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Em Morley

Mansion Tax to be fast-tracked if Labour win

Published On: April 23, 2015 at 2:24 pm

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Categories: Landlord News

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Shadow Chancellor Ed Balls has risked losing a number of potentially key votes in the closest and fiercely contested General Election in years.

With just two weeks to go until voters across the UK head to the ballot box, Mr Balls has suggested that he would like to see people with high-value properties paying the controversial, ‘mansion tax,’ within the current financial year, should Labour be elected into power.

Commitment

During an interview given to the Independent in December last year, Mr Balls stated that he wished to implement the tax on people with the most expensive properties during the 2015-16 financial year. This pledge was made despite the financial year beginning a month before the General Election itself.

However, during a speech to nurses in Manchester yesterday, Labour leader Ed Milliband reaffirmed his party’s desire to push ahead with the tax at the earliest opportunity. Milliband said that he planned to implement that tax within his first 100 days in power, as part of Labour’s emergency package to raise funds for over 1,000 additional trainee nurses.

Mr Milliband said that, ‘with A&E in crisis, staff shortages and hospitals weighed down by large deficits, this plan has to start immediately.’ He continued by categorically stating that, ‘in our first 100 days, our first Budget, our first year in office, we’ll begin to bring in funds from the mansion tax and tobacco levy,’ to, ‘support the NHS with our immediate Rescue Plan.’[1]

Mansion Tax to be fast-tracked if Labour win

Mansion Tax to be fast-tracked if Labour win

Intent

In his interview with the Independent, Mr Balls went on record to say that, ‘saving the NHS will be at the heart of our first Budget,’ with that revenue, ‘coming in the first year of a Labour government, before the end of the financial year.’[2]

Property experts suggest that 80% of homes that could be potentially affected by the mansion tax are in London and the South East of England.

Despite the practicalities of any introduction of tax open to argument, the precedent has already been set. In 1997, the new Tony Blair led government imposed a £5bn windfall tax on relevant privatised utilities just seven months after taking office.

 

[1-2] http://www.landlordzone.co.uk/news/labour-will-fast-track-mansion-tax?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=facebook

 

 

 

Just 1.1% House Price Inflation in Wales

Published On: April 23, 2015 at 2:11 pm

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Just 1.1% House Price Inflation in Wales

Just 1.1% House Price Inflation in Wales

Property price growth in Wales has been slowing down recently, with the country experiencing only 1.1% inflation in the last 12 months.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) has found that for the whole of the UK, house prices rose 7.2% in the year to February 2015. However, this is still down from 8.4% in the year to January 2015.1

Annual property price increases were 7.4% in England, 6.4% in Scotland and 14.2% in Northern Ireland.1

Despite the Wales figures indicating a significant slowdown, the ONS says that annual price growth is showing signs of slowing around most of the UK.

1 http://www.ftadviser.com/2015/04/20/mortgages/houses-price-inflation-in-past-year-ADjp4xOgDgmq2AdXMH7tcP/article.html

 

Gross mortgage lending up 21% in March

Published On: April 23, 2015 at 12:18 pm

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Latest figures released from the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML) have showed that mortgage lending rose at a substantial rate during March.

The statistics show that gross mortgage lending during March reached £16.5bn, a 21% increase from the £13.6bn recorded in February. As a result, lending in the first quarter of this year totalled £44.9bn.[1]

Despite this significant rise, gross mortgage lending was actually down 12% on the last three months of 2014, and down by 3% on the same period last year.[2]

Stable

Chief Economist of the CML Bob Pannell, feels that the figures show stability. Pannell said that, ‘the underlying picture is stabilising. Sentiment and activity are showing early signs of improvement and should be further supported by the effects of stamp duty reform.’ He said that the CML, ‘expect to see lending strengthen over the next few months, albeit from a relatively sluggish start in 2015.’[3]

Brian Murphy, Head of Lending at the Mortgage Advice Bureau, agreed with Pannell about the positivity of the statistics. Murphy said that the data showed that, ‘housing activity is back on track.’ He went on to say that, ‘the fall in February was not unexpected given the seasonal slowdown but it is encouraging to see that lending has risen 21% over the month.’[4]

Murphy also rebuffed the notion that the upcoming election had caused market activity to slow, saying that, ‘there is still appetite in the market for lending and consumer demand has also held strong.’[5]

