LandlordZONE parent firm Hamilton Fraser acquired by insurance intermediary giant
Hamilton Fraser, the parent company of LandlordZONE, has been acquired by the UK’s largest independent insurance intermediary group Global Risk Partners (GRP).
The deal, which is for an undisclosed sum, is subject to regulatory approval by the CMA.
Borehamwood-based Hamilton Fraser, as well as being a leading supplier of insurance products and services to landlords and letting agents, operates three of the UK’s government-approved private rented sector schemes.
These are myDeposits, the Property Redress Scheme and Client Money Protect as well as leading evictions firm Landlord Action.
All of the group’s staff will move over to become GRP employees as will its senior team including CEO Eddie Hooker, who founded Hamilton Fraser in 1996 with Simon Fox and David Jacobs and remains a significant shareholder.
Digital future
“Hamilton Fraser is joining forces with a like-minded business in GRP, which like us has seen the future of insurance and realised it will become increasingly digital which is particularly true within the property sector,” says Hooker (pictured).
“I’m confident they are the best custodians for our business, our people and our loyal clients as we embark on the next exciting stage of our development.”
Stephen Ross, GRP’s head of M&A, who says he was impressed with the “sheer quality of the Hamilton Fraser business, which has an outstanding track record of success in its chosen niches and is a superb fit for GRP”.
“Hamilton Fraser is a high-class brokerage with a strong commitment to digital innovation and customer-centricity, built on a deep understanding of the specialist markets in which they operate.”
Hamilton Fraser will continue to trade under its existing brands and will sit within GRP’s high-growth digital division headed by Steve Anson, its COO.
GRP is one of the largest independent insurance intermediaries in the UK and itself was acquired via a majority shareholding by global private investment firm Searchlight Capital Partners in 2020.
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EXCLUSIVE: Landlords accuse big council of ‘bulldozing’ through licensing schemes
Landlords in Ealing are dismayed that two controversial licensing schemes have been “bulldozed” through without properly engaging them in the consultation process.
Many opposed the HMO licensing scheme and renewed selective licensing scheme which were rubber-stamped in December after a public consultation and come into force on 1st April.
Last summer, they complained of being kept in the dark about the council’s proposals which they also criticised for being ‘cobbled together’ and lacking detail or justification.
Peter Littlewood, of landlord campaigning group iHowz, says the authority made no attempt to communicate with them, or local landlords.
He tells LandlordZONE: “We invited Ealing to several meetings, we asked them for comments, to justify the new scheme, and to show us what should be a public report on the success, or other, of the previous scheme.
“To all these we had no response, not even an acknowledgement they had received the emails.”
Money maker
Adds Littlewood: “The scheme has been introduced to earn the council money, with property conditions being a firm afterthought. They appear to be determined to bulldoze this through.”
However, a council spokesman insists: “The council has an ongoing publicity campaign to ensure all key stakeholders are made aware of the new schemes.”
The HMO licensing fee is £1,100 per HMO plus £50 for each habitable room, with the first payment of 30% payable on application to cover the costs of processing the application form.
If the application is refused, this first payment won’t be refunded. The new selective licencing fee is £750, with an initial payment of £225 taken at application.
Like most councils, Ealing doubtless won’t accept ignorance of its schemes as an excuse; in nearby Waltham Forest, a landlord was recently handed a £5,400 rent repayment order for not registering with a selective licensing scheme after a First Tier Property Tribunal rejected her defence that she didn’t know about it.
©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – EXCLUSIVE: Landlords accuse big council of ‘bulldozing’ through licensing schemes | LandlordZONE.
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Labour burns its bridges with landlords with call to speed up rent controls introduction
Labour’s housing spokesman in Scotland has called on its government to bring in rent controls to stop landlords hiking up prices before their expected introduction in 2025.
The government is consulting on proposals for a new deal for tenants in the country, including a system of rent controls, setting up a regulator for the private rented sector, and creating a new housing standard covering all homes.
However, Labour MSP Mark Griffin fears the current target doesn’t come soon enough. Speaking to a local TV station, Griffin said: “There’s no need for it to be so late in the parliament because it just gives landlords the opportunity to ramp prices up before any cap comes in.
“We should be looking to do this now. We can see the cost of living going through the roof just now and people absolutely struggling to make ends meet.”
Overheating
Griffin suggests that the housing sector is overheating due to an increase in the number of people looking for a new home after two years of the pandemic.
“People are being charged more and more to buy a property or to rent a property so that’s why we think the government should step in,” he adds.
A proposal for rent controls was first made in MSP Pauline McNeill’s Fair Rents Bill in 2019, which the Scottish Association of Landlords believes could lead to higher and more frequent rent increases as well as a shortage in the supply of homes.
Labour Scotland’s pledge mirrors the party’s national policy as its website still stands by its 2019 private renters’ charter which promised to cap rents at inflation nationally, while Labour London mayor Sadiq Khan continues to campaign for similar powers. Elsewhere, Bristol is bidding to become the first UK city to have the power to cap rents.
©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – Labour burns its bridges with landlords with call to speed up rent controls introduction | LandlordZONE.
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BREAKING: Trading Standards moves to regulate sales and lettings portal listings
Property portal listings for rented and for-sale properties will soon be required by law to have mandatory information within them following the launch of a much-anticipated initiative from National Trading Standards.
Its Estate and Lettings Team (NTSELAT) has launched Phase 1 of a programme that will see some of the basics ‘required’ on portal listings including price or rent, size of deposit, council tax band or rate and fore sales properties, whether its leasehold, freehold or commonhold.
Phase I is to go live this month with agents required to be compliant by the end of May.
Later phases will be backed by legislation will make it compulsory for property listings to include utilities available within a property, non-standard features that could influence a transaction decision and more prosaic factors too including location.
The initiative is part of NTSELAT’s attempts to make renting and buying property more transparent and fairer for buyers and tenants, and earlier this month was rolled into the government’s ‘levelling-up’ White Paper announcement.
“These technical changes will prompt all players in the property market to do things a bit differently,” says NTSELAT Senior Manager James Munro (pictured).
“Vendors and agents may find that bringing conveyancers on board at the outset helps ensure all information is available for marketing, and issues with things like restrictive covenants or boundaries can be addressed earlier.
“For consumers, a better understanding of why certain information such as a property’s tenure is important will enable them to make informed decisions when they embark on a property search.”
A further two phases are being developed which will incorporate further material information such as restrictive covenants, flood risk and other specific factors that may impact certain properties.
Sean Hooker (pictured) Head of Redress at The Property Redress Scheme, said: “This is great news for the consumer and will lead a much more transparent and consistent way of introducing properties to the market.
“It will also give clarity and assurance to agents that they are doing the right thing, will set the ground rules on what is expected and avoid the consequences of not providing a good level of information. Fewer complaints, faster transactions, happier customers, what is not to like?”
Theresa Wallace, (pictured) Chair of The Lettings Industry Council, adds: “The material information project is a crucial piece of work to ensure that consumers looking at buying or renting property can make an informed decision earlier in the process.
“The objective is to provide consumers with more information prior to viewing a property. This will be a big change for the industry who have come together to support this initiative and The Lettings Industry Council felt it was important to be a part of a project that can have a real benefit for consumers.”
©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – BREAKING: Trading Standards moves to regulate sales and lettings portal listings | LandlordZONE.
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