Help me to die poor!!

Regarding the first of the above, do you happen to know what percentage of current market value they are typically prepared to pay for a property or what percentage could be considered fair and reasonable?

Regarding the nominal rent you mention above, can you give me an idea of what percentage of the 'normal' (i.e., going market rate) rent for the property this would typically be, (again, assuming a fair and reasonable company)?

Thanks,

Hank

Reply to
Hank
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Thank you - much appreciated, as always, Daytona. I will check these links out today.

Hank

Reply to
Hank

In message , Hank wrote

The company purchasing the equity in your property would probably want to see the planning permission and/or the necessary building approvals.

Reply to
Alan

Yep their tough luck, which is why they will only lend you a small percentage of the property value in order to avoid them getting unlucky.

Hank, I know that you have only told us a limited amount about why you are in the situation you are in, but I really don't think this is the solution to your problems.

tim

Reply to
tim.....

Thanks, yes; having learned a bit about these schemes now, they do seem to be aimed at the very gullible, the very apathetic or the very desparate. I am none of these, but am in danger of becoming the last, if I don't sort something out soon, or interest rates don't start coming down soon...

Hank

Reply to
Hank

There's no way interest rates will be coming down soon. They have quite way to go up first.

Reply to
Ronald Raygun

In message , Hank writes

Sorry Hank, on looking at your age I think you are too young for a reversion, they usually have a minimum age of 60 or 65 and are onle of good value if your are 70+, IMO.

Reply to
John Boyle

OK - thanks. It looks as though I need to think of another way to wipe out a major part of my debt before interest rates go up any more.

Hank

Reply to
Hank

I was hoping perhaps one more rise in May and that's all. No?

Hank

Reply to
Hank

No.

Reply to
Ronald Raygun

Hank bear in mind that this is only an opinion. Admittedly it isn`t one that I`d argue with, but be aware that anyone who could tell the way that markets etc will move in the future with absolute certainty won`t be here, they`ll be busy buying the rest of the world :-)

Reply to
Simon Finnigan

You won't be able to do much financially with the property without planning permission.

Reply to
Peter Saxton

I have been told that due to the 'established use' rules, I could get a Certificate of Lawful use from the council without any difficulty, if necessary.

If they did turn me down and ordered me to convert it back into a

3-bed house, they'd lose out on council tax.

Hank

Reply to
Hank

Why don't you do that then?

Wouldn't you be better off getting a mortgage that doesn't tie you in to relieve your immediate problems so you have a longer time to change things with the tenants/house/flats to your advantage rather than dealing with it on the present basis?

Reply to
Peter Saxton

Surely rates cannot go up much further, as that would risk crashing the housing market, and the government will never let that happen? That is the "word on the street" anyway.

Reply to
Tom Robinson

Wholesale energy prices have tumbled. This was one key factor which caused the 'shock' rate rise.

So you could be taking a big risk by not being in shares & property...

Reply to
whitely525

The housing market will or will not crash, and this will have its own reasons. Whatever the government wants is not one of those reasons.

Whose street? Yours? Consider moving!

There are lots of things the government is powerless to control. It is not entirely out of the question that the downtrodden masses are going to refuse to accept pay rises at the "official" inflation rate for any length of time, and this means there is a danger that we will see a repeat of 70s madness of strikes fuelling inflation, fuelling interest rate rises, fuelling repossessions on a vast scale (now that the masses have mortgages), fuelling more strikes, etc.

I'm not saying it will happen, but I'm not saying it won't...

Reply to
Ronald Raygun

In message , Tom Robinson writes

Not on my street. Neither the Govt or the BoE are particularly bothered about house prices per se, only the effect increased equity has on the money supply. A drop in house prices would suit them admirably because then they wouldnt need to increase interest rates because new cheap personal credit would be restricted without an interest rate hike.

The word on the banking and Gilt Fixed Interest Street is another 25 basis points within a month or three and possibly another 25 if things dont seem to be turning by end of year (ish).

Reply to
John Boyle

I reckon the govt very much like high house prices, and would try to prevent them falling. What with stamp duty receipts, IHT receipts, forcing people to sell their houses to pay nursing home fees, not to mention the "feelgood" factor that stupid people get when their house price goes up (even when they have no intention of selling up/borrowing against it) which makes them forgot about high taxes or the mess their pension is in....

Reply to
Andy Pandy

Shirly there's not much chance of all that, while "Britain is booming" and "we live in a low inflation economic miracle"? :)

Latest news is that pay settlements are steady at around 3.5% (which is below RPI)...

Reply to
Tom Robinson

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