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Em Morley

Does the Rental Sector Really Need Fixing?

Published On: May 1, 2015 at 11:56 am

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Labour’s rent control policy would cause landlords to leave the market and therefore make things worse for renters.

Commentary on the private rental sector indicates that rents are spiralling, there is a shortage of supply and young people are having to live with their parents into their 30s.

If this was the case, it wouldn’t be surprising that Ed Miliband wants to push his rental control plans to the first Queen’s Speech. By the summer, the government could be setting rents for Britain’s 4m private tenants.

However, the big problem with this policy is that these observations aren’t really the reality. There is no evidence to suggest that rents are surging. If this were a problem, rent controls would make it much worse. If the caps failed, then more intervention would be called for.

Mr. Miliband is proposing that rents increase only by the rate of inflation during a tenancy agreement and that tenancies are longer. It seems that Mr. Miliband believes rents have been spiralling ahead of other prices.

Does the Rental Sector Really Need Fixing?

Does the Rental Sector Really Need Fixing?

However, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) revealed on Friday 24th April that rents are hardly rising at all in real terms, and could be falling.

Data from ONS indicates that rents rose 2.1% around England in the last 12 months, 3.2% in London and slightly less in Scotland. Wales’ increases were much less. 2% national growth is not serious.

This figure is higher than general inflation, which is currently at 0%, but it is less than for example the rate of increase in hotel and restaurant prices, which rose 2.4% annually.

Rents are in fact increasing at a substantially lower rate than the price of buying a home, which is growing 8% per year. Rents are not out of line with the rest of the economy, and renting is becoming more appealing.

Since 2005, rents have grown from 90 on the ONS index to 105, excluding London. The number rises to 110 when including the capital. This makes an increase of around 17% over ten years.

In the same decade, overall price level has grown by 27%. Therefore, rents are actually decreasing compared to the other things that people buy. But what about wages?

Real wages have been stagnant in the last few years, but over the past ten years, they have risen by over 17%. This is also true of those earning the least. Minimum wage, for example, has increased from £5.05 in 2006 to £6.50 now, a rise of about 30%. It will probably grow next year too.

Therefore in real terms, rents have gone down. One factor driving down the cost is that the amount landlords need for financing the purchase of a property has declined in the last decade. The cost of supplying the product has fallen so rents have too.

Furthermore, supply is increasing. There are currently 3.8m private homes for rent compared to 2m in 1999. The total number of homes has grown from 20m to 22m. With rising supply and falling prices, the market seems to be working well.

Even if the market were negative, rent controls would make matters worse. Landlords would leave the market. The reason rents have risen only slowly is that many buy-to-let investors have been entering the sector. If landlords begin selling their portfolios, prices would increase again.

Taking away tax relief on wear and tear is another policy that would not be welcome. It would give landlords a reason for not maintaining their properties.

Having the state controlling prices does not improve the market, and can often make it worse. These plans would also cause spiralling regulation. There will be demands for more controls, and the government would then be setting rents.

Those looking for flexible accommodation do prefer to rent than buy, and their market is working well for them.

It is clear that the country is in a housing crisis; we do not build enough homes and the sector is crowded with regulations. What would be better for the market and the tenants is to remove political intervention.

Help to Buy going strong two years on

Published On: May 1, 2015 at 11:48 am

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With the second anniversary of its inception having just passed, the Help to Buy scheme is remaining people with first-time buyers.

Latest figures show that that the number of homes purchased using the scheme is nearing 50,000. The statistics, compiled by the Department for Communities and Local Government showed that the average price of properties purchased using the scheme is now £212,932.[1]

Purchases

Since being introduced on April 1st 2013, 47, 018 properties have been bought as a result of Help to Buy assistance. The total loan value stands currently at £1.99b, with overall value of the properties sold at £10bn.[2]

The most popular areas of Britain, where Help to Buy has been used more predominantly, are Wiltshire, followed by Central Bedfordshire, Peterborough, Milton Keynes and County Durham.

