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Here’s a snippet to help you if you’re looking for tradesmen for your refurbishments. Now here’s a quite excellent website I’ve stumbled upon www.propertyfail.com. Here’s a place where you can feel better about your own refurbishing (and other real-estate) screw-ups. In their own words:
How many failures are you going to share with us? For those of you in commercial property, I recommend spending an hour online at the Property Week website for this webcast. There are some very well respected professionals from banks and commercial real estate on the panel. I’m a big fan of the Property Week podcast. James Max hosts a truly insightful look into all aspects of what’s going on in real estate in the UK, and around the world. His guests range from the biggest names in commercial property: fund managers and asset managers, to every-day successful landlords. Available directly from the Property Week Website, here or from iTunes. Well worth checking out and subscribing to. What is it with these people? Perhaps I’m naive but sometimes I thinking you shouldn’t even need to worry about some rental valuations. I’m referring to ensuring that the bank is satisfied that the expected rental for a unit you plan to buy is enough to give you your maximum loan to value (LTV). An example to recap how to calculate this:
So using the above example: (£1500X12) / 125% / 4.99% = £288,577 Which means based on the expected rental income the bank will lend us £288,577. Of course this is subject to the maximum LTV of 70% in this case, which is £196,000. So we’re expecting to receive the maximum LTV of £196,000 – it’s not even worth worrying about. These are actual figures of a property in London we’re buying this week. Nothing too exotic, a 3 bedroom terrace in great condition — ready to move in. Now based on searches on rightmove.co.uk and speaking to the local agents, we know that the LOWEST rent for this type of property is going to be £1,500 per month. There’s nothing on offer or recently let for less than that. So we’re pretty relaxed about our £196,000 mortgage. So what happens in reality when Mr Let-me-screw-another-property-investor shows up for his 5 minute ‘valuation’? You guessed it, an impossibly low rental assessment of £1,000 per month. £1,000? Oh, come on – did he even show up to the right address? The right city? We’re talking London, here — not Lincoln? What does this mean to the maximum loan? We get £192,384. OK, £3,615 less isn’t going to kill us, but seriously, what did the valuer’s boss tell him that morning — if you don’t downvalue 5 units today, by at least 30%, I’m transferring you to our Somalia office? Lesson — don’t take anything for granted, even if you think the numbers are hugely in your favour. Do the usual stuff to sway the surveyor – go meet him at the appointment — give him a pack of comparables and a written rental assessment from your local letting agent. Trust me, it helps and you’ll avoid another shafting from Jim Carey or Jeff Daniels. |
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