What are the house builder CEOs doing about the poor quality of their new homes

Read any of the largest house builders year-end reports and it is all about profit, earnings per share, return on capital employed, sales, turnover, number of homes built, the average selling price and land bank values – all financial matters. Forecasts for the coming year are about the potential to increase these numbers. So it should be, after all they are commercial businesses and these numbers matter to investors, shareholders and the banks lending them money.

But what about announcements regarding improving quality and customer satisfaction? Surely these matter to shareholders too, as any successful business must have happy satisfied customers. But it is very rare that any of the CEOs make any reference about the actual quality of their product in their year-end statements. Even when they do, it is normally a reference to the potentially manipulated HBF Customer Satisfaction Star Rating. The star rating is only based on around 30% of the homes that the larger house builders build each year so is hardly representative. CEOs may also mention awards won in the year such as the NHBC Pride in the Job Awards. However, some of the larger builders, whilst winning a handful of awards, have a poor record in the competition considering the number of active sites they have in any given year.

Top left to right: Jeff Fairburn –  Persimmon * Pete Redfern – Taylor Wimpey * Mark Clare – Barratt/David Wilson * Steve Morgan – Redrow * Greg Fitzgerald -Linden.  Bottom left to right:  Ted Ayers – Bellway * Tony Pidgley Berkeley * David Ritchie – Bovis * Stephen Stone – Crest * John Bloor – Bloor

House Builder CEOs

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Why new home buyers should have their homes independently inspected

Are snagging inspectors worth it?  This is a question often asked by new home buyers, especially as it comes at a time when they have other non-optional costs such as stamp duty, legal fees and mortgage fees to budget for.

New homes are required to be built to the relevant building regulations and warranty standards. Whether any new home meets these standards will depend on the level of inspection and supervision throughout the build process. However, compliance should not be taken for granted. 

Snagging inspectorMany people buying a new home do not even think about hiring a professional snagging inspector. They expect, quite rightly, that their new home will be built with care and that all those statements and promises regarding quality from the house builder will be reflected in the finish of their new home. 

According to the HBF Customer Satisfaction Survey, 91% of new homebuyers reported problems with their new home after they moved in. A quarter (27%) of new homebuyers experienced more problems than they had expected. 

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Eric Pickles outlines help for self-builders.

Eric PicklesThe Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government Eric Pickles has announced his intention to turn Britain into a “nation of house builders” with a series of policies offering tax breaks and subsidies to people who want to build their own home. He said: “We’re taking practical steps which will unlock the potential and will turn our country, which is famously a nation of shopkeepers, to a nation of self-builders too.” 

He said added that encouraging people to build their own homes would lead to less “homogeneous, pasteurised housing” being built all over the country. It is believed people living in the countryside will be less likely to object to custom housing than larger modern ‘hobbitat’ developments. 

Currently, UK self-building accounts for around 11,000 new homes each year worth £4 billion. The new policies are aimed at doubling this in a few years so that around one in every five new homes will be a self-build. 

Mr Pickles confirmed that more than 50 councils are making sites available for self-builders and 3,000 plots are already in the pipeline. Under planning guidance, councils are asked to assess the demand for self-building in the local area and keep a register of people who are interested in plots as they become available. 

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George Osborne says Help to Buy unlikely to affect house prices

Despite a widespread condemnation of the Help to Buy scheme and an already overheating property market, George Osborne has now gone on record stating that “the Office for Budget responsibility has estimated that during the three years the scheme will be running, there will be over 3.4 million property transactions. Of these only 2% will be with the support of the Help to Buy Equity Loan scheme and therefore it is unlikely that the scheme will have a material effect on house prices.” 

Help To Buy jpgHowever, during the first five months of the scheme, over 12,000 households have already reserved a new home using the Help to Buy Equity Loan scheme. At the current rate of take up there will be 18,400 more buyers using the Equity Loan scheme, 27% more than Mr Osborne’s forecast. With house builder’s average prices rising around 7.6% over the last 12 months and outstripping price rises in the general housing market, as house prices get even further out of reach, even more buyers will need to use the Help to Buy Shared Equity Scheme. 

BubbleReaders should note that Mr Osborne specifically avoided saying that the recently brought forward Help to Buy Mortgage Guarantee scheme will not lead to a house price bubble.

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How to avoid being conned when house prices are rising

Buyers should watch out for the tricks used by the greedy when house prices are rising in a booming property market.

