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Em Morley

Energy Efficiency Report Claims that Gas Central Heating Should be Banned

Published On: February 25, 2019 at 9:00 am

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A new report into the energy efficiency of homes claims that gas central heating should be banned in new builds. 

The UK housing: Fit for the future? report is set to have major implications for both new and existing homes, including those who value and market properties of the future.

In particular, the report focuses on gas central heating. New homes would have no gas boilers or radiators within six years, while gas hobs would also be banned. 

Instead, new builds would have heat pumps and induction hobs.

The report, from the Committee on Climate Change, calls for all new homes to be built as thermally efficient as possible. 

However, there would also be huge implications for the 29m existing homes in the UK, which the report insists should be retrofitted as a national priority. The Treasury would support this, under the plans.

Existing homes would be upgraded to use low-carbon technology that has been widely regarded as alternative, such as heat pumps and heat networks.

Wherever possible, new homes should be timber-framed and triple-glazed, alongside having no gas. The report calls for no new builds to be on the gas grid by 2025 at the latest.

The Committee on Climate Change is highly critical as to the quality of new builds, and wants the performance gap between how homes are designed and how they actually perform to be closed.

It says that an immediate improvement would be to enforce current building standards. 

The organisation also wants to see construction skills improved, particularly in relation to low-carbon building, and to see that low-carbon heat and mechanical ventilation systems are properly designed and installed, and householders trained in their use.

On retrofitting existing homes, the report calls for the roll out of heat pumps in properties that are off the gas grid as an early step.

It suggests that estate agents would have to take a home’s energy features strongly into account when valuing a property.

Read the full report here.

HMRC Data Highlights the “Sluggish Nature” of the Housing Market

Published On: February 22, 2019 at 10:57 am

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The latest HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) UK Property Transactions Statistics highlight the “sluggish nature” of the housing market, an expert believes.

The report shows that the provisional seasonally adjusted number of UK property transactions in January 2019 was 101,170 residential and 10,650 non-residential sales.

The provisional seasonally adjusted count of residential property transactions increased by 0.8% between December 2018 and January 2019, and is up by 1.3% on an annual basis.

Generally, residential transactions in January are lower than in other months. This has been a consistent year-on-year trend, HMRC reports. 

Equally, year-to-date residential sales in 2018-19 are at similar levels to previous years. 

On an annual basis, non-adjusted residential transactions in January were approximately 0.9% higher than in the same month of 2018.

Steve Seal, the Director of Sales and Marketing at Bluestone Mortgages, comments on the release: “Today’s figures show the sluggish nature of property transactions. Monthly peaks and troughs fail to disguise the lack of housing, rendering the market inaccessible to some aspiring homeowners.  

“While house prices are rising at a more steady rate, the rising cost of living is preventing many borrowers from saving for both a deposit and funds for a rainy day. It’s usually either/or, and the majority struggle to save for the latter. As a result, many see their credit history suffer, should an unexpected illness, bill or payment occur.”

He insists: “However, a few missed payments should not be a reason for these borrowers to be blocked from homeownership. As an industry, we need to ensure these borrowers are provided with the support they need in navigating their way through life’s challenges, and still achieving their homeownership ambitions.” 

Are you concerned about the “sluggish nature” of the UK housing market at present, and do you expect property sales to pick up over the coming months, as in recent years? 

London’s Top Commuter Towns for Property Investment Revealed

Published On: February 22, 2019 at 10:32 am

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With a growing number of Londoners renting homes outside of the capital, due to stretched affordability, more buy-to-let landlords are now looking beyond the confines of London when investing in property. To help you decide where to invest, the top commuter towns for those working in the capital have been revealed…

Credit specialist TotallyMoney has ranked London’s commuter towns, based on average house prices, length of a train journey into the capital, the cost of an annual season ticket, and the commuter town’s Office for National Statistics lifestyle rating. 

Cheshunt in Hertfordshire came out on top for property investment this year.

Located around 26 minutes from central London, a season ticket here, which costs £2,288 per year, is the fifth cheapest of the 116 towns analysed in the study.

For buy-to-let landlords thinking of investing in property in Cheshunt, the average house price is currently £384,248.

According to TotallyMoney, the level of life satisfaction in the town is ranked at 7.92, which is the same as Waltham Cross (also located in Hertfordshire), the town that came in second place.

Commuters in Waltham Cross can expect to pay £2,028 for an annual season ticket and travel for around 28 minutes to get into London.

However, house prices here are slightly more expensive, at an average of £390,612.

High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, ranks in third place.

The average journey time into the capital is 30 minutes, while the typical property value is £331,092.

Hatfield in Hertfordshire, Gravesend in Kent, and Broxbourne in Hertfordshire also made the top ten commuter towns for property investment, along with Watford Junction in Hertfordshire, Basingstoke and Overton in Hampshire, and Hemel Hempstead in Hertfordshire.

If you’re looking to cater to high levels of tenant demand in London’s commuter towns, take note of the top locations detailed in this study. 

New Bid to Introduce Rent Controls in Scotland Launched

Published On: February 22, 2019 at 10:00 am

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A new bid to introduce valuable rent controls in Scotland has been launched by a tenants’ union.

Living Rent, alongside think tank Common Weal, is upping the pressure on introducing rent controls in Scotland, with the launch of The Rent Controls Scotland Needs.

The Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland) Act 2016 granted the Scottish Government the power to introduce localised rent controls, or rent pressure zones (RPZs).

However, these powers have yet to be used, the campaigners argue.

In these zones, rent price rises would be limited to once a year and be capped.

The campaigners point out that there are serious flaws in the system, which they claim does not recognise that rent prices in Scotland are already too high.

A loophole of the legislation is that the date at which the first rent increase could be implemented in a tenancy is not set, meaning that landlords and letting agents could bring in dramatic rent price rises within a few months of a tenant moving in.

The campaign is now calling for a rent control system, through which rises would be attached to a new Scottish rental affordability index. This index would keep rents below an affordability level, which Living Rent believes is 25% of a tenant’s income.

It is also pushing for a new Scottish living rent commission to be created, to monitor and regulate the private rental sector.

Gordon Maloney, the co-author of the report and a member of Living Rent, says: “The Scottish Government urgently needs to take action. Tenants can’t wait. Rent Pressure Zones are not working, but the current situation is simply not sustainable. If we are serious about ensuring affordable, decent housing for everyone in Scotland, then we need proper rent controls now.”

Robin McAlpine, of Common Weal, adds: “We need effective rent controls to tip the balance back in favour of tenants.”

Read up on the campaign in this helpful document: https://www.scottishhousingnews.com/uploads/documents/Rent%20Controls%20%282%29.pdf

This campaign arrives at the same time that MPs are considering the pros and cons of rent controls in England. 

MPs Briefed on the Pros and Cons of Rent Controls

Published On: February 22, 2019 at 9:00 am

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MPs have been briefed on a new research paper that assesses the pros and cons of rent controls in England. 

The report’s conclusion suggests that property agents themselves may hold the key to the re-introduction of rent controls in the country.

Following its publication, the Private rented housing: the rent control debate paper has been placed into the House of Commons library.

Rent controls were in place in England until 1989. Up to this point, tenancies were generally covered by the Rent Act 1977, under which, fair or registered rent prices were set by independent rent officers.

Since deregulation, most new private lettings have been under assured or Assured Shorthold Tenancies(ASTs), through which landlords can charge market rents.

The new paper discusses the subject of rent controls returning to the political agenda in England. It includes housing charity Shelter’s call for a stable rental contract of five years, during which annual rent rises would be index linked.

The Labour Party’s 2017 manifesto stated: “Labour will make new three-year tenancies the norm, with an inflation cap on rent rises.”

Tenant lobby group Generation Rent wants to go one step further, calling for monthly rent prices to be capped at half of the property’s annual Council Tax payment. 

The briefing paper acknowledges the substantial opposition by landlords and landlord membership bodies, including the belief that market intervention would cause investors to leave the sector, thus reducing supply for tenants.

The main argument for rent controls is affordability. In London, for instance, tenants renting a median two-bedroom home can expect to spend half their earnings on rent. Not surprisingly, the Mayor of London is a firm advocateof limiting “unacceptable rent increases”.

Another argument is the cost to the public purse when private tenants are in receipt of housing benefit, receiving Local Housing Allowance, which is a flat rate payment that is capped.

The paper also discusses rent controls in other countries, including intense opposition from the likes of Assar Lindbeck, a professor in Stockholm: “In many cases, rent control appears to be the most efficient technique presently known to destroy a city – except for bombing.”

The 37-page document is impartial, but ends on an interesting note.

In Paris, rent controls have been part of new regulations since 2014, under which a rent observatory provides the evidence for deciding whether to allow rent increases in re-let properties.

Apparently, reports of rent rises have been recorded, but there are also claims of “growing resistance by estate agents” to provide the evidence: “Without the statistics provided by the agents, it is difficult to see how the reference rents can be provided.”

The full document can be accessed here

Give Benefit Tenants a Choice, the RLA Urges

Published On: February 21, 2019 at 10:59 am

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The Residential Landlords Association (RLA) is urging the Government to give benefit tenants a choice when it comes to Universal Creditpayments and private rents.

Chris Town, the Vice Chair of the organisation, spoke out after the Prime Minister, Theresa May, made comments on the difficulties faced by benefit tenants.

On a day when three Conservative MPs resigned from the party, May confirmed that the Government is looking at ways to address the problems faced by benefit claimants living in private rental housing. 

Town responded: “With ever growing numbers of benefit claimants now reliant on the private rented sector for a place to live, we need to do much more to give tenants and landlords greater confidence in the benefits system.

“This means a package of measures that should include giving all tenants the right to decide what is best for them, by enabling them to choose to have the housing element of Universal Credit paid directly to their landlord, as well as working with bank lenders to address the problem of mortgage terms that prevent landlords renting to benefit claimants.” 

Earlier this month, the RLA insisted that further reforms to the Universal Credit system are needed, as more benefit tenants fall into rent arrears. 

Yesterday (20thFebruary 2019), Anna Soubry, Sarah Wollaston and Heidi Allen wrote a joint letter to May to confirm their departure from the Conservative Party.

The Prime Minister was “saddened” by the resignations, but added that the party would “always offer…decent, moderate and patriotic politics”.

The three MPs criticised the Government’s “disastrous handling” of Brexit and said that it had undone “all the efforts to modernise” the Conservatives.

The pro-remain trip will join the new Independent Group, which is made up of eight Labour MPs, who resigned from their party over its handling of Brexit and anti-Semitism, saying that it represented “the centre ground of British politics”.