The Scotsman

Lingerie tycoon’s house sale reflects wider issue

- Comment David Alexander

Most home-owners understand­ably expect to realise a surplus from the sale of their house or flat, especially if they have lived in it for a considerab­le period of time.

But this has not, alas, applied to the Glasgow-born former lingerie tycoon Michelle Mone, who was elevated to peer of the realm by the former Prime Minister David Cameron in 2015. We learned recently that rather than receive an uplift, Lady Mone has sold her Scottish home for £125,000 less than she and her former husband paid for it 11 years ago.

Purchased for £1.525 million in 2008, the property, in the exclusive hamlet of Thorntonha­ll in Lanarkshir­e, is said to have been sold to a local businessma­n for £1.4m. It was originally put up for sale in 2012 for offers over £1.6m – but failed to find a buyer

and had been off-market for some time until December last year.

So is this price sag typical of the top end of the residentia­l market in Scotland today?

Well, given my earlier reflection­s in this column and elsewhere about the negative effect of the draconian rates of Land and Buildings Transactio­n Tax (LBTT) on high-end transactio­ns, you could be forgiven for thinking this is the case. However, there may be special circumstan­ces here, not least that Lady Mone also has a home in London, where she is mainly based. Also, it could have been that the house was bought when the market peaked just before the financial crash, a phenomenon from which many wealthy business types and celebritie­s have later had to take a hit.

But the “special case” attributab­le to this sale does not hide the fact that the top end of the property market in Scotland remains something of a hard slog, thanks not only to Holyrood’s excessive rates of LBTT, but also in part to the tax levied by Westminste­r on UK properties that may not be the owner’s “main home” (something that can negatively affect executives who, for perfectly-reasonable business reasons also have an overseas home).

Of the two, however, LBTT is having the greater effect. Take the original price of Lady Mone’s home, £1.6m, which would mean any purchaser having to find an additional £150,350 in tax. A price half that still attracts a tax bill of £54,350, or close to 8 per cent. Even for anyone who can “afford” an eight-hundred grand home, an additional £50,000-plus can often be a deal-breaker.

There is not even a “swings and roundabout­s” element to compensate – ie ven

Our sector has tried, tried and tried again to persuade the Scottish Government to have a re-think on the basis that if top-end tax rates are cut, this will stimulate sales activity that will filter down to the middle echelons of the market, thus actually increasing the tax take. But so far our pleas have fallen on deaf ears.

A postscript to last week’s column in which I expressed surprise at the proposal by the Conservati­ve government to follow Holyrood’s example and bring a ban on no-fault evictions of private tenants when their leases end.

My attention has been drawn to the satirical magazine Private Eye, which keeps records of statements by politician­s – of all political parties – which come back to haunt them. The Eye reminded readers that in the 2015 general election campaign, the then-labour leader, Ed Miliband, proposed that private tenants would be guaranteed security of tenure for three years, which at the time was condemned as “Venezuelan-style socialism” by the then-conservati­ve housing minister Grant Schapps. Fast-forward four years and the current minister, James Brokenshir­e, has gone much further with proposals for openended tenancies.

Isn’t party politics wonderful?

David Alexander is MD of DJ Alexander

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom