London Welsh kept in suspense over Premiership promotion bid - The Guardian London Welsh kept in suspense over Premiership promotion bid - The Guardian
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London Welsh kept in suspense over Premiership promotion bid - The Guardian

London Welsh kept in suspense over Premiership promotion bid - The Guardian

London Welsh will not find out whether they have met the minimum standards criteria for entry into the Aviva Premiership until a few hours before the first leg of their Championship play-off final against Cornish Pirates in Penzance on Wednesday night.

The Rugby Football Union's board of directors meets that morning and will examine the issue of whether London Welsh, who propose to move out of their Old Deer Park home and play at Oxford United's Kassam Stadium if they are promoted, fulfil the criteria.

The Professional Game Board last Thursday discussed the report of the auditors who assessed London Welsh's bid – the Pirates are not candidates for promotion because they knew they would not meet the criteria – but did not make a recommendation to the RFU.

It is understood that the PGB was divided, with representatives from Premiership Rugby questioning whether London Welsh met the stipulation regarding primacy of tenure. The Kassam Stadium should meet the criteria: it has a capacity of 12,000 and staged two Challenge Cup finals in the 2000s.

London Welsh are not concerned that if the RFU ruled against them it would have a negative impact on their players ahead of the game at a ground where they lost by 21 points in the regular season. The Exiles have an immediate right to appeal, something they would exercise with alacrity through their chairman, Bleddyn Phillips, a senior partner at a major law firm.

London Welsh have told the RFU that it would rather the governing body take its time than rush into a decision. The fact that the board of directors is discussing the matter as part of its regular monthly meeting, rather than deciding by conference call on Monday would indicate that the club's case is considered to have merit.

Leicester's director of rugby, Richard Cockerill, has settled his differences with the England coach, Stuart Lancaster, following their public spat last week over the fitness of the fly-half Toby Flood. The Tigers refused to allow England's physio to assess the player last week but diplomatic relations have been restored ahead of this weekend's Premiership grand final.

Cockerill said he and Lancaster have had "a healthy discussion" and considers the matter closed, although he is still declining to confirm who will start at No10 against Harlequins at Twickenham. "Me and Stuart get on pretty well," said Cockerill, who last week described the England coach as "naive" in his handling of the Flood issue.

"In the future we will discuss things a bit more closely and hopefully avoid any flashpoint or confrontation. He's a good guy. Occasionally we're going to be at odds with our opinions but that's OK."

The 19-year-old George Ford remains on standby to start at fly-half for the Tigers unless Flood makes a miracle recovery from his ankle injury. "Floody is working hard and improving day by day," said Cockerill. "He's not training today [on Monday] but he'll train tomorrow [on Tuesday] and we'll see where he's at. Fordy's an intelligent player … it's not the end of the world." Saturday's game will be Leicester's eighth successive grand final appearance.

The Australia wing James O'Connor will miss next month's three-Test series against Wales because of liver damage, but the outside-half Quade Cooper is expected to be named in the Wallabies' squad after recovering from a knee injury he sustained against Wales in the World Cup third place play-off.

The Wales caretaker head coach, Rob Howley, remains hopeful Warren Gatland will be able to join the squad at some stage in Australia.

Gatland, the head coach, is recovering from the serious heel injuries he suffered in a fall at his holiday home in New Zealand in April.



London Art Fairs: A Beginner’s Guide - Londonist

It seems like London plays host to an art fair every other weekend. How do you decide which one’s are worth going to?

One major differentiator is who’s at these fairs. Some are gallery fairs where all the stands belong to established galleries representing their artists. The advantage here is that the galleries have already screened the artists and selected who they want to represent. This means that the art quality should be high, but also that the gallery will take a hefty commission on purchases. Brace yourself for higher prices.

The other type  – we’ll call these artist fairs — are where the artists represent themselves. The organisers of the fair do some screening, but the quality of the work on display is usually a mixed bag. The advantages are you get to talk to and negotiate with the artist directly. This is your chance to discover up-and-coming artists before they make it big.

The third type we’ll refer to as genre fairs. These are aimed at a niche, specialised market and might be the best place to go if you know the exact type of art you’re after.