Optimism

Additional figures released by the HMRC also gave cause for optimism. Mr Murphy pointed out that, ‘housing transactions rose above 100,000 for the first time in four months in March,’ and went on to say that, ‘this should have a knock-on effect on mortgage completions, lending to further growth.’ He warned however that, ‘with housebuilding levels still trailing behind consumer demand, long-term growth could be stunted if this imbalance is not addressed.’[6]

Gross mortgage lending up 21% in March

Gross mortgage lending up 21% in March

 

Peter Rollings, CEO of Marsh and Parsons, said that the lending figures showed a market, ‘emerging into a spring full of promise.’ He believes that the, ‘significant increase from February,’ is welcome, but it is, ‘the year-on-year figure that is even more encouraging when you consider how strongly the property market began in 2014.’[7

Rollings also thinks that after the forthcoming election, ‘buyers and seller will soon have a more concrete idea of what the future holds for the property market and will be able to act more decisively.’ When this is married up with features such as improving mortgage rates and the traditionally strong spring to summer period, Rollings suggests that, ‘the outlook is rosy,’ for the property market.[8]

 

[1-8] http://www.propertyreporter.co.uk/hero/gross-mortgage-lending-hits-165bn-in-march.html

 

 

 

What do Young, Single and Homeless People Really Face?

Published On: April 23, 2015 at 11:34 am

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Categories: Finance News

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Mateasa Grant is a 25-year-old who found herself homeless at the end of 2013.

After her relationship broke down, Mateasa moved in with some friends and got herself a new job. When her boss disappeared after two months without paying her, Mateasa had nowhere to live.

Mateasa could not turn to her family for support, and realising that she would have to sleep rough “was frightening” and “out of my control.”

However, Mateasa found that her situation is not unusual, as over half of those seeking help for homeless are under 25-years-old.

Mateasa was “confident” that her local authority could help her, but what followed has formed part of a shocking and disappointing journey. Mateasa documented her struggles in the film Young, Single and Homeless.

The facts that Mateasa unearths will surprise many, as it appears the housing crisis is causing difficulty for councils, charities and those finding themselves without somewhere to live.

Watch the film below:

 

 

 

 

Councils Pay Landlords £4,000 to House Tenants

Published On: April 23, 2015 at 10:58 am

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Categories: Landlord News

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Councils are paying private landlords up to £4,000 to house homeless tenants, as a shortage of social housing has forced authorities to entice the private sector with the incentives.

This news arrives as the Conservative party pledge to extend the right to buy scheme, which allows housing association tenants to purchase their home. This could worsen the housing shortage by selling around 1.3m properties, with councils struggling to replace them. Find out more here: /how-would-the-conservatives-right-to-buy-work/.

Councils in London and the South East are now advertising to private landlords with attractive cash incentives. Westminster Council in central London will pay up to £4,000 for landlords who accept council tenants. Tower Hamlets in East London has publicised a £2,500 payment for one-bedroom properties rented for two years by council tenants and £4,000 for two or more bedroom homes.

In Haringey, North London and nearby Barnet, private landlords are being offered payments of up to £3,000 for two-year tenancies. Southwark Council in South London will pay up to £2,000.

Housing charity Shelter says that these offers indicate a power switch between councils and landlords. Policy Officer at Shelter, Zorana Halpin, says: “Landlords don’t need local authorities, but local authorities need them.”

These cash incentives highlight the struggles that councils are already facing housing homeless families and individuals.

Councils Pay Landlords £4,000 to House Tenants

Councils Pay Landlords £4,000 to House Tenants

Increasing rents in the private rental sector and the cuts to housing benefit in 2011, have made landlords less likely to rent to council tenants, yet local authorities are finding it difficult to house the growing number of households dependent on this accommodation.

More councils have launched or increased cash incentives to landlords. November saw Hounslow Council in West London raising its payments, and in March, Basildon Council in Essex announced that it would start paying £1,000 for 12-month agreements and £1,500 for two-year tenancies.

Councils are so concerned over the lack of housing stock that payments are often made for homes in different boroughs.

Westminster Council said that it has paid landlords with properties outside London in the hope of housing people on its waiting list.

Housing consultant David Lawrenson says that landlords consider council tenants to be higher risk than private renters, and increasing rents in the private sector are more financially appealing.

For example, in Haringey, the average rent for a two-bedroom home is £1,556 per month, yet the maximum local housing allowance (LHA) for the same property is £1,109.

