1. Right then let’s get down to business... who do you fancy off the telly?
Difficult one... partly because I don’t watch that much TV, and I probably wouldn’t be able to tell you their names anyway! But from the big screen it would have to be the classic, natural beauties like Keira Knightly, Sandra Bullock...
2. OK, so when did you start working as Head of Finance at Cheval and where were you before that?
I grew up in Cape Town, South Africa, and trained as a chartered accountant there for three years before moving to England when I was 27.
I wouldn’t necessarily be in financial services. I do enjoy being involved in small businesses – where I feel I can help the business develop and direct it at a strategic level. That’s what I really like; I like helping things grow, making a difference, problem solving – I’m not interested in merely being a small cog in a large corporate machine.
6. The worst thing?
Frustration that you can’t do as much lending as you’d like to do. Not because of a lack of available funding to do transactions but because of the refinance market. You see deals that make perfect sense where, before the recession, you would have completed the loan easily, but now that mainstream mortgages are far more difficult to obtain, you just cannot lend the money unless you can have a reasonable level of certainty that the borrower has the means or ability to repay the bridging loan. Treating customers fairly is very important to us.
Over the last 12 months there’s been a steady increase in the number of good quality applications and loan completions; brokers have a far better understanding of the types of transactions that bridging lenders are able to get involved in, which saves time for everybody. The takeout of the majority of these transactions is through the sale of the security property or other properties.
We’re halfway through the Cheval Blue Skies Roadshow; a series of seminars designed to educate brokers on bridging finance and build new relationships to generate new business. So far the quality of brokers has been great.
It is so much more difficult when mainstream lenders aren’t providing finance, there’s so much more assessment to do - a return to common-sense lending so to speak. In assessing a deal a far greater emphasis is placed on who the borrower is, rather than merely the security property and LTV. Putting a distressed asset on the market for sale is no good for either the lender or borrower in the current climate.
9. What’s your favourite film?
10. What’s your favourite book and why
I find reading about people and how they got to where they are fascinating. Nelson Mandela, A Long Walk To Freedom, was another incredible read. Growing up in South Africa, you were obviously fed a particular line...so reading his autobiography was a real eye-opener to some of the things that took place that nobody had any idea about....
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