Gallery Fairs

London Art Fair
Venue: Business Design Centre
When: Every January
Price Range: No limit
Verdict: One for the high rollers, you’ll see artworks going into six figures that are likely to include works by notable artists such as Damien Hirst and Picasso. The level of quality here is very high and is great for browsers but only for serious buyers.

Affordable Art Fair
Venue: Battersea Park and Hampstead Heath
When: Bi-annually in Battersea (March and October), annually in Hampstead (November)
Price Range: £50 to £4,000
Verdict: The title is a little misleading as the prices tend to be more towards the upper limit so may not fall within your definition of affordable; but there is usually much high-quality work on display. Most artists represented are already well established so you may have to settle for their smaller works as their larger pieces often tend to exceed the upper limit of the fair.

Frieze Art Fair
Venue: Regent’s Park
When: Every October
Price Range: Undefined
Verdict: Similar in scope and price to the London Art Fair. This is full of well-established galleries from around the world and this is reflected in the quality of the art and the prices.

Masterpiece
Venue: Royal Hospital, Chelsea
When: Every June
Price Range: Undefined
Verdict: It’s probably unfair to classify this as an art fair as it’s all about masterpieces — from art to food and on to classic cars.  This is another one for those with bulky wallets or for those wanting to see what high society is all about.

20/21 British and International Art Fairs
Venue: Royal College of Art, South Kensington
When: Every February (International) and September (British)
Price Range: Undefined
Verdict: A duo of gallery fairs that has one show for British galleries and a separate fair that opens the doors to other art dealers from around the world. The fairs are smaller and less populist so offer a much more relaxing environment for buying and browsing in comparison to the bustle of some of the aforementioned.

Pinta
Venue: Earl’s Court Exhibition Centre
When: Every June
Price Range: Undefined
Verdict: A fair that specialises in bringing across work from the emerging Latin American contemporary art scene. A rare opportunity to see art that doesn’t get a huge showing in the UK.

Artist Fairs

The Other Art Fair
Venue: Ambika P3
When: Every May
Price Range: £50 to c£5,000
Verdict: This is one for spotting the ‘next big thing’. Artists here are unrepresented and are usually very early on in their careers. Hence, there are plenty of bargains to be had. On the flipside, the quality of the work can be variable but don’t let that put you off because there are hidden gems to be found.

Parallax Art Fair
Venue: Chelsea Town Hall
When: Quarterly in February, May, July and October
Price Range: c£50 to c£2,000
Verdict: The very definition of low key. This is an international art fair where up-and-coming artists showcase their work at surprisingly reasonable prices, especially for Chelsea. There are lots of talented artists on display that you might not find elsewhere.

Wimbledon Art Studios — Open Studios
Venue: Wimbledon Art Studios
When: Bi-annually, Summer (May) and Winter (November)
Price Range: c£50 to c£10,000
Verdict: A truly unique event where artists let you wander around their paint-stained studios. There are usually a few hidden talents waiting to be discovered and it’s an opportunity to enter artists’ creative worlds.  It also stands apart for being the only free art fair on this list.

Genre fairs

Kinetica Art Fair
Venue: Ambika P3
When: Every February
Price Range: c£50 to c£75,000
Verdict: A great mix of science and art with quirky inventors displaying their wares. Our top recommendation for browsers as you’re unlikely to find these creations in any mainstream gallery.

Animal Art Fair
Venue: South Bank
When: Every May
Price Range: £150 – £30,000
Verdict: Animal lovers won’t want to miss out on this one. If you’re a fan of animal art then this is the place to look for that painting or sculpture you’ve been searching for.

Pick Me Up
Venue: Somerset House
When: Every March/April
Price Range: c£15 to c£1,000
Verdict: This fair is all about contemporary graphic art and bargains abound with signed prints available from as little as £15.

London Original Print Fair
Venue: Royal Academy
When: Every April
Price Range: £100 to £100,000
Verdict: This is the more refined and pricier cousin to Pick Me Up.  The higher price range is justified by the more notable names and galleries represented but we prefer the edgier Pick Me Up.

