Property consultant RLF says worries over pandemic putting brakes on deals being signed off

Cautious funders are slowing down developments, according to some of the country鈥檚 biggest clients.

from cost and property consultant RLF said financial risk checks and legal hold-ups have been delaying schemes getting off the ground.

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Funders are inserting covid-related clauses into agreements before signing them off

It added: 鈥淗igh land prices and strong investor appetite is matched with considerably tighter scrutiny on deals. Due diligence on schemes is taking longer as investors look to build a deeper understanding of the development before committing funds.

鈥淐ovid and Brexit are undoubtedly lawyer-friendly environments, and our developers told us that this is slowing deals down, with new covid related clauses introduced to funding agreements. We do not see that changing as we move through 2021.鈥

Sean Clemons, executive partner at RLF, said it made sense that investors were looking to safeguard their cash.

He added: 鈥淭here are these issues, like covid, that you can鈥檛 foresee or prepare for, so what this means is that investors are going to be even tighter on the risks they can control.鈥

In the report, Rob Sloper, development director at U+I, said: 鈥淚 think there will be a tightening of the wallets from the funders and more due diligence undertaken to really get under the skin of each site to make sure they鈥檙e not deploying their capital in an area where they鈥檙e unnecessarily exposed to risk.鈥

And Brian Clarke, joint managing director at Glasgow property firm Park Lane Scotland, added: 鈥淧eople are more cautious in terms of development appraisals, building in contingencies to deal with covid.鈥

The report said it expected more build-to-rent schemes to get off the ground as they were including amenities, such as communal space, people were now coming to expect.