Help to Buy going strong two years on

Help to Buy going strong two years on

Help to Buy Isa

It is hoped that the upcoming Help to Buy Isa will have the same success. This new initiative will see first-time buyers given an additional £50 for every £200 that they manage to save for a deposit. The scheme is limited to £3,000 on £12,000 of savings, with people only able to open one account. However, there are no rules limiting someone else in the same household from opening a separate account, meaning that couples can save and receive bonuses at the same time in different ISA’s.

There is also a cap on the overall value of properties that the bonus can be used to buy. This is £450,000 in London and £250,00 on homes outside of the capital. Banks or building societies will be able to offer their own interest rates for all Help to Buy Isa’s. The scheme will begin in the Autumn.

[1-2] http://www.zoopla.co.uk/discover/property-news/help-to-buy-has-assisted-50-000-buyers-to-move-home/?utm_content=buffer57cec&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer#zj67sJkiPiVc0jU6.97

 

 

 

Labour’s Housing Policies Take £200m off Value of Builders

Published On: May 1, 2015 at 10:49 am

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The Labour Party’s housing plans have taken criticism from leading property experts as house builders experienced their share prices falling after Ed Miliband announced the proposals.

Around £200m was taken off the value of Taylor Wimpey, Barratt Developments and Persimmon after the policies were revealed on Sunday. One plan is to limit private landlords from increasing rent by more than CPI inflation for three years.

This could cause buy-to-let investors to leave the sector, as the market would be less profitable. This would worsen the shortage of housing for generation rent, which Labour has claimed to want to help.

The Association of Residential Letting Agents (ARLA) claim that three-quarters of its members are worried the plans will “see landlords exit the market and reduce supply.”1 

Head of the National Landlords Association (NLA), Richard Lambert, says: “We understand Labour wants to assure tenants they have their concerns at heart, but this policy will backfire because they don’t understand the economics of supplying private housing to rent.

“These changes will have far-reaching consequences for the private rented sector, for landlords’ willingness to put their own money into providing homes, and for mortgage lenders’ view of the risk in supporting them.

“If these proposals are going to be rushed into the first Queen’s Speech, less than a month away, without time to think through the consequences, Labour’s good intentions could make the housing crisis worse, not better.”1 

Labour's Housing Policies Take £200m off Value of Builders

Labour’s Housing Policies Take £200m off Value of Builders

The British Property Federation (BPF) has also cautioned that rent controls “could deter much needed investment in the housing sector.”

Chief Executive of the BPF, Melanie Leech, comments: “Ultimately what will help tenants best is more investment in housing.

“Pension funds and other institutions have billions to invest in this market; developing places that would provide a new generation of high-quality homes that offer greater choice to renters, including the option to sign longer tenancies.

“This additional investment will be vital to tackle the housing crisis, and we would urge the next government to do all it can to encourage it, rather than chase it away with an overly-proscriptive approach to rent setting.

“In places like London, tenants will find this policy on rents may make their budgeting harder, rather than easier. Their rent will tick along at CPI for a couple of years and then they will face a potential sharp rise in year three when the rent returns to market.”1 

Mr. Miliband seemed unaffected by the drop in house builder’s share prices: “Our proposals will be better for companies building homes in Britain. The housing market is not working. By common consent the Lyons plan is the most comprehensive for a generation. We can’t carry on with the status quo.”1

He says that small house builders will benefit from the policies.

Labour’s plan to abolish Stamp Duty for first time buyers on homes worth up to £300,000 also faced disapproval. The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) believes it could further push up house prices.

Head of Policy at RICS, Jeremy Blackburn, says: “While this proposed Stamp Duty reform could help some first time buyers in the market, it’s another measure that tinkers with demand-side stimulus. Prices are already predicted to rise in the next parliament and this is only likely to make matters worse.”1

Labour first revealed rent control plans last year.