Collect
Venue: Saatchi gallery
When: Every May
Price Range: Undefined
Verdict: The most notable crafts fair in London (though we don’t know of any others). If you’re looking for something that’s both functional and aesthetically pleasing then this is for you.

Did we miss any? Let us know below and we’ll add them to the list.



London Knights fined at Memorial Cup - Tri-City Herald

SHAWINIGAN, Quebec. — Mark Hunter doesn't think his London Knights should be taking all the blame for late-game fireworks in their 6-2 loss to the Memorial Cup host Shawinigan Cataractes Sunday night.

TV cameras caught London forwards Greg McKegg and Matt Rupert throwing punches from the bench at pesky Shawinigan fourth-liner Alex Grand-Maison during a scrum with 2.5 seconds left in the game.

"Their player came by the bench and was screaming," Hunter, the London GM and head coach, said. "There's no need for that. Just enjoy your win and skate away. It (the incident) wasn't anything. They were just a couple of shoves, pushing him away from the bench."

The Canadian Hockey League fined the Knights $1,000 Monday for physical contact initiated from the bench. That's twice as much as Saint John head coach Gerard Gallant's $500 hit for blasting the Quebec league and its officals in a rant Saturday night after losing to London.

Grand-Maison, a 17-year-old from Mirabel, Que., didn't expect to be punched by Knights who weren't on the ice.

"Who would," Shawinigan head coach Eric Veilleux asked.

But the feisty forward realizes his style makes him a target.

"I'm doing my job," he said with a wide grin. "They punched me. I'm OK. I'm a pest. That's my job for the team.

"I like to receive a punch in my face. I get a lot of punches, hits, fights. It's fun."

Neither of the Knights players were penalized. Neither side is anticipating any further discipline.



London ticket grumbles seen as price of success - Reuters UK

LONDON | Mon May 21, 2012 2:15pm BST

LONDON (Reuters) - Complaints over elusive and expensive tickets for the 2012 Olympics are a product of unprecedented demand to see live action from Britons, the man behind the policy said on Monday.

"I'd build a stadium with a million seats because we had more than a million applications to see the opening ceremony and the 100 metres final," Paul Williamson, London 2012 director of ticketing, told the Global Leadership Summit at the London Business School when asked what he would have done differently.

Demand for tickets has far outstripped supply, leading to grumbles from Britons about the initial allocation via online ballot, prices and the number of tickets going to sponsors.

Tickets for the opening ceremony cost from 20.12 pounds ($31.80) to 2,012 pounds ($3,200).

Williamson said London organisers had to market tickets for sports like handball which is a mystery to many people in this country. He said handball and other "challenging sports" like archery, shooting and wrestling would now be played out before full houses.

Athletes could also look forward to having their heats staged in a busy Olympic stadium.

"Morning sessions at the athletics, when the preliminaries are held, were always in a half empty stadium," said Williamson.

"We'll have 60,000 plus in London, so we must have got some of the pricing right. It'll be a different audience from the evenings, more families, but a vibrant atmosphere."

Some of those ticketing grouses were voiced at the conference. Brigitte Ricou-Bellan from online ticket market place StubHub told the conference that her company had surveyed Britons and found dissatisfaction "not just on prices but on delivery of tickets".

However, London organisers won heavyweight support from Michael Payne, former marketing chief for the International Olympic Committee, noting demand for tickets.

"This is viewed internationally as by far the most successful (ticket) marketing programme," Payne told the conference. "It will be the model for Rio (in 2016). The problem is success," he said.

Williamson said a further batch of Games tickets would go on sale on Wednesday and that he expected almost everything to sell out in London.

Tickets for soccer at venues like Newcastle and Glasgow were proving harder to shift, he said.

London organisers had talked of selling excess tickets at booths in the capital before the start of the July 27-August 12 Games but Williamson said he did not expect many tickets to be left over to sell in this way.

($1 = 0.6326 British pounds)

(Reporting by Keith Weir, editing by Justin Palmer)



London close: Stocks rebound, EU summit eyed - Life Style Extra
- G8 underwhelms; markets look to EU summit

- Hollande expected to push eurobond idea to Merkel

- Risk-on as financials, miners advance; defensives sold

London's FTSE 100 finished firmly higher on Monday following a poor performance last week which saw the blue chip index slump to its worst levels since mid-November 2011. Despite the rise though, the mood was still cautious as uncertainty over Greece's future in the Eurozone continued to dampen sentiment ahead of a meeting of European leaders scheduled for Wednesday.

