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Conveyancer jailed for fraud over stamp duty scam
A warning has gone out to property industry professionals in the UK to make sure they carry out correct Stamp Duty returns after a conveyancer was jailed for stealing money paid by his clients. Anthony Maragh, 57, from Harrow in London, consistently undervalued his clients’ properties so that less stamp duty land tax was paid to Revenue and Customs (HMRC) while he kept the difference. He swindled his clients and HMRC out of almost £352,500 in stamp duty land tax between 2008 and 2013. Tax investigators found that he lied on paperwork to undervalue his clients' properties meaning the amount of tax owed was reduced. But he charged them the full amount and kept the difference. He under declared the stamp duty land tax due on 43 property transactions, transferring £297,000 directly from the solicitor's company accounts into his personal bank account. He also spent a further £55,000 directly from the Client Account on collectable antique Chinese gold bonds. ‘As a conveyancer, Maragh knew only too well that he was breaking the law and what the consequences of his actions would be,’ said Martin Brown, assistant director of the Fraud Investigation Service at HMRC. ‘He abused the trust of his clients, stealing money that had been paid by them in good faith to meet their tax liabilities, to line his own pockets. Maragh thought that his scheme would go undetected, but he was wrong and is now behind bars with his reputation and career in tatters,’ he added. Anyone with information on suspected tax fraud should contact the Customs Hotline on 0800 59 5000. Maragh was sentenced to three years and four months in prison and confiscation proceedings to recover the proceeds of crime are underway. ‘This was repeated offending and an abuse of position and trust with a large number of victims exposed to risk,’ said Her Honour Judge Poulet in court. Continue reading
Continued low interest rates boosting UK property sales
Home sales in the UK have exceeded 100,000 per month for a fifth month in a row with buyers attracted by low interest rates and attractive mortgage products. The latest official transaction data from HMRC shows that the provisional seasonally adjusted UK property transaction count for October 2015 was 105,490 residential and 10,160 non-residential transactions. The seasonally adjusted estimate of the number of residential property transactions decreased by 0.2% between September 2015 and October 2015. This month’s seasonally adjusted figure is 6.3% higher compared with the same month last year. The data also shows that the number of non-adjusted residential transactions was 2.6% higher than in October 2014. Peter Rollings, chief executive officer of Marsh & Parsons, pointed out that October marks the fifth consecutive month that home sales have cleared 100,000, putting activity in a whole other league to the first half of 2015. ‘There has been a slight correction on a monthly basis, but we’re still head and shoulders above a year ago, as buyers ride high on the wave of low interest rates and attractive mortgage products,’ he said. He also pointed out that in London, supply and demand are moving in different directions. ‘We’ve seen the number of available properties for sale fall 5% during the third quarter of 2015 compared to a 4% boost in buyers over the same period,’ he explained. Continue reading
Existing sales fall in October in the United States
Existing home sales in the United States fell by 3.4% in October to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.36 million from 5.55 million in September, the latest data shows. All four major regions of the country saw no gains in sales. However, despite the decline sales are still 3.9% above a year ago at 5.16 million, the figures from the National Association of Realtors also show. According to Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, the sales cooldown in October was likely given the pullback in contract signings in the previous couple of months. ‘New and existing home supply has struggled to improve so far this fall, leading to few choices for buyers and no easement of the ongoing affordability concerns still prevalent in some markets,’ he said. ‘Furthermore, the mixed signals of slowing economic growth and volatility in the financial markets slightly tempered demand and contributed to the decreasing pace of sales,’ he pointed out. ‘As long as solid job creation continues, a gradual easing of credit standards even with moderately higher mortgage rates should support steady demand and sales continuing to rise above a year ago,’ he added. The median existing home price for all housing types in October was $219,600, which is 5.8% above October 2014 when it was $207,500). October's price increase marks the 44th consecutive month of year on year gains. The data also shows that total housing inventory at the end of October decreased 2.3% to 2.14 million existing homes available for sale, and is now 4.5% lower than a year ago. Unsold inventory is at a 4.8 month supply at the current sales pace, up from 4.7 months in September. The share of first time buyers increased to 31% in October, up from 29% both in September and a year ago. NAR's annual Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers, released earlier this month, show that the annual share of first time buyers fell to its second lowest level since the survey began in 1981. All-cash sales were 24% of transactions in October which was unchanged from September and down from 27% a year ago. Individual investors, who account for many cash sales, purchased 13% of homes in October, unchanged from September but down from 15% a year ago. Some 62% of investors paid cash in October. Distressed sales, foreclosures and short sales, declined to 6% in October, which is the lowest since NAR began tracking them in October 2008 and own from 9% a year ago. Some 5% of October sales were foreclosures and 1% were short sales. Foreclosures sold for an average discount of 18% below market value in October, up from 17% in September, while short sales were discounted 8% compared to 19% in September. ‘All-cash and investor sales are still somewhat elevated historically despite the diminishing number of distressed properties. With supply already meagre at the lower end of the price range, competition from these buyers only adds to the list of obstacles in the… Continue reading




