CLC: ‘Right time’ for property market reforms

Reforms to the property market have come at just the right time, the Council for Licensed Conveyancers (CLC) claims.

It comes as research by the CLC revealed a lack of confidence in the home buying and selling process.
Fewer than half of the property professionals who took part in the CLC’s latest confidence tracker survey said they were confident in current market stability, 45% down from 54% asked the same question earlier this year.

Consumer confidence was also down, from 36% to 21% for buyers and from 24% to 15% for sellers. This also reflects sentiment about the state of the economy.

The CLC is now urging its practices to throw their support behind the changes, which follow two major public consultations.

TRANSFORMATIVE REFORMS

The CLC said it supports the Government’s view that the reforms will be transformative, reducing delays and the unacceptably high level of transactions falling through.

This will be achieved by the introduction of legally binding agreements, supported by sales packs containing all the information prospective buyers may need upfront. Buyers and sellers can therefore make informed decisions and have confidence much earlier in the process that the transaction will complete.

Stephen Ward, head of strategy and external relations at the CLC, says: “The CLC has a long history of championing innovation and modernisation, and we will be working hard to ensure these reforms take hold.

“This is a significant and exciting step forward in improving the whole process, not just for consumers but also everyone involved in home buying and selling, so we urge the property market to continue its collaboration to make this vision a reality.”

ROOM FOR IMPROVEMENT

Just 17% of the 87 respondents thought the speed and efficiency of the conveyancing process was improving and the average transaction time was still static at between three and four months.

More than a third of respondents (36%) also admitted they had been holding off investing in new technologies or redesigning processes until the detail of the reforms had been announced.

Ward adds: “I firmly believe we will look back on this moment as a major turning point in transforming a broken system into one in which consumers and professionals alike will have much greater clarity, certainty and confidence.”

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