New French President Franois Hollande is expected to press German Chancellor Angela Merkel for the implementation of the so-called 'eurobonds' (debt issued and backed by the entire Eurozone together) at the informal European Union meeting to be held on May 23rd. Merkel has long opposed immediate implementation of eurobonds because she feels it would hinder member states from becoming fiscally responsible and following through on structural reforms.

Leaders are also expected to discuss the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) and the idea of giving it the capability to directly recapitalise struggling European banks, something which Germany has also been long-opposed to.

As expected, the Group of Eight (G8) world leaders this weekend spent a great deal of time focusing on efforts to promote global economic growth and particularly on the Eurozone sovereign debt crisis while showing their support for Greece remaining in the single currency. "We agree on the importance of a strong and cohesive Eurozone for global stability and recovery, and we affirm our interest in Greece remaining in the Eurozone while respecting its commitments," the joint communiqu said.

"With Germany continuing to oppose relaxing the austerity measures and issuing eurobonds, the options are starting to run out for the ailing Eurozone economies, with some unable to borrow in the open market due to the excessive borrowing costs and Spain and Italy only hanging on in there," said analyst Craig Erlam from Alpari.

In other news, there were rumours that China could act to counter a slowdown after Premier Wen Jiabao called for "putting stabilising growth in a more important position". According to the Chinese Securities Journal, the world's second-largest economy could announce stimulus measures in the near term.

FTSE 100: Financials, resource stocks provide a lift; defensives sold off

The financial and resource sectors were making gains today, rebounding after a poor showing last week as they bore the brunt of the Eurozone-fuelled sell-off.

Hedge fund manager Man Group jumped after saying it is set to pay up to $142.8m for FRM Holdings, a global hedge fund research and investment specialist. Man and FRM's combined multi-manager business will have total funds under management of approximately $19bn, making it the largest independent non-US based fund of hedge funds.

Global banking group HSBC rose after completing the sale of 195 US retail branches to First Niagara Bank for $0.9bn, first announced in July last year.

Barclays was on the rise after announcing its intension to dispose of its entire holding in BlackRock.The transaction will be by way of an offering and related buyback by Blackrock itself, and is likely to cost around 3.8bn based on the valuation at the close of trading last Friday.

Mining stocks were broadly higher on the back of stimulus hopes in China with Vedanta, Polymetal and Xstrata making gains as copper prices ticked higher. However Fresnillo was in the red as precious metals prices came under pressure.

Real estate investment trust British Land rose after revealing profits ahead of expectations and net asset value (NAV) growth in the 12 months to the end of March. Underlying profits before tax rose 5.1% while NAV grew 4.9%.

Defensive stocks were firmly out of favour today as investors tapped into 'riskier' assets. Utility peers Centrica, United Utilities, Severn Trent and SSE were among the worst performers of the day.

FTSE 250: Resources on the rise, Lamprell drops after downgrade

Resource stocks were leading the risers on the second-tier index as copper and oil prices edged higher. Heritage Oil, Petropavlovsk, Afren, Ferrexpo, Cairn Energy, Wood Group and Talvivaara Mining all made decent gains.

Heading the other way though was oil, gas and energy engineer Lamprell after Nomura downgraded its rating from buy to reduce on the back of last week's profit warning. "We believe Lamprell's execution and operational strategy is fundamentally at risk and we were wrong to previously assume the company had turned a new leaf. In our view, the root cause of the problems announced lies with management's inability to execute lump-sum contracts," analysts said.

Newsletter publisher and exhibitions organiser Informa fell after sticking with its full-year guidelines despite admitting that renewal and new subscriber cycles are taking longer than they used to.