Lawrenson says: “There is supposed to be some kind of agreement to stop councils competing with each other, but these landlord incentives suggest that they are not working, as they still seem to be competing with each other to try to get that stock in. It’s only going to get worse as rents continue to rise.”1

The highest payments are made to landlords who take on council tenants for long-term contracts. The rent on these agreements is paid for in housing benefit claimed by the resident. Other schemes are open to landlords who let to council tenants for up to five years. In both situations, if the landlord did not take the tenant, then they would have to be housed in temporary housing such as a B&B.

Landlords who enter the schemes are not given a deposit, but could have to use the cash payment at the end of the agreement to make any repairs. However, the money is theirs to do as they please.

Benefits for 12-month tenancies are paid for by LHA, but this was cut in April 2011, making private renters more attractive to landlords.

Halpin says: “Local authorities used to procure large volumes of temporary accommodation from private landlords through leases; the rents they could pay were in line with market rates and it meant no void periods for landlords, so councils had a bit of negotiating power and the deal was attractive to landlords.”

Halpin explains that councils’ buying power has decreased: “The fact that councils are prioritising their spending to make sure people are being housed is a good thing, but we are concerned that they have limited resources and are having to use some of them to pay these incentives. Ultimately, the only long-term solution is to build more affordable homes.”1

Head of Policy at the Chartered Institute of Housing (CIH), Melanie Rees, says that councils have been given more freedom to help house homeless people by making use of the private rental sector, despite benefit cuts reducing the rents paid to private landlords.

She says: “But welfare reform, in particular the benefit cap, has cut the amount of benefits that people receive and made private landlords in some areas more reluctant to let to claimants.

“In some areas, offering incentives to private landlords may well be cheaper than using temporary accommodation, and a better option for the tenant than being stuck in a poor quality B&B.”1

1 http://www.theguardian.com/society/2015/apr/17/councils-pay-private-landlords-up-to-4000-to-house-tenants

 

 

New legislation to aid energy efficiency

Published On: April 23, 2015 at 10:52 am

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New legislation is going to see landlords who let draughty properties to tenants left out in the cold.

From April 2018, landlords with property as either a F or G will be banned from letting them out to tenants in England and Wales, as part of a new initiative aimed at reducing energy bills and carbon footprints.

 

Improvements

Additionally, tenants currently living in properties with an F or G rating will be able to ask for energy efficiency improvements from April 2016. It will then be a legal requirement for all landlords to bring their properties up to at least an E energy rating.

Official government figures show that nearly 10% of the 4.2miliion privately rented houses in England and Wales fall short of the E energy rating. The Government predict that the new legislation will assist over one million tenants, who are thought to pay up to £1,000 more than the average annual heating bill of £1,265.[1] Many experts believe that the extortionate costs are a result of poorly insulated homes, which rival the worst in the whole of Europe.

Penalties

The new legislation will see landlords punished if they do not comply with tenant improvement requests. This will see penalty notices served on unhelpful landlords. Properties with an F or G energy rating will still be able to be let out after 1st April 2018, but only for the remainder of pre-existing rental agreements. However, tenants will not be able to renew a rental contract, nor will landlords be able to let the property out to anyone else, until they have made sufficient improvements that bring the home up to an E energy rating.

New legislation to aid energy efficiency

New legislation to aid energy efficiency

 

Michael Portman, managing director of LetRisks, said that the new legislation ‘will have a significant impact on landlords with older, draughty properties in terms of extra expense and lost rental income, while they improve their properties.’ Portman went on to say that despite this, ‘there will be a range of support mechanisms, such as the green deal and ECO schemes, that could alleviate upfront costs for landlords.’[2]

Insurance

Mr Portman also expressed his concern that landlords with F and G rated properties faced tougher criteria when applying for mortgages and insurance. Most insurance companies require landlords to comply with all relevant statutory requirements, meaning that landlords will have to comply with the new legislation or face major difficulties. Portman said that, ‘landlords and agents are running a risk if they have F and G rated properties and they need to manage this by upgrading and improving their properties.’ He added that, ‘letting agents that have F or G rated properties in their portfolio should be urging their landlords to start work on the properties, to bring them up to scratch.’ Otherwise, he warns, ‘they could face the risk of losing some of their landlords because their properties have become illegal.’[3]

Urgent

Portman believes that, ‘as a matter of urgency, agents and landlords that are currently renting out F and G rated properties should be reviewing the improvements that can be made, as well as researching costs.’ He continued by saying that, ‘agents and landlords should ensure that their properties meet the legal requirements.’[4]

 

[1-4] http://www.propertywire.com/news/europe/uk-landlords-energy-rules-2015042210417.html