BREAKING PROPERTY NEWS – 28/02/2022

Daily bite-sized proptech and property news in partnership with Proptech-X.

 

Valocity Partners With Fabrick To Speed European Mortgage Market Lending

Fabrick and Valocity have agreed to a commercial tie-up, bringing Valocity’s Australasian-based property valuation solution to Europe. The solution, which has already powered over $1 trillion worth of lending decisions, will now be available to European banks, enabling them to streamline mortgage approval for a seamless customer experience.

Fabrick, a leading Italian fintech company that operates internationally to promote Open Finance, and Valocity, a world-leading provider of data-driven solutions that help banks to speed up property valuations in the mortgage approval process, announced their new sales partnership last week. The two firms are bringing the best in Australasian and APAC property valuation technology to the underserved European and MENA market.

The transformation and digitisation of the property valuation process is becoming increasingly important. Globally, lenders and brokers are experiencing two growing frictions; the increasing regulatory compliance in parallel with rising customer expectations.

These challenges are made all the more significant by the fact that purchasing property is typically the biggest financial decision that an individual or organisation makes. So, reducing friction in the property valuation process, which is estimated to have high associated financial and time costs, is a significant benefit to both banks and end customers

Through the partnership with Fabrick, Valocity will expand its geographical footprint in Europe and MENA by leveraging Fabrick’s platform and established presence encompassing relationships with top tier European banks and over 200 fintechs.

Fabrick will be able to enhance its Open Finance ecosystem with the addition of an innovative solution that harnesses technology to improve the lending services of banks and institutions. The partnership will culminate with Valocity joining Fabrick’s Open Finance platform integrated as an API producer in early 2022.

Valocity is delivering a global industry platform that connects valuers and lenders digitally across multiple markets to enable an entirely digital valuation experience that dovetails with Open Finance and connected ecosystems.

Streamlining the mortgage valuation process by creating a connected ecosystem for brokers, valuers and lenders and includes tools for all participants such as a remote valuation inspection tool which negates the need for a valuer to enter the property, as well as data capture tools which enable valuers to capture new data.

Marco Casartelli, Co-founder and Deputy CEO of Fabrick, said: “We are proud to partner Valocity and make its transformative service available in Europe through our Open Finance ecosystem. The process of digital transformation that has improved and created more efficient customer experience across multiple industries has only just begun in the mortgage lending ecosystem and as an early pioneer and now market leader, Valocity is poised to offer a sought-after solution in Europe’s marketplace.

“As all banks have to certify a property’s value before agreeing a loan there is a large addressable market and opportunity for European lenders to offer seamless process that customers increasingly demand …  it enables all operators to easily integrate new services and quickly respond shifting customer needs.”

Carmen Vicelich, Founder and CEO, Valocity, said: “We’re very excited to partner with Fabrick to work with their innovative lenders and support their significant ecosystem, to enable end to end digital mortgage lending solutions that put the customer first, and to continue the expansion of our globally proven mortgage valuation products.”

 

Is Rightmove Pivoting Its Model To Become More Like Propertymark?

Love or Hate Rightmove

Early in 2021, we reported that there would be big changes in the architecture of estate agency, including some big hitters pushing into other organisations’ ecosystems. We have already seen a gobbling up and rationalisation in some verticals, but the big question is will Rightmove try to get a material advantage by starting to ‘add value’ to its estate agent clients, and start to provide services that Propertymark and similar organisations already do?

With over 17,500 members from the whole of the property fraternity, Propertymark is a behemoth, and CEO Nathan Emerson has markedly changed its fortunes, presenting a more modern, listening and smiling face to its membership and stakeholders.

But Rightmove has just announced that it wants to offer free training to agents, a territory that is very much the driver for income for Propertymark, which has a variety of pay-as-you-go accredited courses.

Jason Charles, Rightmove’s Head of Events and Education, said: “We want to help agents with this free training so they can get ahead of mandatory regulations that the government may bring in based on the RoPA Report. Over the next few months we’ll be working with ABBE to finalise our syllabus and will be launching it later this year.”

ABBE is the awarding body for building education, an Ofqual regulated producer of qualifications, so this all looks very laudable. But the hidden intent may be that Rightmove needs a new charm offensive to keep agents happy as the base price to be on the property platform ratchets up year after year.

Put another way, Rightmove can offer training for free, as the cost of the training is buried in the average £1,189 price paid per agent, a whopping 9% rise on the previous year, with operating profit in 2021 being £226 million, an uptick from 2019’s £289 million.

Clearly, Rightmove can bankroll the free training as software as a service (SaaS) is a model that just keeps giving for the original proptech grand-daddy.

However, if it steams into the business model of Propertymark, which is the educator and non-mandatory regulator of the property industry, how can Emerson’s company compete without a Rightmove-sized war chest?

Now it may be true that agents will not take up the training options that will be unveiled later in the year, but if it is free then that would seem a great way for agents to lessen their cost base as 2022 is going, as usual, to be as unpredictable as 2021.

The pandemic may be at a level where it can be contained, but interest rate rises, a shortfall of inventory and now Mr Putin going rogue will probably make ripples for us all, even in property.

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

Breaking News

Biggest property put-offs revealed by homebuyers

Biggest property put-offs could see homebuyers offer £40k less or more – From flying flags to aggressive dog breeds The latest research from Springbok Properties has revealed the biggest property put-offs that could see buyers offer as much as £40,000 less, if not more, leaving many sellers struggling to achieve their asking price in the…
Read More
Rightmove logo
Breaking News

Southern buyers benefit most from static house prices and lower mortgage rates

Ahead of the Bank of England’s interest rate decision at 12:00pm on Thursday, Rightmove’s analysis shows that buyers in London and the south of England are benefitting most from improved affordability compared to last year Across Great Britain, the average monthly mortgage payment is now £84 lower than a year ago: In London, buyers are…
Read More
Home and Living

Kitchen Trade Expert Shares Five Benefits of Fully Assembled Units

The UK kitchen and bedroom fitting sector is currently facing a number of challenges. The UK Trade Skills Index 2023 report revealed that 937,000 new workers will be needed in the construction and trade industries by 2032 to meet the demands of the sector, impacted by the widening skills loss posed by Brexit, an ageing…
Read More
Breaking News

Why are HMO numbers falling?

The latest research from COHO, the HMO management platform, reveals that despite little change in tenant demand, house share availability has dropped by almost -60% in some parts of England, raising the question of whether we’re seeing an HMO landlord exodus. COHO’s analysis of house share listings data* shows that in England, the number of…
Read More
Breaking News

Only 27% of homes have been fixed in a £1.8bn Govt programme

Report shows only 27% of homes have been fixed in a £1.8bn Govt programme, as red tape and asbestos keep thousands in the cold Thousands of homes will face another winter of fuel poverty due to a raft of failures as scheme to fix them hits buffers Hundreds of millions of pounds of allocated grant…
Read More
Breaking News

UK House Price Index for July 2025

The latest index shows that: – The average monthly rate of house price growth in July was +0.3%. The average annual rate of house price growth in July was +2.8%, down slightly from +3.6% in June. As a result, the average UK house price sits at £269,735.   Director of Benham and Reeves, Marc von…
Read More