Brandon Lewis, Conservative housing minister, comments: “Ed Miliband is relaunching a policy that descended into chaos when it was first announced; the experts he claimed backed his plans came out and attacked it as unworkable.

“Rent controls never work; they force up rents and destroy investment in housing, leading to fewer homes to rent and poorer quality accommodation. Even Ed Miliband’s own shadow housing minister admits they don’t work.”1 

Shares in Taylor Wimpey dropped as much as 2% in morning trading on Monday, while Barratt decreased as much as 1.9% and Persimmon as much as 1.8%.

By late morning, the value of the three FTSE 100 house building firms was £178m less. Shares in FTSE 250 house builders also dropped.

1 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/constructionandproperty/11565524/Housebuilders-hit-by-Ed-Milibands-rent-control-plans.html

 

The Lucky Generation who Could Buy a Home

Published On: May 1, 2015 at 9:55 am

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The young and elderly are accustomed to renting, but for those born in the 1950s, buying a home was fairly simple.

It can be frustrating for members of generation rent to hear about how easy it was to buy a house in the past. But the truth is that apart from a brief period, buying a property has always been difficult.

For those now in their 80s, just half were homeowners or had a mortgage by their 50s; the others rented. People in their 90s at present struggled even more. So despite young people feeling they have it bad, the elderly today were also part of a renting generation.

Before that, it was quite the same. In the 20s and 30s, house building in cities in Britain was undertaken by investors who built for landlords, or by landlords themselves. For most people, wages were so low that they had to rent. Salaries did grow after the Second World War, but at this point there was a shortage of labour, and therefore housing to buy.

Conservative and Labour governments fought to build the most council homes, and individuals built their own houses. But even then, it took people a while to save a deposit, get a mortgage from the building society and plan the building of their property.

In the 70s, there was mortgage rationing and interest rates were in double-digits. Council house building was also slow.

The Lucky Generation who Could Buy a Home

The Lucky Generation who Could Buy a Home

It was the 80s that saw the biggest changes. For those now in their 60s, these were the lucky ones at this time. In 1983, three quarters of those aged 28 owned their own home outright or had a mortgage. By the time they were 30 in 1993, 86% lived in owner-occupied housing. Just one in seven rented into their late 30s.

It was much easier for this generation to buy than it had been for their parents and would become for their children.

Professor of Geography at the University of Oxford, Danny Dorling, explains his experiences with housing: “I was aged 23 when, in the early 90s, I bought my first home in Newcastle upon Tyne with my then girlfriend. Neither of us had a permanent job. I only had a two-year contract. I was a research associate at the university studying housing. My salary was not large and I had almost no savings.

“Because I was studying housing, I decided to ask 16 banks and building societies if they would give us a joint mortgage. All 16 of them interviewed me and many interviewed both of us.

“All of them sucked their teeth or otherwise looked disparagingly at us asking to borrow so much money when we had so little job security and low wages. All of them made it look as if it would be very hard for them to lend us the money and we would have to wait and see.

“And then all but one offered us a mortgage. We bought out first home, a three-bed end-terrace for about £50,000. It was not hard to do.”

Dorling explains how this happened: “Had I not asked 16 lenders if they would lend and discovered that 15 would say yes, I would have been left with the impression that I was very lucky to be granted a mortgage back then; but it was not luck, they had so much money to lend that they were forced to lend it to people who were cohabiting, young and only in temporary employment. The Big Bang of 1986 had forced them to compete with each other and they needed our interest payments.”

Lending rules are now a lot stricter. This is in part due to the assumption that house prices will have to stop rising. They are now so high that they may not increase further. Banks are therefore worried that if they lend irresponsibly, they won’t be able to recover funds through repossession. The Government is also backing the banks through the Help to Buy scheme, meaning that it does not want to be left with insecure debts.

The consequence has been that only a third of people aged 30 today can buy a house. It is not until people are in their 60s that they are in a home owning majority.

