led by Jenrick – who has homes in both London and Herefordshire – he was asked if he should apologise for the claim that Herefordshire is his family home as his children attend school in London and his wife works in the capital.

He said last the time: “I joined my family at our home in Herefordshire as soon as I was able to do so, as soon as we made the decision that it was no longer necessary to work in person in Westminster. I’ve been there since, I’ve been working from home and returned to Westminster last night to do this press conference because Parliament returns next week.”

Jenrick has come out in support of Dominic Cummings’ description of events in this latest controversy.

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‘Furlough could wreck housing market’ – warning to government

'Furlough could wreck housing market' - warning to government

The government is jeopardising the success of the housing market relaunch through the inflexibility of the furlough scheme, claims a group of agents, conveyancers, valuers and other property professionals.

The Home Buying and Selling Group has now written to Chancellor Rishi Sunak proposing that property sector employers should be able to furlough and un-furlough staff on a weekly basis rather than the current three weekly basis.

The HBSG claims that because of the financial implications of having to commit to paying un- furloughed staff, and faced with uncertainty in respect of income, many industry companies are taking a conservative approach to bringing people back on to the payroll.

It adds that due to the way the housing market operates with most transactions forming part of chains, it only takes delays due to lack of resources at one point in the process to cause a logjam for homebuyers and sellers in completing transactions.

By amending the furlough arrangement to allow firms to bring employees in and out of furlough on a weekly basis these delays should be avoided and enable the market to run as smoothly as possible in the current circumstances, the group claims.

Group founder Kate Faulkner says: “The decision by the government to re-activate the property market has been widely welcomed by all parties, not least those consumers who are desperate for a whole variety of reasons to complete their home moves.

“It is really important that government now does all that it can to ensure the smooth operation of the market, helping to minimise stress levels for many people who already feel under great pressure, particularly essential workers moving home”

The HBSG describes itself as “an informal mix of people across the property and finance sectors all of whom passionately believe that by working together we can improve the home buying and selling process for consumers.”

The group meets on a quarterly basis and is currently working on reservation agreements; changes to leasehold; industry; and consumer education and information required prior to legals being carried out.

Here’s the full letter Faulkner has sent to Sunak:

Dear Chancellor

We are writing to you with regards to the Government’s Furlough Scheme.

As a group we represent estate agents, lawyers, search agents, valuers, surveyors, energy assessors and removal companies.

The Government announcement lifting restrictions on the operation of the housing market has been welcome both for consumers and all parties involved in the home buying and selling process. The whole property sector has come together in a co-operative effort to ensure that transactions which are now able to proceed do so in the safest possible way in accordance with Government guidance.

The sector has considered the impact of ‘re-starting’ the market and there is a very real and practical issue that needs to be urgently addressed to optimise the smooth operation of the market.

Whilst the extension of the Furlough Scheme and the flexibility that will become available from 1st August is very welcome, current furlough arrangements require that individuals can only be moved into and out of the scheme at three weekly intervals. This requirement will present difficulties for businesses in the property sector as the home buying and selling market begins to reactivate.

There is a universal view across the sector that there will be a spike in activity in the immediate future as pent up demand to complete transactions is released following the lifting of restrictions – indeed there are already signs of this after only a few business days. This spike will be concentrated at the start of the process with listing of new properties for sale and property viewings by those who have had their plans put on hold over the last two months, and at the end of the process where all those transactions which had progressed through the process to the point of exchange of contracts during the period of restriction will complete and allow home moves to occur. There are approximately 450,000 transactions (as MHCLG Secretary of State Robert Jenrick referred to last week) that underpin this spike in activity. Once the spike at each end of the process has passed there will be a lull in activity whilst the pipeline of transactions rebuilds.

It is of course the case that the spike in activity will not happen uniformly across the country, or indeed with a consistent demand on resource from one week to the next (or even one day to the next). There will be inconsistent demand for the whole range of services across the homebuying and selling process, whether it be for EPCs, lenders valuations, buyers surveys, property viewings, removals, conveyancing and Land Registry registrations, the production of searches or the provision of mortgage advice.

In order to manage this short spike in activity property practitioners will need to move furloughed staff back onto the payroll. However, the property market is dominated by small practices, who cumulatively cover a significant proportion of the market (for example, 90% of law firms offering conveyancing services employ fewer than 15 specialist conveyancers, and these firms account for at least 45% of the market share of completions). If the market is to get going again, as is intended, these small firms will need to be able to reactivate their workforces to deal with the spike in demand. Individually, however, it is unlikely that the amount of work that this spike brings to each individual firm will be enough to make it economical for those firms to return staff to the payroll for the minimum three weeks required.

In these circumstances taking staff off furlough will present too much of a financial risk, and early evidence suggests many firms are instead opting not to do so. The end result of this will be a logjam in the market. The current furlough arrangements present companies that are involved in the home buying and selling process with very difficult short and long term choices which must be set against their ability to survive over the coming weeks and months. Government will be aware that businesses involved in the home moving process, particularly estate agents and property lawyers, are in the majority only paid once transactions have completed. This means that cash flows must be extremely carefully managed, and for so many organisations that serve the property market, employee costs are the largest expense.

