Posts Tagged ‘Bridging Finance’

New bridging specialist appoints Masthaven to panel

March 31st, 2011

New to market bridging finance specialist Only Bridging has appointed the recently FSA regulated Masthaven Bridging Finance to its lender panel.

With over 25 years experience in the industry, Only Bridging do what it says on the tin by providing a one stop shop for all bridging finance needs. They have availability to rates from 0.75%, 80% LTV and 100% lending, and have had a tremendous initial response to their marketing emails.

Winner of the Business Moneyfacts award for best service provider as well as the NACFB’s award for Short Term Lender of the year, Masthaven is one of the leading lenders in the bridging market and has been lending for nearly 30 years.

On the news of the exciting new partnership Simon Juniper, Managing Director of Only Bridging said “Masthaven are one of the best bridging firms in the market, and we’re delighted to have them on board. With their recent FSA regulation and their “Can do” attitude it was a no brainer to use their superb products”

Richard Deacon, Sales and Marketing Director of Masthaven commented “I have known Simon for a number of years, and it was a very simple decision to look to join their lender panel. The name Only Bridging is such a great moniker for a Bridging Finance company, and I am sure they will do a roaring trade”

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Apprentice star enters the bridging world

March 4th, 2011

A property finance company has announced the appointment of a former Apprentice star into a major role.

Liz Locke, from Birmingham, who featured in last year’s series of the the BBC’s Apprentice competition, has been appointed Business Development Director at Omni Capital.

The company offers short-term loans to individuals and developers, predominantly within the prime postcodes of London.

24-year-old Liz proved to be a popular contestant on the show, receiving an apology from Lord Alan Sugar after he fired her for failing a task in episode ten.

She played an integral part for the ‘Apollo’ team for the majority of her time on the show, selling nearly double the amount of tickets than rival Stuart Baggs during the infamous ‘Cockney Tour’ task.

However, Lord Sugar felt that she was lacking a certain special quality which he was looking for in his Apprentice, and promptly fired her.

Set up by Mortgage Centre IFA and Christian Candy’s property firm CPC Group in 2010, Omni Capital believe Liz will be instrumental in promoting the company’s finance solutions to individuals, companies and intermediaries due to her “strong financial background”.

Paul Munford, Managing Director of Mortgage Centre, said: “We were immediately impressed with Liz’s strong financial background and the work she achieved at two of the world’s largest global investment banks. “

The company have also recruited a new Sales Director, John Wheeler. He has 30 years experience in retail banking, insurance finance markets and short-term funding.

Mr Munford said: “In addition, John has one of the most impressive and experienced backgrounds in the sector. We now have an unrivalled team of professionals in place and we look forward to growing the business further with this powerful duo onboard.”

Liz began her career as a graduate sales executive for investment bank UBS, after graduating with a first class honours degree in accounting and finance from Birmingham University. She then joined the private wealth management arm of Deutsche Bank where she developed a sports and media division and executed several brand building projects.

Alongside a career in finance, Liz has also invested in and successfully developed property on the north-west coast of England.

Source: www.bridgingandcommercial.co.uk

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A View from the Rostrum by Property Auctioneer, Felix Rigg

November 15th, 2010

Here we are in the middle of a recession and you’d expect me, a commercial property auctioneer, to be far too busy selling distressed stock to write this article. The fact is, though, that I’m not.

A quick look at auction statistics produced by Essential Information (eigroup.co.uk) confirms that my market has seen some substantial reductions. Over the 12 months to the end of September 2010, the commercial auction market has raised just 43% of the amount raised in the equivalent period 2006-7 (in my opinion, the peak of the market). Meanwhile, across the same respective periods our success rate has dipped, from 80.1% to 71.7%.

So where are all those bargains you’d normally expect to see in auction catalogues as a result of loan defaults and debt recovery processes?

