BREAKING PROPERTY NEWS – 21/09/2021

Estate Agent Networking Breaking News

Daily bite-sized proptech and real estate news in partnership with Proptech-X. Today, Stanton looks at the Ministry of Housing’s rebranding, the looming final SDLT deadline, and the commercial partnerships defining proptech operations

 

  1. Will the Department for Levelling Up become the Ministry of Silly Walks?
  2. Sunak’s SDLT giveaway finally ends in nine days. What next?
  3. Are commercial partnerships the new proptech holy grail?

 

Will the Department for Levelling Up become the Ministry of Silly Walks?

In 1970, John Cleese and Monty Python performed a skit in which a government department invents silly walks which are to be grant-funded. The piece was a satirical take on the civil servants in Whitehall who dream up grandiose ideas with little regard for reality, timescales or budgets.

Now Michael Gove is the incumbent housing secretary, it would seem that the actual ministry has become a modern-day pastiche of that famous skit. The Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government has now been rebranded as The Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities.

Give it a few months and it may well become The Ministry of Silly Walks, Levelling up, Levelling Down, Housing and Communities…or MSWLULDHC for short.

Andy Haldane, the former Bank of England chief economist, is to head up this levelling up taskforce, an invention of Boris Johnson in the recent cabinet reshuffle. Haldane said in The Guardian recently that the job of this new outfit is: “to design and deliver an economy that works for every part of the UK.”

So, it looks as though housing is now going to be hitched to Boris’ Bandwagon of Desperation in the hopes that he and his cabinet might make it to the next general election with a shred of success to show for their tenure.

But let’s not forget, Michael Gove has an annoying habit of being parachuted into troubled areas of government and creating chaos before performing an elaborate disappearing act, leaving everyone connected to him holding the bag. Haldane, who Boris has backed publicly for his credentials, will answer to Gove and the PM.

Will he be left in a similar situation? Time will tell.

Sunak’s SDLT giveaway finally ends in nine days. What next?

The 30th of September draws near, and so too does the final, final deadline day for the stamp duty initiative.

Given that the UK housing market now has very few properties on the market, has the government made a critical error by encouraging a stampede of homeowners in a concentrated timeframe?

One thing’s for sure, it’s forced house prices up and distorted the usual ebb and flow of the housing market.

Despite Rightmove’s recently released upbeat message about the housing market, the reality is that agents in the UK have less inventory per agent than the preceding years, and new instructions are trickling in with super inflated price tags.

Some property pundits are drawing comfort from the fact that the scarcity of unsold property is keeping prices high and the sales cycle to a minimum. On average, a sale occurs in 35 days against a typical sales cycle of over 60 days earlier in the year.

But if there are only a few houses on the market, and only a few coming to market, then the housing market has slowed. The first sign of a slowing market is people not moving, which means less inventory. Sooner or later, they’ll run out of things to sell.

Traditionally, the selling and listing season for estate agents runs until late October, with Halloween heralding long dark nights, weekend viewings, and a general slowdown as Christmas looms. Hope begins to rise once again in mid-January that the house moving public will shift into gear.

It’s true that 2021 has been anything but a normal year, and the vitality of the housing market has certainly been a surprise to all.

However, are we now entering a very different type of housing market, one where sky-high properties do not sell as they once did due, in part, to the tinkerings of an untested Chancellor with a penchant for poorly planned initiatives?

Are commercial partnerships the new proptech holy grail?

In various forums over several years, proptech has sought to be denounced by traditionalists who point to the fact that software developers are creating solutions for problems that have little commercial traction. They’re not completely wrong. The Software as a Service (SaaS) model only works if an end-user actually pays for it.

To overcome this, a new form of commercial partnership is emerging. Corporates are identifying their problem first before external proptech companies build out the solution for them.

So, unlike the situation that was happening before where a founder might have a eureka moment and start producing a solution to some irksome problem they encountered, this new model is being replaced by a corporate with a well-defined pain point that is willing to partner up with a technically-minded proptech founder to find a solution.

Our insight tells us that in the past two months alone there have been four major commercial tie-ups like this taking place in stealth mode, which is probably a better way of operating due to inevitable changes and redesigns.

Ultimately, the benefit of this model for the proptech is that they don’t need to worry about runway and chasing more cash to build the solution. If they can provide an MVP and find a market fit to the satisfaction of the commercial partner, then financial rewards will result.

What the corporate gets out of this exchange is a commercially viable, scalable solution and mitigated risk – assuming their idea was correctly validated in the first place.

Believe me, I’ve seen enough failing proptechs to know that the validation stage is very much lacking.

Andrew Stanton

CEO & Founder Proptech-PR. Proptech Real Estate Influencer, Executive Editor of Estate Agent Networking. Leading PR consultancy in Proptech & Real Estate.

You May Also Enjoy

Estate Agent Talk

Storytelling for Homeowners: Producing Content That Connects Emotionally

In the quick-paced global of online facts, information by myself is rarely sufficient to encourage or have an effect on. Whether you’re a home owner sharing your protection adventure, a blogger covering indoors traits, or a real estate professional assisting customers discover their dream homes, storytelling is the important thing to building belief and emotional…
Read More
Estate Agent Talk

This Summer’s Extreme Heat: What It Means for UK Gardens

The UK has been enjoying plenty of warm sunshine during the early weeks of the 2025 summer season. In predictions made by the Met Office for the three-month outlook there is plenty more hot weather to come. According to the government agency, the UK’s meteorological summer is twice as likely to be hotter than normal…
Read More
Breaking News

No-fault evictions by bailiffs up 8%

New figures show that in the 12 months since Labour came into Government, no-fault evictions by bailiffs in England have risen by 8%. Labour has pledged to end no-fault evictions under its Renters’ Rights Bill, which is going through Parliament. According to the latest figures from the Ministry of Justice there were 11,402 repossessions by…
Read More
Breaking News

Leasehold Lettings Under Pressure: Landlords Blocked from Improving Flats

New research from LRG (Leaders Romans Group) reveals that leasehold structures are creating a growing barrier to progress in the rental sector, limiting upgrades, pushing landlords away from flats, and lowering tenant confidence in how buildings are managed. According to LRG’s most recent Lettings Report, 58% of flats let by landlords are leasehold. Among these,…
Read More
Breaking News

234% surge in demand for air-conditioned homes as UK buyers brace for hotter summers

Following the many heatwaves the UK has experienced this summer, searches for homes that are for sale with air conditioning have more than tripled in a year (+234%).1 According to recent research, just 1.2% of homes for sale in England feature air conditioning, which adds around 2.5% to a property’s overall value.2 As air conditioning…
Read More
Home and Living

Bathroom Supply, Fitting & Repairs: A Complete Guide for Homeowners

Your bathroom is one of the most used rooms in your home — it should be functional, comfortable, and built to last. Whether you’re planning a full renovation, upgrading tired fixtures, or dealing with a plumbing issue, understanding the ins and outs of bathroom supply, fitting, and repairs is key to getting the results you…
Read More