FTSE 100 - Risers

Vedanta Resources (VED) 1,008.00p +5.16%

Man Group (EMG) 78.80p +4.65%

Royal Bank of Scotland Group (RBS) 20.80p +4.05%

Polymetal International (POLY) 828.00p +3.63%

Standard Chartered (STAN) 1,328.50p +3.26%

Xstrata (XTA) 943.00p +3.09%

Tullow Oil (TLW) 1,373.00p +2.77%

IMI (IMI) 881.50p +2.68%

Weir Group (WEIR) 1,503.00p +2.52%

Aggreko (AGK) 2,084.00p +2.46%

FTSE 100 - Fallers

Fresnillo (FRES) 1,319.00p -2.87%

Centrica (CNA) 310.60p -1.40%

Aberdeen Asset Management (ADN) 237.90p -1.33%

Tesco (TSCO) 311.15p -0.81%

United Utilities Group (UU.) 617.50p -0.80%

Severn Trent (SVT) 1,644.00p -0.66%

SSE (SSE) 1,325.00p -0.60%

Antofagasta (ANTO) 1,030.00p -0.48%

Rolls-Royce Holdings (RR.) 801.00p -0.44%

BT Group (BT.A) 203.20p -0.39%

FTSE 250 - Risers

Heritage Oil (HOIL) 124.60p +8.25%

Petropavlovsk (POG) 411.60p +5.11%

Kesa Electricals (KESA) 50.85p +4.85%

Henderson Group (HGG) 96.40p +3.82%

Inchcape (INCH) 323.30p +3.56%

Salamander Energy (SMDR) 165.00p +3.45%

Wood Group (John) (WG.) 709.00p +3.43%

Ferrexpo (FXPO) 218.10p +3.36%

Cape (CIU) 331.90p +3.04%

Cairn Energy (CNE) 294.40p +2.94%

FTSE 250 - Fallers

Ocado Group (OCDO) 101.10p -6.65%

Northgate (NTG) 171.00p -6.10%

Daejan Holdings (DJAN) 2,725.00p -4.55%

RPS Group (RPS) 206.50p -3.82%

Informa (INF) 369.60p -3.72%

Savills (SVS) 312.20p -3.61%

TR Property Inv Trust Sigma Shares (TRYS) 61.40p -3.31%

Lamprell (LAM) 117.00p -3.31%

Rathbone Brothers (RAT) 1,151.00p -3.28%

Dunelm Group (DNLM) 492.50p -3.24%

BC



London attractions: what to see and do in winter - Daily Telegraph

My hotel pick: The Megaro, an affordable option down the road in King's Cross

Like your Christmas traditional? Winter Wonderland (www.hydeparkwinterwonderland.com) is now an annual fixture, running until January 3 in the south east corner of Hyde Park. You can stroll through without a ticket and enjoy the atmosphere - twinkly Christmas Market, big wheel, ice rink and Zippo’s Circus - or buy tickets for individual attractions. For instance, off-peak/peak circus tickets cost £8.50/9.50 adults, £5/6 children, £20/24 family.

My hotel pick: The Ritz, one of London's best luxury hotels, and close to Hyde Park

Politicos should nip along to the V&A (www.vam.ac.uk) for the free Private Eye: The First 50 Years exhibition, until January 8, to see some of the satirical behemoth’s legendary speech-bubble covers, original cartoons and witty ephemera.

My hotel pick: The Rockwell is ideal for the museum district

You can now book a Saturday tour of the Houses of Parliament (0870 906 3773, www.parliament.uk) during the Winter (tours run daily during the Summer Recess, August to September). Tours take 75 minutes, cover Lords and Commons and cost £15 adults and £6 children.

My hotel pick: 41 Hotel, in nearby Victoria

The East London Design Show (www.eastlondondesignshow.co.uk) opens at Shoreditch Town Hall December 1-4, showcasing over 100 independent designers of everything from homeware to jewellery. It stays open until 9pm on Friday. Admission: £5 adults, £3 children.

My hotel pick: The Hoxton, a hip hotel with knock-down prices in trendy Shoreditch

The British Military Tournament (www.britishmilitarytournament.com) explodes into action at Earls Court from December 2-4 and in the process raises money for three major military charities. The Queen will be there on the first day, probably wondering why they changed the name from “Royal”. It’s still a thrilling display of speed, strength and speed from humans and horses - and all for a good cause. Tickets from £29.75 adults and £22.75 for 16s and under.