Hitherto, there have been very few high-profile instances of property lenders “pulling plugs” on loans that are in breech, unless interest payments are not being met or the borrower has proved to be unreliable or uncooperative. The reason for this still remains unclear to those of us outside the banking world, but it feels almost as if there is a great inter-bank decision not to crystallise losses on loans where the value of the asset against which the loan is secured has dropped markedly. At any rate, banks have avoided revaluing these assets to establish a true current value, adopting what appears to be a “head in the sand” attitude toward technical breaches of covenant.

Of course, this is not the case where interest payments are not met. And yet how often does this happen? Tenant defaults and the consequent lack of rental income are the usual reasons for a borrower to default on interest payments. Fortunately, this recession has yet to witness widespread business failure and, thus, the levels of defaults are not as high as predicted by some as the recession unfolded.

However, property loans don’t last forever. The vast majority are cast in five-year terms, after which they must be either refinanced or paid back in full. In pre credit crunch times, refinancing was much easier than it will be today. And, counting forward five years, it is easy to see that the loans made in the absolute boom times of 2006 and early 2007 will be maturing across the next 24 months.

What will happen? The banking system has neither the means nor, frankly, the appetite to refinance all those loans. In some cases, the banks may have to opt for a brief extension of a year or so (this is happening already on some earlier maturities). Other banks, such as West Bromwich Building Society, have already announced their intention to wind down over time their property lending side altogether.

Most recently, this problem loomed for Norwich-based property investor Targetfollow, whose plug was finally pulled by their bankers last week with a reported £700 million of loans overdue and no sure way to repay them. What happens to the Targetfollow portfolio over the next few weeks and months may well be a pattern for what is to come.

The problems will be most acute where asset values have slipped considerably from the levels ascribed at the time the loan was granted. This is very likely to happen in the case of a secondary investment property that was purchased during that boom period of 2006 – 7, unless its value has been somehow enhanced in the meantime through adroit asset management. Whether banks can afford to keep such devalued assets as security seems less likely in the wake of Basle, leading one to the conclusion that the banks may end up – whether they like it or not – in charge of a lot of property that they will then have to sell.

You will gather from the above that, whilst I may not be as busy as I would like at the moment, I am expecting to become very much busier from about this time next year onwards. Before then, I will still have time to suggest a few ways of finding bargains in the auction rooms and also how to avoid pitfalls that can lead to expensive mistakes. But that will have to wait until next time.

Felix Rigg is a partner and principal auctioneer at King Sturge LLP
www.kingsturge.co.uk

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Bridging lender blames FSA fine on 'old school' practices

November 15th, 2010

In a major blow to the bridging finance industry, last week saw short term lender Bridging Loans Ltd and its director Joseph Cummings become the first bridging firm and director to be fined by the FSA for serious failures relating to lending practices.

Bridging Loans Ltd was dealt a £42,000 fine, whilst Mr Cummings received a £70,000 fine – reduced from £100,000 for agreeing to settle at an early stage of the investigation.

The firm did, however, retain its FSA authorisation.

In a statement released by the regulator, Mr Cummings was said to have shown “total disregard for the interest of his customers”.

Not only did the director receive a Final Notice, but so did three members of his family; Miriam Cummings, Laura Cummings and Susan Cummings, who have been banned from undertaking any “significant influence function” at a financial services firm.

In a statement released by the firm, issued exclusively to Bridging and Commercial, Bridging Loans Ltd denied refusing the FSA access to their office and blamed Mr Cummings’ ‘old school’ lending practices for the fines.

“We obtained approval in 2004 to undertake regulated lending. In June 2009 we first became aware that parts of our administration were being conducted in breach of the Regulations.

“Contrary to what is stated in the FSA Press Release, Bridging Loans Ltd and its directors did co-operate with the FSA and access was provided to all of our files.

“One of the main problems was that Mr Cummings was “Old School” and he didn’t put the right ticks in the right boxes. At the time of our initial approval in 2004, the Regulations were designed for the protection of long term mortgage customers and were not clear in relation to many aspects of short term bridging finance, which is the sole market in which we operate,” said Bridging Loans Ltd.

In reference to the low level of fines, the firm said they were “a proportionate response to the errors identified, and reflect the nature of the FSA’s findings.”

Masthaven – for all your Main Residence Residential Bridging Loans

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Bridging life – things are on the up!

