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Posts Tagged ‘Home Reports’

Home Reports have devastated the Scottish House Market

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

According to the Scottish Executive and Consumer groups Home Reports were intended to revolutionise the Scottish house market for the better. Ignoring the results of its own failed trial, the Executive pushed ahead against reasoned opposition and sensible requests for delay, and made the commissioning of a Home Report compulsory on domestic property sales from 1st December 2008.   The results have been spectacular.

  • GSPC is the premier house selling organisation in the West.  Their listings dropped by 80% in the month after the introduction of Home Reports.  They have remained resolutely at about 50% of 2008 levels ever since.
  • ESPC is the premier house selling organisation in the East.  Their registrations dropped by 80% immediately after the introduction of Home Reports and are cumulatively down about 52% in 2009 compared with 2008.
  • Solicitor Property Centres and Estate Agencies across the country have recorded similar figures.
  • House sales recorded in the Land Register dropped dramatically in January 2009 by 64 % from the 2008 figure.
  • House sales recorded in the Land Register to end October 2009, the last date on which figures are available, are running at 5503 per month compared with 8571 per month in 2008. That is a massive fall of about 36%. And remember 2009 sales will have been artificially inflated from “Normal” by purchases under the Lift scheme and by the stamp duty holiday.

On any logical view of the house market and these figures it is clear that Home Reports have had a significant deleterious effect.  If the rules of a market change on a particular date and from that date activity levels collapse I think it fair and reasonable to conclude that the rule change has affected activity.  Our own experience in Caesar and Howie on volumes is typical and the chaos caused by this legislation is reflected in our daily work.

  • Our listings halved in number from precisely the date of the introduction of Home Reports and have not yet recovered.
  • Multiple surveys had been unknown in our firm for years until the introduction of Home Reports – now we are aware of them happening all the time – and who pays for them is often a cause of dispute.
  • House Purchase and Sale transactions are taking longer and are usually more expensive for both buyer and seller.
  • Many sales clients have complained bitterly to us about the cost of Home Reports, many buyers do not trust the sellers Home Report and lenders frequently reject the Home Report and require their own survey to be done.
  • Potential sales clients have simply said they would rather not sell than meet the cost of a home report in a slow market.
  • Sellers and buyers alike treat Energy Performance Certificates (part of the Home Report) with open contempt and see them as worthless.
  • In many Home Reports, some, and even most of the questions in the Property Questionnaire section  are answered “don’t know”.
  • Sellers in financial difficulty who cannot get credit are selling “off market” often well under valuation because they cannot afford the Home Report and they therefore cannot put their house on the market.

In the face of our experiences and the figures I have quoted I am at a loss to see how any objective view of Home Reports could fail to confirm that they actually hinder the house market not help it.  We have had a recession since early 2008 and yet the largest falls in listings and sales have come since the introduction of Home Reports – most markedly so.  Many commentators predicted aspirational sellers (in our view the majority of sellers) would leave the market if it became too expensive to sell – and they have done just that, in their thousands.  Every aspirational seller is also an aspirational buyer – which is why chasing this group from the market by ratcheting up the price of entering the market was such a daft policy decision.  Indeed I wrote to Alex Neil, the Housing  and Communities Minister, and all MSP’s advising that Home Reports would decimate the market and cause redundancies throughout the property and mortgage sector as well as in areas where trade relies on house transactions such as furniture shops, carpet shops etc.  Such closures and redundancies throughout Scotland are now well documented.

As an aside, it seems pretty remarkable to me that a policy introduced to stop the non-existent problem of multiple surveys can actually cause multiple surveys and still be declared to be a success by our Housing and Communities Minister.  If this mess is a success what on earth would constitute failure?

Sadly Home Reports were conceived in a Fantasy Land peopled by politicians, consumer “champions” and surveyors, with a sprinkling of a few non-representative lawyers.  In Fantasy Land the 250,000 or so Scots who bought 155,241 houses in 2007 (and similar numbers in the years before that) were all hapless victims, recklessly spending their hard earned money on houses they knew absolutely nothing about.  All these unfortunates apparently quite unwittingly bought “pigs in pokes” which might ruin their lives forever. This upset the consumer organisations and politicians who always know much better than the actual buyers themselves how and in what way they should spend their money.  Oh and of course, these silly buyers were racking up about 5 survey fees a purchase as well.  Of course in Fantasy Land it was all just that – pure fantasy.

Without wishing to be offensive I see from a recent press release that the proponents of Home Reports remain happily resident in Fantasy Land congratulating themselves on how they have fixed the house market – which they surely have.

Home Reports have “benefited buyers and sellers over the last 12 months” – The   RICS.