House pricesDuring a transition from a buyer’s to a seller’s market, with increasing demand outstripping supply resulting in house prices rises every month, many buyers, particularly first timers, will feel pressured into buying fearing they might lose out or face higher house prices later.   This brings out some of the property industry’s worst practices and probably the worst and most well known is Gazumping.

Gazumping : This can only take place in a booming housing market. It is the situation when an often greedy seller accepts a higher price for their property, despite having previously accepted an offer from another buyer. Quite often the original buyer is invited to match or beat the new offer and a bidding war takes place. The original buyer can have more to lose as they may have already incurred expenses with legal fees and a structural survey.

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Why Buy To Let Need Landlord Insurance

Why normal home insurance will not cover a rental home?

One of the most frequently asked questions when people first start letting out their main home is whether or not they need to change their home insurance, and if ordinary home insurance will provide cover for a rental home.

If you are intending letting your home, you need to tell your insurers straightaway, as your normal insurance would be invalidated. Your insurer will need to adjust your policy (and probably charge you a higher premium) even if you are just renting a room to a lodger.

When you rent out your home to a tenant, you need to take out landlord insurance. This is similar to home insurance, in that it can cover both the building itself as well as your contents such as any furniture, but not your tenant’s possessions. It also covers several important things that ordinary home insurance does not. For example, landlord insurance provides cover for any third party risks that you may encounter as a landlord. It will reduce your level of risk, and will ensure that you do not lose out financially if anything goes wrong.

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Help to Buy Mortgage Guarantee

Yesterday, the government officially launched the Help to Buy Mortgage Guarantee along with details of lender’s fees and some 66 pages of scheme rules.

house-of-moneyThe £12billion scheme is intended to help thousands of people buy a home. RBS, NatWest and Halifax will start taking applications this week, with HSBC and Virgin Money joining later. However, some bankers working on the scheme say they expect interest rates could be as high as 6%, well above the best deals currently available, due to government fees. Buyers can already get 95% mortgages by paying a rate of around 6%.

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Taylor Wimpey’s Pete Redfern reacts to Ed Miliband’s “use it or lose it” land grab ultimatum

Pete Redfern, Taylor Wimpey’s CEO, went on the offensive on Monday in a blog Pete Redfernon the company’s website regarding Ed Miliband’s announcement during the Labour Party conference last week, that if elected, he will introduce a “use it or lose it” policy on land banks with planning approval, if house builders fail to build on them.

Redfern joined the growing list of builder CEO’s to bemoan the planning system saying: “the greatest challenge for our industry is getting sites through our slow and complex planning system, and then getting them started as quickly as possible”

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAHe denied that house builders were sitting on land with planning permission in order to benefit from increases in land value and house prices, claiming: “if we could be criticised for anything, it is rushing the final stages too quickly to get a new site open – born out of frustration with a planning process which has often taken many months longer than expected”

Redfern was particularly critical of planning conditions, which he said: “can be as many as 100 but the average is around 25. They can vary from obtaining a ‘newt licence’ to approval for a road access layout.”

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Estate Agents are after easy sales not best prices

Even without David Cameron mad decision to bring forward Help to Buy (2) the state-backed mortgage indemnity for lenders by three months, the housing market is already doing quite nicely.

The latest data from Sequence, a national network of 300 estate agents shows, the number of new buyers has risen 58% in the last 12 months and UK house prices are rising at 7% a year.

House pircesAs the housing bubble inflates, with buyers finding they can borrow more for less and sellers reacting to the increased demand by raising asking prices, estate agents are cleaning up. So much so that they are focusing on ‘easy’ sales rather than ‘best price’ sales, by grading buyers according to their potential ability to complete the deal quickly, without any delay or complications. Showing houses to the best buyers first – those most likely to be able to complete the quickest and easiest. According to Francis Long of buyer’s agent Hanslips, top of their list are buyers with cash.

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Government invites house builders to apply for £400million Build to Rent fund

House builders are being offered a share of a new £400 million government investment scheme, to help encourage the building of new homes specifically for private rental. Now for the first time, the government is offering support for developers and investors looking to move into the private rental market.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAHousing Minister, Mark Prisk recently said this new ‘Build to Rent’ scheme, will encourage people to invest in the untapped private rental market and offer a better choice and quality of homes for those looking to rent a home. Whilst acknowledging the housing market was “turning the corner” he said: “I want to go further, which is why I’m inviting bids for a share of up to half a billion pounds to help build a bigger, better private rented sector.”

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