November 5th, 2010

Residential bridging finance has been experiencing something of a renaissance in recent times. The “old” uses of bridging finance such as chain breaking and the day 1 remortgage are now more a distant memory, as the industry has been seriously keeping up to speed with all that has gone on around it.

Renovation and refurbishment, 100% of auction purchase, payment of tax bills and probate property transactions are all recent examples of where bridging finance is being used nowadays. If you use a good bridging lender who also provides second charge facilities, then there really is no better way to gain short term funding.

There have been casualties along the way in the last few years, as indeed there has wherever you look in all aspects of business. The positive spin to come from all this however is the emergence of a new breed of bridging finance providers who are leaner, hungrier and who will “take a view” on a deal as opposed to treating it as a tick box exercise.

So, all is rosy in the bridging finance world? Well, nearly. There is of course the spectre of regulation looming over all of our non regulated heads. What does it mean, where will it go, what will happen? The general consensus of opinion is that the bridging finance market will be regulated at some point, but with all the uncertainty in the financial industry and indeed the political arena, quite when this will be is anyone’s guess.

The role of the broker in residential bridging finance is more important now than ever before. In past times the brokers role was easily defined, as all he or she had to do was highlight a client who required short term funding, and then almost let nature take its course and let the bridging finance provider do the rest.

The exit route is a much tougher aspect to all bridging loans in these days of post crunch, with virtually no sub prime lenders around, which takes out the refinance option for those with a poor credit history. Then there is the residential market which has tightened LTV’s and criteria for the man in the street consumer as well as the BTL professional landlord.

So what should a broker be doing to ease the path of the client through a bridging loan?

Firstly, establish the real reason the client needs a bridging loan. Bridging loans are in essence short term finance for a client who needs to create liquidity quickly. So whether the client needs to raise money for a tax bill, or needs funds to finish a self build project, or, has put their hand up in an auction and has 28 days to find the rest of the purchase price, is bridging the best, and most cost efficient answer for them?

Often the answer is yes, but does the broker know the best way of finding out the real answer? Most lenders lend their bridging funds at anything between 1 and 2% per month, but the client wants to know what the “deal cost” is going to be. The monthly interest rate is only one small aspect of the overall cost of the loan. What about the arrangement fee, application fee, valuation and legal costs? Is there an exit fee, are there early repayment charges? Is the interest applied monthly or daily, and of course what is the broker themselves charging the client?

If the overall “deal cost” of borrowing the money is acceptable to the client, then it is the brokers prerogative to then source which company will actually complete on the deal. Many bridging loan providers will say they will happily take the deal on, then at the last minute change their mind or go cold on the deal thus costing the client money, and more importantly time.

A good broker always gets the facts up front first. A bridging lender will always ask what the ”story” is behind a loan, always questioning why a client wants to pay high fees and costs to obtain the money in a quick time. The hard working broker will furnish the lender with all the answers generally before application stage so that the lender can make an informed decision on day one and proceed to completion quickly and efficiently.

There are brokers out there who very rarely have to resort to bridging finance, and therefore are uncertain if a bridge is best for their clients. This is where the bridging lender can provide that personal service, going through the deal make up with the broker step by step to help highlight the costs and procedures to them so that they can then inform their client if the bridge is really for them or not.

A recent case we had, detailed below highlights this perfectly:

An introducer phoned us with regard to a client he had, asking if we could help because the client was due in court to be repossessed in 3 weeks time. He informed us that the client had had some very bad luck in various build projects that he was undertaking for various clients and he had literally poured all of his own resources into these projects to get them to work, but unfortunately with no success. He owned a fantastic property in the home counties worth £1.6 million that he had developed to a very high standard, and had a £750,000 first charge mortgage on with circa £100,000 in other unsecured and secured debts that he had built up trying to save his own business. Due to the clients bad luck in his projects he had missed the last 6 months payments on all his credit (including his mortgage) and also obtained 3 county court judgements. He was resigned to selling his house, and had indeed moved in with his family for the time being until his “mess” was sorted out.

