WHY SCOTLAND WILL ESCAPE THE PROPERTY WOES

Released on: May 5, 2008, 8:24 am

Press Release Author: Holyrood Partnership

Industry: Real Estate

Press Release Summary: Scotland's unique and widely admired house-buying system is
set to protect it from the property market woes affecting the rest of the UK,
according to the influential ELPG group of property solicitors.

The Scottish contract process based on "Missives" is being singled out as the reason
why the Scottish housing market is remaining robust - and indeed buoyant in some
areas - while in England prices are falling and the spectre of negative equity is
looming heavily over many homeowners.


Press Release Body: Scotland's unique and widely admired house-buying system is set
to protect it from the property market woes affecting the rest of the UK, according
to the influential ELPG group of property solicitors.

The Scottish contract process based on "Missives" is being singled out as the reason
why the Scottish housing market is remaining robust - and indeed buoyant in some
areas - while in England prices are falling and the spectre of negative equity is
looming heavily over many homeowners.

And the ELPG, made up of five of the most experienced solicitor firms operating in
the Edinburgh and Lothians, believes the system ensures Scotland should again escape
largely unscathed from problems crippling the market south of the border.

ELPG member Steve Spence, Senior Partner with Neilsons Solicitors, said it was
important to stress that the Scottish and English markets are two separate entities
and that fundamental principles affecting one don't apply to the other -
particularly with regard to the dreaded "property chains".

He said: "During the last property slump in 1989-1993, prices went through the floor
in England but in Scotland they merely plateaued - staying the same and even in some
cases showing a slight increase.

"The reason for this is the Missive system which underpins Scottish property
transactions.

"In Scotland, house-buying is governed by individual contracts which are not
directly linked to any other transactions. An offer is submitted with a long entry
date, several weeks ahead, and the purchasers are expected to conclude Missives
right at the start on the basis that they will get their mortgage through before the
entry date and sell their property with an entry date which hopefully corresponds.

"It means that in Scotland we have individual transactions that are completely
insulated from any other transaction. If one sale breaks down, only that one
transaction is affected.

"In England, the system is completely different. When an offer is made, the deal is
"subject to contract". The contract is conditional on a number of factors falling
into place - the sale of the purchaser's property and the arrangement of the
mortgage being two key factors.
"The deal will be agreed but the contract will not be finally signed and exchanged
until all the financial and practical 'ducks' are in a row.

"Transactions, therefore, are inter-dependant and long 'property chains' can develop
often as much as 10 or 12 properties long. Only when each and every party in the
chain is ready to go does the chain of transactions progress, the first time buyer
pays for his property and so on along the chain.

"So if the first time buyer's expected 100% mortgage fails to materialise, as is
being experienced now because of the credit crunch, it is possible for 10 or 12
transactions to fall flat on their faces overnight. That creates unimaginable
turmoil and instability in the market place. Panic reigns and prices are reduced to
try to get property deals resurrected.

"The best analogy is that of a string of pearls. If the pearls are strung on one
string and the string breaks, all the pearls fall off. If the pearl are strung up
individually, only one will fall."

Steve added the Scottish system creates stability, allowing people to buy and sell
with confidence - a key factor when there is uncertainty in the market.

He said: "Commentators have expressed surprise that the English market is on a
downward slide while Scotland is bucking the trend - with prices holding up in a
remarkably robust manner and even showing modest increases in some areas.

"This is because we have a different legal system - our transactions are insulated
from each other; our contracts are set up unconditionally at a much earlier stage
and we don't have the "subject to contract " chains which develop in England. In
addition, in Scotland we do not have the regular peaks and troughs experienced in
the English market."

Statistics for the period January to March 2008 show evidence of this, with the ELPG
members actually selling more houses compared with the same period in 2007 - 802
compared to 787. One ELPG member is reporting a sales surge of 22% year-on-year.

In addition, the ELPG group also saw a huge increase in the numbers of people
putting their houses on the market - 1243 in Jan-Mar 08 against 1089 in 2007 -
suggesting confidence remains high among homeowners and highlighting again how the
local market is remaining resilient regardless of what is happening in England.

Steve added: "While the market here may take a breather, we believe there's every
reason to assume that Scotland will escape unscathed from the current challenging
conditions and continue to enjoy a robust property market. We are a distinct and
different market and it's wrong for people to assume what is happening in England -
and causing all the adverse headlines - will inevitably happen in Scotland."

ENDS

Note to Editor: ELPG - the Edinburgh and Lothians Property Group- made up of
Drummond Miller, Leslie Deans & Co, The Lints Partnership, Neilsons and Warners -
account for 26% of all properties sold in Edinburgh.

Issued on behalf of ELPG by Holyrood Partnership. For more information call Raymond
Notarangelo on 0131 561 2244 or info@holyroodpr.co.uk


Web Site: http://www.holyroodpr.co.uk/

Contact Details: Issued on behalf of ELPG by Holyrood Partnership. For more
information call Raymond Notarangelo on 0131 561 2244 or info@holyroodpr.co.uk

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