Thursday, September 15th, 2011 in Commercial, Landlord, Managing Agent, News, Residential
Patrick Cannon in Property Week notes that the Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) has recently published its “Draft supervision and enforcement strategy for conveyancing”, which it plans to finalise in October this year. This paper explains how the SRA will deal with – or as the paper puts it, “engage with” – solicitors whose conveyancing work is in breach of the new SRA Handbook which is effective from 6 October.
The new handbook is intended to move away from prescriptive rules and introduce more flexibility. To that end, there will be 10 mandatory principles, fleshed out by the code of conduct with lists of “outcomes” and “indicative behaviours”.
Thursday, September 15th, 2011 in Commercial, Landlord, Managing Agent, News
The rate of shopping centre construction activity has fallen to similar levels seen during the early 1900s recession, limiting opportunities for retailers to expand, according to the latest research from CB Richard Ellis, reported in Shopping Centre.
Shopping Centre development has fallen to less than 25 percent of levels recorded in the first half of 2007, immediately before the onset of the credit crisis, and continues to contract in Great Britain with new completions set to provide less than 3m sq ft of space in 2011. More than half the total of new shopping centre space completed this year is accounted for by Westfield Stratford.
However, unlike the early 1990s recession when new scheme proposals and consent levels declined sharply, the overall development pipeline has remained relatively stable. The decline continues to be more to do with nominal delays that schemes being scrapped altogether, albeit “distressed” schemes – those where developers are in administration or cannot progress schemes for financing reasons – have inevitably grown in number.
Due to the length of time it takes to get planning consents and the cost of holding land for development, it is clear that some shopping centre schemes will inevitably be cancelled resulting in further pipeline contraction. CBRE expect the current pipeline total of around 60m sq ft to fall to about 40m sq ft over the next three years.
Thursday, September 15th, 2011 in Landlord, Managing Agent, News, Service Charge
According to a report by Property Week, the Occupier Satisfaction Survey 2011 questionnaire based on the Code for Leasing Business Premises, shows that commercial property tenants in the UK are slightly more satisfied with the service they receive from landlords than last year, although service charge arrangements remain a particular area of discontent. The survey was commissioned by the Property Industry Alliance in conjunction with the UK chapter of CoreNet Global.