The solution we came up with for the client was to take a first charge on his house, pay off his mortgage and all other credit, including the CCJ’s so that he could stop his house being repossessed. We deducted all fees and interest from the advance so that the client did not have to pay anything upfront other than valuation and solicitors costs. He then sold the property, paid us back and had around £700,000 to start all over again with. One very relieved client and one happy broker.

There are many roles which today’s broker can take on within the residential bridging finance sector. As mentioned above, debt management is a very big part of why people take out bridging finance, as long as the exit route is via sale of property. Auction purchases where the subject property is in a non habitable state and the high street lender would put 100% retention on it is a great deal for the bridging lender. Second charge deals where the client has significant equity in either their main residence or indeed investment property that they may own is very often a great way to create liquidity very speedily to raise money for a wide variety of purposes like buying property abroad, paying HMRC, finishing a new build property where funds have dried up, purchasing closed pubs to turn into investment properties….the possibilities are endless.

Some recent industry publications will have you believe that there are now less than 10,000 mortgage broker’s actively trading in the UK. If those figures are anywhere near accurate it is a huge decline from the near 40,000 reported pre crunch. Residential bridging finance may only be a small part of today’s broker’s armoury, but it is nonetheless a vital component that he or she must be aware of and use to the best advantage for their clients.

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Masthaven is appointed first affiliate lender to the Association of Bridging Professionals (AOBP)

October 14th, 2010

Masthaven Bridging Finance is pleased to announce their appointment as first Affiliate Lender to the Association of Bridging Finance (AOBP).

As an affiliate member to the association, Masthaven plans to develop further its commitment to introducers, whilst strengthening existing relationships and creating new ones.

The Association of Bridging Professionals (AOBP) officially launched on Tuesday, 12 October and has already received several applications from lenders applying for an Affiliate Membership.

That Masthaven has been granted Affiliate Lender Membership to AOBP so quickly demonstrates its dedication to bridging and commitment to improving its quality of service.

Andrew Bloom, Director of Masthaven Bridging Finance comments: “Masthaven is delighted to be associated with the AOBP, its membership is the life blood of the bridging industry and advisors thoroughly deserve to be represented in this way.

“I look forward to supporting its members who we currently work with, whilst building relationships with new ones.”

AOBP Executive Committee Member and Compliance Expert Ray Cohen, comments: “I am delighted that Masthaven has been granted the first Affiliate Lender Membership, and I am confident they will set a precedent for the Association.

“Masthaven has been established in the sector for over 25 years, and provides the quality of service the AOBP is looking for in a lender.

“By becoming an affiliate member, relationships between the team at Masthaven and our advisors and packagers will become even stronger, helping to promote a better united industry.”

Formed by a selection of highly experienced bridging professionals, out of an increasing need to provide the sector with a unified voice, AOBP will act as a trade body to help promote a better operating environment in the bridging finance sector, whilst providing essential information and industry analysis to its members.

Masthaven Bridging Finance

Masthaven Bridging Finance is a specialist principle lender established for over 25 years.
Based in Mayfair, London, the team at Masthaven take pride in offering a first class service and highly competitive rates.
Email: enquiries@masthaven.co.uk

The Association of Bridging Professionals (AOBP)

The Association of Bridging Professionals (AOBP) is a newly established, not for profit organisation. The association was launched in response to a growing need for a unified body to represent the bridging professional.

The AOBP provides a service to intermediaries, master brokers and packagers in the Bridging industry by providing a forum for discussion on non-competitive issues, acting as a trade body to help promote a favourable operating environment and providing information to assist them in their business.

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Masthaven win Best bridging website 2010 award

October 8th, 2010

Masthaven is delighted to win this award.

We have worked tirelessly in trying to provide a site that is both informative and easy to use. Masthaven work very closely with everyone from Bridging & Commercial and it is no secret that their website is often praised as being the industry standard of excellence, so to win this award from them is a massive feather in our cap.

Click here to visit our award winning website and take a look at our bridging loan products

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Cazenove to launch Diversity Income Fund

September 27th, 2010

Cazenove Capital is planning to launch a new multi-asset, multi-manager income fund called Cazenove Diversity Income Fund.