Next year is Charles Dickens’ bicentenary and few writers can match him in their contribution to the capital. Dickens in London at the Museum of London (www.museumoflondon.org.uk) runs from December 9 to June 10 (Adults £8, child/concession £6), launching with “Dickens and London@Late”, 6.30pm-9.30pm on the 9th (adults £10, concessions £8), with festive food, pay bar and music from the Gay Men’s London Chorus. Sounds a hoot: bet he would have loved it.

My hotel pick: The Zetter is a trendy bolthole in Clerkenwell, ten minute's walk from the museum

Take to the streets in central London - no, not like that - the Regent Street/Oxford Street axis has Traffic-free Shopping Days on December 10, 11 and 26. You’ll be surprised at how different the atmosphere is, like the passagiato, but colder.

My hotel pick: The Langham, London's oldest purpose-built grand hotel, found on Regent Street

Titty, Roger and co arrive at the Vaudeville Theatre as Bristol Old Vic’s production of Swallows & Amazons takes to the London stage from December 15-January 14. Tickets from £13 are available from the National Theatre (www.nationaltheatre.org.uk).


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Far East buyers beware in London property rush - Reuters UK

LONDON | Mon May 21, 2012 5:56pm BST

LONDON (Reuters) - When Hong Kong businessman Mr. He paid a 35,000 pound deposit on a four-bedroom apartment in Britain, he believed it was a 40-minute walk from central London, his lawyer says. In fact it was a 40-minute journey by high-speed train.

The 350,000 pound home was in Lincolnshire, eastern England. He sued the developer for misrepresentation last year, getting his money back before the case got to court in what his lawyer told Reuters was an attempt by the developer to avoid its marketing material being splashed around a courtroom.

His experience shows the potential pitfalls facing a growing number of Far Eastern people buying British homes unseen as developers target places such as Hong Kong, Shanghai and Singapore because British buyers are struggling to get mortgages.

"It is a matter of developers saying: 'Here are some people who are likely to be interested. They probably do not know too much about the market, so why don't we advertise there'," said David Eldon, former chairman of HSBC's Asia unit (HSBA.L) who has witnessed the practice during two decades in Hong Kong.

"I think they are being a little economical with the truth," he told Reuters, saying properties could be sold for higher prices in the Far East.

Major developers including Barratt (BDEV.L), Taylor Wimpey (TW.L) and Berkeley (BKGH.L) have stepped up efforts to court cash-rich Far Eastern buyers since 2009 after the global financial crisis sapped demand at home. Developers do not all use exactly the same marketing methods.

Berkeley said it had had many repeat purchases from Asian buyers over 20 years, although it acknowledged a mistake in one of its press releases. Taylor Wimpey said it offered a high level of service to all customers. Barratt declined to comment.

The number of Chinese and Pacific Asian buyers of the best quality newly built London homes jumped to 37 percent in 2010 from four percent in 2009, data from property consultancy Savills (SVS.L) showed. The majority purchase for investment and are used to buying off-plan - before the home is built.

Mr. He was told his flat was 40 minutes from central London at a face-to-face meeting with the developer, said David Linklater, head of litigation at law firm Alan Broadhurst, who represented He. Broadhurst declined to give his client's full name or the developer's identity.

"Lots of people go to the fairs in Hong Kong and get a sheet of paper with a picture of Big Ben. You think you are going to be the Queen's neighbour when actually the Queen has a great big garden with a big wall around it," said Linklater, who deals with 20-30 unhappy overseas buyers a year.

PICTURES OF HARRODS

Sold at exhibitions in plush hotels, many properties are not in the most desirable London neighbourhoods despite the prominent pictures of Harrods or Buckingham Palace. Details of exact locations tend to be omitted rather than inaccurate.

"There is a lot of embellishment going on working off the naivety of the Chinese buyer," said James Moss, managing director of property consultancy Curzon Investment Property.

A brochure advertising 375 Kensington High Street, a luxury London scheme marketed in the Far East and developed by a Berkeley joint venture alludes to the proximity of the High Street Kensington underground station in a brochure entitled "London's most sought after new address".