Dorling says: “I am the last of the lucky generation. Indeed, I am probably the youngest of that cohort. When I did get a permanent job at the University of Bristol in the late 90s, I was so shocked at the house prices there, in comparison to Newcastle upon Tyne, that I rented and only later bought upon moving back north to Leeds.

“Not buying in Bristol in the 90s was almost certainly the most stupid financial decision of my life. But today having a mortgage at all has become a privilege, so who am I to complain?”1

1 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/general-election-2015/11566824/Only-one-lucky-generation-ever-struck-housing-gold.html

 

Spring cleaning property can save money

Published On: May 1, 2015 at 9:40 am

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With Summer fast approaching, landlords could be excused for thinking about beach-bodies and sun-tan lotion as opposed to broken boilers and large-energy bills. However, now is a great time for them to give their property a full Spring clean, in readiness for the Winter months.

Spring is arguably the best time of year to give all home appliances a full MOT, to help plan for avoidable costs and misdemeanours in six months time. Additionally, if things are discovered to be awry, homeowners can take their time to consider the best solution, with contractors subsequently having enough time to complete necessary work before the cold months arrive.

Furthermore, for larger work, such as replacing a boiler, this will be more cost-effective during warmer months and will negate the chance of having to go without heating in colder times. What’s more, demand for skilled traders is typically less in the summer months

Landlords must remember that a delay in providing heating repair can result in tenants legally withholding their deposit.

With this in mind, landlords should consider the following Spring cleaning tips to ensure that their property is in the best possible shape: 

  • Bleed all radiators

To make sure that all radiators are working efficiently, landlords should bleed them during the Spring months. If radiators have cold spots, there is air within the system, therefore they need to be bled to solve the issue.

Bleeding radiators can be achieved by turning the system off, then turning the radiator key until the air stops and water runs smoothly. On switching the system back on, the issue should have been resolved.

  • Exclude the draught

Landlords should ensure that all windows and doors within their property are sufficiently sealed to stop air getting out. Draught excluders are a great way of achieving this and can dramatically cut down on heating bills as a result.

  • Hear the alarm

Despite being common practice, landlords should make sure that smoke and carbon monoxide alarms are only fitted but are regularly tested.

Spring cleaning property can save money

Spring cleaning property can save money

  • Look after your boiler

During the warmer months landlords should check the efficiency of all boilers in their portfolio. Boilers should be at the correct pressure and should be topped up as necessary.

Hot water tanks should also be sufficiently wrapped so that all hot water is insulated. Materials to do this are readily available in most DIY stores and could be invaluable in saving landlords both heat and money.

  • Insulate

Cracked or broken pipes are a big problem in many UK homes during colder periods of the year. To help prevent this, landlords can make sure that their pipes are securely insulated by using pipe lagging, which again can be purchased from most DIY shops.

Landlords should also look at insulating both the loft and cavity walls of a property, if they are suitable and have not already been done.

 

 

 

 

 

No. 10’s Value Surges with Cameron

Published On: May 1, 2015 at 9:00 am

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No. 10's Value Surges with Cameron

No. 10’s Value Surges with Cameron

10 Downing Street’s value has spiralled since David Cameron came into power in the 2010 general election.

The property is now worth an estimated £6,312,292, a huge rise from the £4,574,831 it was allegedly worth when Mr. Cameron formed a coalition after failing to win an outright majority five years ago.

Figures, from the Daily Telegraphy and Zoopla, reveal that the iconic Georgian terraced home has experienced substantial growth in the last 36 years.1

The property was worth £860,562 when Margaret Thatcher came to power in 1979. This would have been a huge amount at the time, but would buy you just a small apartment in most of London today.

When John Major replaced Mrs Thatcher in 1990, No. 10 was worth £1,804,952. Seven years later, when Tony Blair took office, the home is estimated to have been worth £1,644,558.

The property has two dining rooms, a basement kitchen and a small private residence on the third floor.

1 http://www.estateagenttoday.co.uk/2298-no-10-shoots-up-in-value-under-cameron