Marcus Brookes and Robin McDonald will manage this fund and its goal is to provide investors a combination of capital growth and income.

The scheme will be launched in the fourth quarter of this year once the regulatory approval comes through. The portfolio for this fund is a combination of assets, constituting 40 per cent each of equities and fixed income and 20 per cent of alternatives. The minimum investment for this scheme will be £1,000 and the annual management charge will be 1 per cent for retail investors with 5 per cent initial fee.

Along with this scheme, Cazenove is also launching Cazenove Multi-Manager Diversity Fund for the second time around.

Commenting about this, Marcus Brookes, head of multi-manager at Cazenove Capital, said, ‘The Cazenove Multi-Manager Diversity Fund has delivered a creditable performance track record, which demonstrates Cazenove Capital’s capability in multi-asset investing.’

If you are considering a bridging loan, Masthaven is ideal for your financial needs, so get in touch.

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Bank slammed for leaving customer’s cheque in cupboard

September 24th, 2010

If you pay a cheque in to your bank account and get a receipt, then you would think that your money is safe…right?

Not for NatWest business customer Stella Hulott, who found out that when you have a completed paying in stub, if the cheque subsequently goes missing once out of the Bank’s domain, you are on your own and it is up to you to get another cheque.

Following a string of errors by the NatWest Bank in Margate, Kent – who admitted leaving her cheque and paying in slip in a bank cupboard instead of sending it off to the Clearing House – once found in the cupboard, the cheque was then ‘specialled’ to another branch to help speed up the payment process.

When the cheque went missing, presumed lost in transit, Stella was told not only by the branch but by their Customer Relations team too that it was Royal Mail’s fault, it was nothing to do with NatWest, and she’d have to go and get another cheque from her client.

“It beggars belief,” says Stella. “I had a receipt which, to me, means that the cheque was now in the safe hands of – and the responsibility of – the NatWest Bank.

“However, I was told by two different people that if the cheque did not arrive, even though this was a chain of events started by their incompetence, I’d have to get another cheque from the client.”

Stella – who has been with the Bank for over 25 years and has several accounts with them, including her Business Account – adds: “I feel extremely let down and disgusted by NatWest, the way they feel they can absolve themselves of something because it was no longer ‘their liability’, even though it stemmed from their complete and utter incompetence.

“I run a very successful and busy company with my husband and have wasted hours and telephone calls over this one cheque. The client who sent the cheque was also getting irate as without the cheque being paid in, I could not supply him with a service, which he needed urgently.”

Luckily, the cheque finally turned up and the payment cleared okay.

Despite this, Stella is still angry with the bank, saying: “With everyone feeling the pinch financially, I am disgusted how an organisation as huge as NatWest can so shoddily treat their customers. I certainly don’t trust them to handle my finances at all.”

Recent figures from the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS) have shown that financial institutions received 84,212 complaints directed towards them in the first half of this year.

Masthaven has been operating as a principal bridging loan lender since it was established in 1983.

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FSA bans mortgage brokerage for communication failures

September 24th, 2010

The FSA has stopped a mortgage brokerage from trading because it failed to inform them of a change of address.

A Final Notice was given this week to Chioma Skiing, which trades as Chioma Mortgages, after “failure to notify the FSA of a change in the address of [the] principal place of business”.

The FSA said the firm had failed to respond within the required 28 days that a Decision Notice was given, and that the permission to carry out regulated activities was therefore removed.

As the firm didn’t notify the regulator of its new address, it has “no current, valid contact information for [Chioma], therefore the FSA has no means of communicating with [Chioma].”

When Bridging and Commercial tried to contact the company its listed phone number didn’t work.

The FSA said: “These failures, which are significant in the context of your suitability, lead the FSA to conclude that you are not conducting your business soundly and prudently, and in compliance with proper standards, that you are not a fit and proper person, and that you are therefore failing to satisfy the Threshold Conditions in relation to the regulated activities for which you have Part IV permission.”

Masthaven Bridging loans

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