This has to be set against a reality that income levels for all market participants have been devastated over the last 8 weeks and cash reserves affected accordingly. Realising income from the spike in completing transactions will not restore these cash reserves particularly as the majority of businesses will have to bear the cost of the up-front spike in activity as well as the spike in completions. It is the loss of overall transaction volumes occasioned by the pandemic which has the greatest financial impact on the property market. Government schemes, whilst greatly appreciated will not absorb this impact.

Against this backdrop, if companies cannot bring employees in and out of furlough on a shorter term basis do they:

– Delay bringing employees out of furlough now with the consequence that they struggle to deal with the short term spike in transactions. Firms acting rationally can conserve cash in the short term by simply allowing cases to drag out until they have a stronger incentive to un-furlough staff to work them through to completion.

– Customers and the overall market will suffer but the labour cost of waiting is largely covered by the furlough scheme. As transactions only progress and complete at the pace of the slowest party this would result in disruption in the market place, particularly with so many transactions being subject to chains. The knock on effect would be a further negative impact on company cash flows creating something of a ‘vicious circle’. Disruption in the market place will of course dilute the economic impact which home moving has on the economy and could also potentially increase the risk of Covid-19 infection if consumers or other parties become frustrated by delays.

– Bring employees out of furlough, but find that they cannot carry the expense of employment as entailed by a three week commitment to pay wages which could ultimately result in redundancies or company failure. This has the potential to seriously inhibit the longer term recovery of the market.

It would be possible to overcome this dilemma for firms by providing greater flexibility in the job retention scheme. Allowing employers to move people into and out of furlough on a weekly basis would allow them to deal with the expected spikes in activity without risking unmanageable staffing costs once the spike has passed. It would help to smooth the re- activation of the property market, save jobs, promote the long term future of viable businesses, and ultimately save the Treasury money in unemployment costs.

This increased flexibility would also likely result in short term savings for the Treasury, as risk averse employers will feel more comfortable taking staff off the job retention scheme with the benefit of this increased flexibility.

According to early figures from the estate agency, removals, and conveyancing sectors, less than 50% of employees have been brought out of furlough following the lifting of restrictions on the operation of the housing market. Increased flexibility in the job retention scheme could, we believe, lead to an additional 10% to 15% of furloughed employees being returned to work. At such figures, the cost savings to the Treasury of one week’s less furlough payments at the lower estimate of 10% is in excess of £18.5 million

We would be delighted to meet with your officials to discuss this proposal in greater depth.

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London’s largest lockdown deal is coup for high-end agency

London's largest lockdown deal is coup for high-end agency

High-end agency Beauchamp Estates is claiming to have bagged the capital’s biggest deal during the lockdown period – a mansion which has sold for £15.45m.

The property overlooks St James’s Park and is also thought to have set a new price record for the area at £2,351 per square feet.

The agency says the Russian buyer had a budget of £25m and personally inspectd the property just prior to lockdown, with the deal being completed on May 15.

“This is not an isolated sale above £10 million, and we have been encouraged by the ongoing activity at the top end of the market” explains Jeremy Gee, Beauchamp’s managing director.“London is a global property market, a ‘property island’ distinctive from the rest of the UK. The jewel in the crown is Prime Central London, which has always attractive ultra-wealthy buyers from across the globe and will continue to do so, this ultra-top end of the market was busy at the start of the 2020 after the Boris Election, activity continued during the lockdown, and now the market has been restarted, we forecast a busy few months as pent up demand is released.”

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Chief exec quits top agency and training guru takes helm

Chief exec quits top agency and training guru takes helm

The well-known chief executive of Fine & Country, David Lindley, is standing down.

An announcement from the agency came late this morning and stated that as part of a new management structure David Lindley would be stepping down from his post “at the end of May” to “pursue other business interests.”

A new chief executive will be found in due course but the former managing director of the Property Academy, Nicky Stevenson, has been named as managing director of Fine & Country UK.

Stevenson will focus on the UK licensee’s network “to grow its market share in the premium market” according to the announcement.

“I am delighted to take on the role … We enjoy great relationships with our network of individual agents across the country, and I look forward to building on them over the months and years to come, whilst continuing to evolve our agent benefits through our leading marketing and technology platforms” says Stevenson.

“We are a young and ambitious company, with big growth plans. I am excited to work with the team to build on our already enviable position of ‘fastest growing premium brand in estate agency’ as we seek to further grow the brand across the country.”

While Stevenson looks after the brand’s UK growth, Daniel Harrington, who has been in the business for five and half years, will be focusing on London and international offices.

The international team will be further strengthened by South African based Linda Erasmus as the brand’s international ambassador.

Lindley made the decision to quit some six weeks ago; Jon Cooke will operate as interim global CEO until a permanent replacement is found.