Land Registry photograph

Land Registry

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FoundedAugust 1993
Minister responsibleDoris CHEUNG Mei-chu, Land Registrar
Superseding agencyGeneral Land Office
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID2063458
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About Land Registry


In Hong Kong, the Land Registry is a government department under the Development Bureau responsible for the administration of land registration. It also provides facilities for search of the Land Register and related records by the public and other government departments.

Crooked House owners' links to previous major fire

Crooked House owners' links to previous major fire
Aug 15,2023 4:01 pm

... Adam Taylor is director of AT Contracting and Plant Hire Ltd, which, according to Land Registry documents, owns the Finmere site...

Salcombe named UK's most expensive seaside town

Salcombe named UK's most expensive seaside town
Apr 5,2023 4:20 am

... " Halifax used Land Registry data covering England and Wales in addition to figures from the Registers of Scotland for the study...

Gulnara Karimova: How Uzbek president's daughter built a £200m property empire

Gulnara Karimova: How Uzbek president's daughter built a £200m property empire
Mar 12,2023 9:21 pm

... Freedom For Eurasia researched property and Land Registry records to identify at least 14 properties which it says were purchased before she arrested, with allegedly suspicious funds, in various countries, including the UK, Switzerland, France, Dubai and Hong Kong...

In Canada, complex fraud schemes are targeting homeowners

In Canada, complex fraud schemes are targeting homeowners
Feb 18,2023 12:41 am

... Data provided to the BBC by the UK Land Registry shows an average of 41 reported cases of both mortgage and title fraud in the past four years...

Register of Overseas Entities: What three luxury homes reveal about who owns UK property

Register of Overseas Entities: What three luxury homes reveal about who owns UK property
Feb 6,2023 7:21 pm

... The BBC and Transparency International matched thousands of filings from the new register with Land Registry records...

House prices: What happens when they fall?

House prices: What happens when they fall?
Nov 2,2022 10:20 pm

... Will house prices fall in the UK? Data from Nationwide and Halifax, which give an earlier hint than the Land Registry figures shown above, Monthly changes can be blips, but the UK s largest lender, Lloyds, is planning for an...

Sanctioned Russian oligarchs linked to £800m worth of UK property

Sanctioned Russian oligarchs linked to £800m worth of UK property
Apr 16,2022 3:25 am

... To get to the bottom of who owns what, we carried out a detailed trawl of leaked offshore documents, the Land Registry and court papers - as well as previous reporting...

Roman Abramovich: Sanctions restrict rent payments to Crown Estate

Roman Abramovich: Sanctions restrict rent payments to Crown Estate
Mar 15,2022 12:26 pm

... The terms of the lease require the companies to pay the Crown Estate " £10,000 rising to £160,000" over a 125-year term, a Land Registry document shows...

House prices: What happens when they fall?

Mar 14,2022 2:18 pm

By Robert Cuffe & Christine JeavansBBC News

The Bank of England is expected to increase Interest rates above 2. 25% on Thursday, feeding through into higher mortgage costs.

Some lenders are already reporting house price falls, but is this just a blip or The start of a bigger drop?

What happens when house prices fall?

Falling house prices have The biggest immediate effect on people who want to move.

Fewer properties are available and would-be movers, who already own a home, may have less Purchasing Power .

Meanwhile, first-time buyers may find that properties are more affordable, allowing them to get a foot on The Ladder - assuming they can get a mortgage.

But a drop in prices can also send shudders through The finances of homeowners who are staying put.

At The Most extreme, households can end up in negative Equity - where The amount they have borrowed is greater than The Current Value of their home.

And with about a third of household wealth tied up in home values, falling prices can make people feel less secure, resulting in them saving rather than spending.

Less spending can make an economic slowdown Even Worse .

A modern browser with JavaScript and a stable internet connection is required to view this Interactive .

How much could my mortgage go up by? How much are you borrowing? If you have an existing mortgage enter The outstanding balance left to pay. If not, enter The Total you are looking to borrow. How long will you take to pay it back? If you have an existing mortgage enter The Total number of years remaining. If not, enter The Total number of years you are looking to borrow over. What is your Current . . For those with a mortgage enter The rate for your Current fixed term. For those without a mortgage enter an Interest rate from another source, such as a bank's mortgage rate calculator. Interest rate monthly payment Choose an Interest rate to compare with…

At this rate, your payments could change by…

monthly change

to

monthly Total

The Information you provided on your monthly payments would not be sufficient to pay off your mortgage within The Number of years Given .

This calculator does not constitute financial advice. It is based on a standard mortgage repayment formula based on The mortgage size and length and a fixed Interest rate. It should be used as a guide only and does not represent The suitability, eligibility or availability of mortgage offers for users. For exact figures, users will need to approach an official mortgage lender.

Interest rates fluctuate based on The Bank of England's base rate and market Conditions .

Why might a drop not turn into A House price crash?

When The Bank of England raises Interest rates, mortgages costs increase.

After The mini-budget, financial markets were forecasting that The Bank of England's Interest rate would rise above 6% in 2023.

However, traders now expect The Peak to be under 5%. You can use The calculator above to see how big an effect those kinds of changes can have on monthly repayments.

In The early 2000s property boom, 100% mortgages and cashback offers were not uncommon.

But after The 2008 financial crash, mortgage lending rules were tightened.

As a result, loans leave more room for prices to fall before borrowers are stuck with negative Equity . Most recent borrowers have also had their ability to pay checked against Interest rates Even Higher than The ones we're seeing at The Moment .

At The start of The pandemic, when many people's earnings were cut, banks allowed people to defer their mortgage payments for up to six months.

Repossessions were suspended from March 2020 to April 2021 and, even in The year since restarting, have remained below 4,000. That compares with More Than 20,000 in The Years just before The 2008 crash.

What has happened to house prices?

In The Last two years, prices rose steeply - by about a quarter - across most of The UK.

That pace of growth is much faster than that seen after The 2008 global financial crisis, where houses lost about a sixth of their value and it took five years, on average, for prices to recover.

In Scotland and The north of England prices kept dropping for a few years - and stalling in Wales - Meaning The Recovery took longer.

In The north-east of England, prices only returned to their pre-crash levels at The End of 2020.

Meanwhile, in Northern Ireland , house prices still remain below their pre-crisis peak.

Recent price growth has been much slower in London than The rest of England, with prices dipping slightly during The pandemic. Despite this, The capital has comfortably seen The largest rises over The Last 10 Years as a whole.

Will House prices Fall In The UK?

Data from Nationwide and Halifax, which give an earlier hint than The Land Registry figures shown above,

Monthly changes can be blips, but The UK's largest lender, Lloyds, is planning for an.

Big jumps in Interest rates put pressure on The amount people can afford to offer for houses, and that means less demand.

Some sellers may also delay putting their homes on The Market . There have been fewer sales than in The year leading up to Last Summer 's surge in prices before The

But if Interest rates stay high, an increasing number of people will come off fixed-price mortgages (about 100,000 each month) to new, higher rates.

Some home owners will find higher monthly payments unaffordable, making them more likely to sell.

The Number of people in arrears peaked during The financial crisis, but has not risen significantly during The pandemic, helped by lenders granting payment holidays.

In The Worst Case , payment difficulties can lead to The Bank repossessing someone's home, although lenders try to avoid this. More Than 200,000 were repossessed in The Five years after The financial crash.

Mortgage affordability depends on other cost-of-living pressures like energy bills, wages and job security. The Future of house prices depends on The economy as a whole.

The worry is that falling house prices and a stuttering economy start to reinforce each other.



Source of news: bbc.com

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