“Which is delighted the new system is working well” – Which.

“It’s good news for everyone”  - Alex Neil Housing and Communities Minister.

Well it must be great to live in Fantasy Land, where propaganda trumps facts.  For the rest us left behind, we have to live with the gritty realities of life, one of them being the worst property market in living memory, a market brought to its knees by compulsory Home Reports.

There is an easy fix to this shambles.  Just remove the compulsory nature of Home Reports – get rid of the £500 civil fine for selling without one – so sellers can freely decide whether to commission a Home Report or not.  Then we will soon see who is right in this debate – because members of the public will decide for themselves whether Home Reports are a good thing worth paying for or whether they are not.

Should anyone in Government, the RICS, Which, or Consumer Focus Scotland read this article I hope someone will publish their response.

To save the hard pressed the bother of having to read it – I can tell you now what it will be.

“It wisnae us – it wis the recession”.  How convenient.  At all costs the Home Report Project must be saved irrespective of fact, logic, job losses, or the economic damage it has done.  Just wait and see.

Caesar and Howie Partner Slams New Sales Law

Friday, March 6th, 2009

Caesar and Howie managing partner David Borrowman is so concerned at the adverse effect of the new property sales law that he wrote to every MSP in the country.  The new law, in force since 1st December means sellers must obtain a Home Report before marketing their house or face a swingeing £500 fine.

Mr Borrowman comments. “This legislation is badly thought out, provides no benefit I can see to anyone, and effectively acts like a great big tax on selling your house.  For example on a flat worth around £105, 000 a seller could have to pay nearly £600 before even putting the property on the market then maybe another £180 or so to update the report when a  sale is actually achieved – with much higher fees for higher value properties.  To lump this extra cost on to sellers in a slow property market is simply daft in my view. ”

Mr Borrowman’s letter sparked some press, radio and TV interest, with BBC staff descending on Caesar and Howie’s offices to obtain an interview for the Scotland Today news programme.

“I’ve seen the comments the Minister for Housing and Communities made in response to my letter but I’m afraid I am totally unimpressed.  Sellers hate these reports, hate having to pay for them and worse than all of that I don’t think purchasers are going to trust them either.  We have done a deal with a large surveying firm to ensure that Home Reports obtained through Caesar and Howie are probably the cheapest on the market but still I think this is all an unnecessary expense.

I don’t see why Home Reports could not be voluntary – if a seller wanted to get one that’s fine, but to force them to get one at a cost of hundreds of pounds with a further fine of £500 if you don’t get one is quite ridiculous in my view.  But the Minister for Housing and Communities minister doesn’t agree – he thinks it is good that sellers have to pay all this money and right for them to be fined if they can’t or won’t pay for a report. I sometimes wonder if the Scottish Government cares much about ordinary Scottish folk”

Home Reports A New Way of Buying & Selling Homes in Scotland

Tuesday, November 18th, 2008

From the 1st December all properties sold in Scotland will require to have a Home Report made available to prospective purchasers.

Caesar and Howie have no particular issue with the concept of Home Reports – if someone wants to produce a report in the belief that it will help a sale that is fine. However we do object to the compulsory nature of these reports and to the fact that sellers will be subject to criminal charges should one not be produced by the seller.

This seems grossly unreasonable to us.  The effect of this legislation is to ensure that sellers will have to incur several hundred pounds of costs before even being able to market a property. This seems wrong and unnecessary to us and we note with interest that the English equivalent of these reports have been seen as a resounding failure – with many now calling for the legislation requiring them to be repealed.

However despite our own views we will ensure that clients are able to obtain a Home Report as part of our property sales service.  The reports themselves split into three sections – the survey, the energy performance certificate and the property questionnaire.  The first two sections will be completed by surveyors who have obtained energy performance assessor qualifications and the last section the government envisages will be completed by sellers themselves. The “survey” section of the report will be similar in form to the old “Type 2″ survey, giving details of construction, necessary repairs and the surveyor’s valuation.  The energy performance section will give an idea of the energy efficiency of the property and potential improvements possible.

The property questionnaire is a section which is intended to give other general information about the property and its usage – including the various rights of access and servitude rights attaching to it. Effectively this last section will contain an amount of legal information which can only be accurately obtained by examining the title deeds to the property.  For that reason Caesar and Howie qualified legal staff will obtain titles for clients assist them in the completion of that part of the report. We think it important if these reports are to be of any use at all that the correct information is entered into them and our legal staff will help ensuring that this is the case where our clients are involved.

Home Reports with legal input can therefore be obtained from Caesar and Howie for all houses going on the market after 1st December 2008.  Credit arrangements will be available to those clients wishing this.