The station, which is at the heart of one of London's most popular shopping districts, is a 15-20 minute walk away while the flats are at the scruffier end of the same long street and closer to two other tube stations.

In a press release issued in Hong Kong on Friday, the development was described as "a short walk from the luxury shopping available at Harrods". The world-famous store is a 50-minute walk according to the Transport for London website.

"To an unsuspecting buyer, you think wow, it is amazing, but actually it is the wrong end of Kensington High Street, right next to Kensington Olympia," said Camilla Dell, managing partner at Black Brick Property Solutions, which helps overseas buyers find London homes.

A Berkeley spokesman said the "short walk" description was "an error".

"We have had a lot of customers from Asia over the last 20 years, many of whom are repeat purchasers," he said.

"It (the development) has excellent transport links and easy access to well-known shops; the distances to which are clearly marked in our brochure. In addition, by far the majority of buyers have or will visit our developments before buying."

Ingrid Skinner, managing director of Taylor Wimpey Central London, said: "Buyers need to be able to trust the company they are buying from. At Taylor Wimpey we offer the same high level of service to all of our customers."

HIGH PRESSURE

The ballrooms of Hong Kong's luxury hotels hold property shows nearly every weekend. The city's two Mandarin Oriental hotels are particularly popular.

At one event attended by Reuters on Friday, prospective buyers were offered San Pellegrino bottled water, chocolate cupcakes and a choice of finger sandwiches. An HSBC banker was on hand to help with financing and a lawyer in case a purchaser was ready to sign.

Buyers can feel the pressure.

Judith, a native of Zhejiang in China who lives in London and declined to give her full name, said her father paid the deposit on six off-plan flats in Colindale, north London, at a Shanghai exhibition a year ago despite the fact she warned him about its remote location.

"The moment my father sat down, the agent wanted him to pay a reservation fee. Once he showed that he liked them, they said he had to pay the fee or someone else would snap them up," she said.

They are in a legal dispute with the agent in an attempt to recover 24,000 pounds, claiming they were sold the properties on the basis they could be converted into nine units, which they subsequently discovered was not possible.

"The developer and agent are not obliged to educate the buyers, it is down to the buyers to educate themselves," said Ken Xiao, president of Chinese Property Professionals Society in London. "Of course the agents will try to show the shiny side because they are trying to sell the property."

There may be little legal recourse. Those buying new homes as an investment are not protected under the National House Building Council's consumer code as opposed to those looking to occupy them, a spokeswoman for the watchdog told Reuters.

Estate agents said overseas buyers of property as an investment were at risk of getting lower-than-expected returns as the mass marketing of the homes at events meant many landlords would likely have to vie for tenants all at once, pushing rents down, Dell said.

"I have yet to see a development where the rents have exceeded the advertised rent," said Ashley Jones, managing director at London-based estate agent Barclay Residential. "I cannot see all of this having a happy ending."

(Additional reporting by Alex Frew McMillan; Editing by Tom Bill and Matthew Tostevin)



London NHS trust fined £90,000 for data breach - BBC News

An NHS trust has been fined £90,000 after 59 patients' details were sent to the wrong person.

Personal data, including diagnoses, was faxed to a member of the public 45 times for three months from last March.

The Central London Community Healthcare NHS Trust did not have sufficient checks in place, the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) said.

The trust said the breach was regrettable, but it intended to appeal against the the fine.

'Acted incorrectly'

Stephen Eckersley, the ICO's head of enforcement, said: "Patients rely on the NHS to keep their details safe.

"In this case Central London Community Healthcare NHS Trust failed to keep their patients' sensitive information secure.

"The fact that this information was sent to the wrong recipient for three months without anyone noticing makes this case all the more worrying."

A spokesman for the trust said: "We deeply regret that the Information Commissioner has decided to impose a fine and so we have instructed our lawyers to commence an appeal against this.

"We consider that the commissioner has acted incorrectly as a matter of law and so we have no alternative but to bring an appeal."

But she added that protecting patient confidentiality was a top priority and the incident, which was a result of human error, was "hugely regrettable".

The trust had apologised to those affected and changes have been made to procedures following an internal investigation.



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