Rightmove

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    Sales agreed rise to highest levels in three years, says Rightmove

    Rightmove says the number of sales agreed in the UK rose by 7% last month compared to a year ago, making it the busiest May since 2014 and the second busiest over the past decade. But it’s a headline figure that hides wide variations in performance from region to region. Although Rightmove paints an upbeat assessment of the market including rising numbers of home sold in all regions, it says that sales agreed in the north increased the most at 11% compared to 3% in the south. Rightmove’s sales agreed figures make no mention of London, which many agents have said is experiencing a significant slowdown so far this year. This includes Savills, which recently described the capital as “falling back to 2015 levels”. But Rightmove does hint at what’s going on in London and its commuter towns. It says prices in London dropped by 2.4% during May, and 0.9% in the South East. Central London prices fared the worst – for example Kingston upon Thames house prices dipped by 6.7% , City of Westminster by 4.4% and Islington by 6%. “London and its commuter belt are proving to be a drag on the national figures, but are currently counter-balanced…

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    Rightmove chairman sells shares worth £4.23m

    Rightmove chairman Scott Forbes (pictured, right) has sold shares in the company worth £4.23 million, taking advantage of a recent spike in its share price. It has jumped in value by £2 to £43.63 or five percent since the 19th May, valuing the portal at £4.03 billion. Scott sold 100,000 of his shares yesterday at the peak of the current surge, which eased off today. This leaves him with 219,000 shares in the company worth £9.3 million. This is not the first time that Scott has cashed in his Rightmove shares. In 2007, just two years after joining the company from worldwide property services company Cendant, he sold shares worth £7 million to finance a home purchase in Kensington and in 2012 shares worth £4 million. Constant growth He joined Rightmove and was appointed to its board in 2005 and has overseen almost constant share price (see graph, right) and business growth at the PLC. This includes last year, which its most recent figures show saw revenue and profits that both jumped by 15% compared to 2015, and total dividend payments that grew by 19%. Agents listing on Rightmove currently spend £832 a month and the website has 20,121 branches…

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    Six reasons why Rightmove domination of market could soon end

    Rightmove domination of the UK property could be about to end as its faces threats from multiple sources, says leading proptech blogger James Dearsley (pictured, below). He and his colleagues at PropTech Consult have looked at Rightmove and say the company has all the characteristics of a successful company that could lose its market-leading position. The consultants’ report says this includes Rightmove being at the end of its original growth strategy; having a large customer database; and delivering excellent returns for investors, including dividends per share that have risen from 22p in 2012 to 51p today. Needs to act Despite this apparently dazzling success, James says Rightmove now needs to act and start a second period of innovation to prevent its dominant position being eroded in the “medium to long term”.  The main reasons for this include: The increasing number of new digital opportunities for agents making them less reliant on Rightmove for leads; Rightmove’s failure to develop new products or services beyond its core search facility; The rise of online agents such as Purplebricks who may become as well-known online as Rightmove; Contracting profitability among high street agents restricting Rightmove’s ability to increase revenue; The rising power of Zoopla and its bid…

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    Sales agreed, prices and time to sell increasing despite election, says Rightmove

    This summer’s election campaign is having a less corrosive effect on sales levels than two years ago when David Cameron made his bid for power, Rightmove has claimed. Its monthly house price index reveals that the number of sales agreed so far this year is 2% higher than during the lead up to the 2015 general election. Rightmove also reckons that the number of days it takes to sell a property is reducing too, down from 79 days in January 2017 to 60 days in April 2017. The reduction is even sharper in London, where in January it took 71 days to sell a home, compared to 53 days in April. Stock levels are rising too, Rightmove says. The number of properties for sale per agent has risen from 52 in January to 57 in April. House prices are also rising, the portal’s index reveals, increasing during April by 1.2% or £3,626 on average, the fifth consecutive rise. All-time high “Whilst all-time high asking prices or economic and political uncertainty could be deterrents to would-be home-buyers, this month shows another strong set of figures,” says Rightmove’s spokesman and director Miles Shipside (pictured, left). “Demand is exceeding supply in many parts of the country…

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    Trinity Mirror launches campaign to take on portals for agent spend

    The UK’s largest regional newspaper and digital publisher Trinity Mirror says it is to “fight back” against the increasing slice of agent marketing spend being taken by Rightmove and Zoopla. Trinity Mirror has over 140 regional daily and weekly newspapers across the UK including big hitters such as the Manchester Evening News, Birmingham Mail and Bristol Post plus 80 websites. It is also publisher of the Daily and Sunday Mirror and three other national newspapers. The campaign is designed to persuade agents that Trinity Mirror’s online and print titles are the best way to ensure they are one of the ‘three’ that vendors and landlords traditionally ask to appraise their properties before deciding on which one to instruct. Campaign message Called #Be1ofthe3, the campaign message is that the major portals “don’t want agents’ brands to stand out – it’s not good for their business model – so they suppress them”. “Agents need to consider other forms of marketing to build their brand presence in the regions they operate within,” the campaign material says. Trinity Mirror, which bought rival regional publisher Local World in 2015 for £220m to make it the largest regional media company in the UK, says its titles reach…

