Tag Archives: yahoo
Property title fraud costing millions in England and Wales
Property title fraud is costing the Land Registry in England and Wales millions a year despite diligent efforts to combat fraud in real estate transactions, new research shows. Almost £10 million worth of compensation claims, at an average value of £168,900 per claim, were received by the Land Registry last year alone because of fraud or forgery, according to new data Obtained through a series of Freedom of Information. The data, requested on behalf of title insurance and property risk solutions provider Titlesolv, also shows that an overall total of £23.3 million worth of claims were received in 2014 and since the start of 2012, the Land Registry Indemnity Fund has received more than £59 million in claims and paid out more than £31 million against them. According to the data, the Land Registry has settled or paid an increasing number of the claims it receives, rising from some 78% of the claims lodged in 2012 to more than 86% in 2014. However, the actual proportion of the value of claims granted has dropped considerably over the same time period, from an average of about 80% in 2012 to just under 36% in 2014. In England and Wales, it is the responsibility of the Land Registry to check the veracity of an owners’ claim to a property when a title is registered, with mortgage lenders then using its records as one of the criteria for approving mortgage applications to check a criminal has not stolen an owner’s identity and is attempting to raise an unenforceable mortgage against a property. In recent years, the Land Registry has made progress in bolstering its governance, processes and records to defend against claims, however the number of claims remains stubbornly stagnant, the costs of which have to be shouldered by its Indemnity Fund. ‘Despite best efforts, significant amounts of money continue to be lost each and every year due to fraud and forgery of property title deeds, with the Land Registry bearing the brunt of these costs. This is not likely to change anytime soon as many of the issues created pre-recession still lie dormant,’ said Chris Taylor, chief executive of Titlesolv. ‘If interest rates go up, and more mortgages fall into arrears, the registry is likely to face another wave of claims as defaults tend to reveal or highlight allegations of fraud. If those mortgages become unenforceable, the registry and the public purse, are vulnerable to claims of negligence,’ he explained. He also pointed out that fraud is not something that can be easily detected, so ultimately the responsibility falls on all parties, the Land Registry, solicitors and mortgage lenders alike , to be as vigilant as possible and to collaborate even more to detect the signs earlier. ‘Ultimately, however, the principle of a State Guarantee on property titles places liability for title fraud squarely with the Land Registry, so it is clearly in its own… Continue reading
New residential rent controls take effect in Paris
The rental market in Paris is now subject to new rent control regulations covering all new residential leases and those that are up for renewal. The law seeks to cap rent increases from one lease to the next in the country’s largest cities as part of sweeping housing reforms promised by French President Francois Hollande during his election campaign. The policy is likely to be popular among tenants in the city who have seen home rents rise by 42% in the last 10 years, although it has been criticised by estate agents and landlords. Paris is the first city to see the law being enforced and it is likely to be rolled out in Lyon, Bordeaux, Marseille, Lille, Grenoble and other big cities in the coming months. The law allows the prefecture of each city to establish a maximum rents measured in euros per square meter based on when the property was built and where it is located. The levels must be no more than 20% above or 30% below the median rental price for the area. There is likely to be winners and losers. It is estimated that rents on around 60,000 properties are likely to come down and those of 25,000 to go up. The biggest decreases are likely to be for studios and one bedroom apartments, according to agents. The National Federation of Estate Professionals (FNAIM) said the law will hold back the rental housing market and put off buy to let investors. It is considering legal action and already agents in Lille have blocked the law being implemented by withholding housing and rent data. Continue reading
Investment in Irish office property market sees record performance
Total returns from investment property in Ireland hit 6.3% in the second quarter of 2015, rising above the 4.3% returned in the first quarter of the year, new data shows. Offices continued to lead the market, returning 7.4% in the last quarter, and 37.7% year on year compared with 33.0% in 2014, another record performance figure for the office sector, according to the figures from the IPD/SCSI quarterly property index. Following a slight dip in the previous quarter, the higher returns for Irish offices stemmed mainly from a strong occupier market, with rental value growth at 6.1% in the second quarter far higher than for the other main sectors. The index report also says that rental growth is now firmly established as the key driver of office returns, taking over from the re-pricing that drove the office market recovery in its early stages, when investor confidence began to return. The 12 month return for Irish commercial property of 33.7% to the end of June 2015 was more than double that for the UK over the same period which was 16.7% according to the IPD UK monthly property index. ‘The index shows that it has once again been a very strong quarter for Irish office investments. That said, we have also seen an improvement in the industrial sector, with total returns rising 250 basis points over the course of the second quarter of 2015,’ said Colm Lauder, MSCI senior associate. ‘The prime retail sector recorded a significant pickup in rental performance during the second quarter, with market rents climbing by 4.4% on Grafton Street as confidence returns to the retail trade. Values on Ireland’s leading high street have grown by 49% in the last 24 months, although this still leaves values 62% off the 2007 peak,’ he explained. ‘Investment pricing on Grafton Street showed an equivalent yield of 4.5% at the end of June, a long way off the 2.6% level achieved during the boom years,’ he added. According to Pauline Daly, of the Society of Chartered Surveyors Ireland (SCSI) said that the increase in returns in the second quarter reflects strong activity levels in the market across all subsectors. ‘An interesting trend has been the change in transaction type in the second quarter from the large portfolio sales in the first quarter to a larger number of individual asset sales in the second quarter,’ she explained. ‘We are also seeing more investment spread to the regions, particularly in Munster, which is good news from a competitiveness perspective and a wider pool of investors involved in the market which is likely to ensure liquidity and continued growth in investment volumes for the rest of the year,’ she added. Continue reading