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    Parents paying £52k extra for homes in Outstanding primary school areas

    Agents are used to parents quizzing them endlessly about properties for sale within the catchment areas of the best local outstanding primary schools. And now a price has been put on this fixation. Parents pay an average price premium of £52,000 to live in the successful admission area of an Outstanding Ofsted-ranked primary school, a report from Rightmove has revealed. The figure is based on the cost of moving from the catchment area of a Requires Improvement school to an Outstanding one. The portal, which partnered with school search engine FindaSchool by 192.com to produce the report, also says that to move from an area around a Good school to and Outstanding costs on average £37,000. “Previous studies have shown links between outstanding schools and house prices, however our data is the first data that is based on whether the property would have secured a place at the school,” says Dominic Blackburn from 192.com (pictured, left). Fierce competition Driving the fierce competition for places at the best school are some starting facts. Across England 86% of Outstanding state primary schools are oversubscribed and only 20% of all schools have Outstanding status and 62% are Good. The areas with the biggest premiums…

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    Hybrid bridging-lender-cum-agent Nested wins £8m of new funding

    As if agents needed more competition from digital start-ups, a company called Nested that offers to buy a client’s home if a buyer can’t be found has won a fresh £8 million injection of cash. Launched 14 months ago, Nested promises vendors that it will sell their homes via its own listings on Rightmove and Zoopla within 90 days or provide them with an interest-free loan to buy their next property. Nested is chasing the 40% of home movers in the UK who do not have a mortgage and therefore find it frustrating when they caught in lengthy buying chains. Hefty fee There are some catches to the deal. Nested guarantees to sell a vendor’s property, but only for 95-98% of the asking price in return for a hefty 2.5% sales fee. If the property is sold for more than the valuation range, it splits any ‘profit’ 70/30 in favour of the lender. But if the property does not sell, Nested then takes out a first-charge mortgage on the property and advances the necessary cash to enable the vendor to move home. When the property sells, the ‘bridging’ mortgage is then cleared. “There are lots of people in this situation and…

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    Agent makes lone stand against landlords who advertise direct on property portals

    Newcastle-under-Lyme letting agent Rocket Homes Rentals has locked horns with the two largest property portals over listings by two local student lettings companies. It says they are advertising on the big portals even thought they are landlords who only market their own properties. Hybrid agent/landlords like these are springing up across the UK at the moment to enable a single landlord, or group of landlords, to bypass letting agents entirely and advertise their properties to rent directly on the large portals. Rockett Home Rentals, which has a single branch in Newcastle-under-Lyme but covers Crewe, Stafford and Stoke on Trent and has been in business since 2003, says its two rivals are advertising on Rightmove and Zoopla. “I’ve talked to both portals and no matter how they want to dress this up, they seem happy to let these ‘agents’ list because they have paid money and that’s it, regardless of how their business works,” says director Bill Rockett (pictured, below) “The only properties they have are the ones they own – they’re not an agent for anyone and they don’t service any customers except themselves. “It worries me that in the small area around my business I’ve seen ‘agents’ like this…

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    Sales stock at its lowest for over two years, says Rightmove index

    The average number of properties for sale with each estate agent in the UK has fallen to its lowest level for at least two years, according to the latest Rightmove index published today. The portal says each agent that lists with it on average had 52 properties during February including those under offer or sold STC, down from 61 in August and two fewer than February last year although it’s at least two years since it was this low. And Rightmove data from previous months suggests the number of months that the traditional winter shortage lasts for is lengthening. Average stock During 2016 the average stock per agent sank from 66 at its peak in July to 53 in December but by March has recovered to 57, a trend which is less obvious this year. Rightmove says the shortage is largely responsible for a sharp increase in the average UK house price last month, up by 1.3%, a monthly rise that has only been exceeded once since the financial crash of 2007/8. “Since the start of the decade, the average March price rise has been 0.9%, so this month’s 1.3% uplift is an indicator of a shortage of suitable property…

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    Rightmove shares slide as agents grumble

    Rightmove announced full year results on Friday 24th February, reporting further success. Pre-tax profits rose from £137.1m in 2015 to £161.5m in 2016, up by almost 18 per cent. Revenues rose by 15 per cent to £220m. So why, on that day, did their shares slide down a steep hill – down 5.8 per cent to £40, wiping over £200 million off its value? Rightmove Chairman, Scott Forbes said, “Our audience, best in class platforms and significant property inventory advantage coupled with our focus on innovation at the core of our business drives our value proposition for the benefit of both our trade customers and consumers. Property data has always been at the core of what we do and we are excited about continuing to harness the power of our data to drive further transparency and efficiency in the property market, predict market opportunities and drive success for our customers and consumers.” There’s no doubt that Rightmove is doing well for its investors, so it is possible that the fall was due to the announcement of Nick McKittrick’s (pictured right) forthcoming retirement, as the national papers deduced, but could there also be growing unrest among Rightmove’s 20,121 Agency and New Homes customers? RIGHTMOVE…

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