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Rents Rise Across England and Wales, with just London Recording a Fall

Published On: October 25, 2018 at 9:21 am

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The average rent price across England and Wales increased by 2.3% in the 12 months to September, hitting £861 per month, according to Your Move.

Rents rose in all regions of England and Wales in September, except in London, where prices have fallen by an average of 1.3% over the year.

But, unsurprisingly, the capital remains the most expensive place to rent a property in the country, at an average of £1,271 per month, the estate agent reports.

The new academic year caused a surge of activity in September, helping to support growth in rent prices.

The highest annual increase was seen in the South West, at an average of 4.3%, to reach £686 per month.

The next fastest rise was in the East Midlands, at 2.4%, to an average price of £656, followed by the South East, at 1.8%, to £895.

Martyn Alderton, the National Lettings Director at Your Move, comments: “Students up and down the country are beginning to return to their universities. Yet, far from the outdated stereotypes of ropey student digs, many young people are able to access top quality student accommodation in their place of study.

“The growth of the student rental market has been a boon for landlords who have invested in good quality properties. Yet the number of living options for students means that there is real competition, with landlords having to ensure quality is high to attract the best tenants.”

Properties in northern regions continue to earn higher rental yields than those located in southern areas.

The average landlord in the North East, for instance, enjoyed an annual yield of 5.0% in the year to September, while, in the North West, this figure was 4.8%.

Landlords in London once again experienced the lowest annual returns, at an average of 3.2%.

Across all of England and Wales, landlords enjoyed an average rental yield of 4.4% in September – the same as in June, July and August, but below the 4.7% achieved in Scotland.

Number of Buy-to-Let Lenders Offering Limited Company Loans Soars by Almost 50%

Published On: October 25, 2018 at 8:59 am

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The number of buy-to-let lenders offering limited company loans has soared by 47% over the past year, according to the latest Buy-to-Let Index from Mortgages for Business.

In the last quarter (Q3) alone, three new lenders have come into the market, with 22 now competing in the limited company loans space. In Q3 2017, there were only 15.

As a result of these new lenders, there are more buy-to-let mortgage products in the market. Overall, the index shows that, in Q3 2018, the total number of mortgage products available to landlords borrowing via a limited company averaged at 628. This figure has more than doubled year-on-year, from Q3 2017’s average of 263.

In the wider market, an average of 1,571 products were available between July and September, in contrast to Q2 this year, when the number of products averaged 1,547.

In terms of the proportions of the mortgage market, 44% of completed buy-to-let mortgage transactions were for limited company loans, which is up by 42% on Q2. Corporate structures (predominantly special purpose vehicles) can provide financial efficiencies, and have proved increasingly popular since the changes to tax relief on landlords’ finance costs were announced in the Summer Budget 2015.

The trend for remortgaging continued, with only one-third of buy-to-let mortgage transactions being made for purchases in Q3. The only property type seeing an increase in transactions was Houses in Multiple Occupation (HMOs), for which 36% of deals were for purchases – up from 33%. This comes despite new HMO licensing this October.

It is interesting to note that 96% of landlords borrowing via Mortgages for Business opted for a fixed rate buy-to-let mortgage in Q3, which is up from 93% in the previous quarter. 73% of those choosing to fix opted for five-year periods. If the preference for five-year fixed rate deals continues, it will have a knock-on effect in reducing the volume of buy-to-let borrowing, the firm points out.

Steve Olejnik, the Managing Director of Mortgages for Business, comments: “It has been encouraging to see so many new entrants to the specialist end of the buy-to-let market in the last quarter, putting product availability at an all-time high. This just goes to show there is still a lucrative, buoyant market out there following on from the recent regulatory changes.

“With the uncertainty surrounding Brexit and the possibility of another Bank rate rise in the near future, I am not surprised that the majority of landlords are choosing to fix. It will be interesting to see what knock-on effect this will have on the buy-to-let remortgage market.”

The Law is Failing to Stop Rogue Landlords, the Guardian and ITV News Reveal

Published On: October 25, 2018 at 8:08 am

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Rogue landlords who have been ruled unfit to let their properties are continuing to operate by exploiting loopholes in the law, which is designed to protect the most vulnerable tenants.

These rogue landlords are collecting rents – often funded through housing benefit – despite being convicted of housing offences and failing to pass the fit and proper person tests required by lettings legislation in England and Wales, reveals an investigation by the Guardian and ITV News.

Worryingly, the study found that, due to the way the law is written, this is usually perfectly legal.

The Guardian and ITV News have also discovered that local authorities have failed to make a single entry onto the Government’s new database of rogue landlords in the six months since its launch.

Prior to the introduction of the database, the Government estimated that there were 10,500 rogue landlords operating in England and said that it expected more than 600 of the worst offenders to be entered onto the blacklist. The contents of the database are being kept secret from the public, with the Government stating that it was “not in the public interest” to explain why.

The Guardian and ITV News have highlighted several convicted landlords that have been judged unfit, but are still in business:

  • Bernard McGowan boasts a £30m property empire, but has been convicted six times of housing offences since 2014. He has failed the fit and proper person test in Brent, north London, but his properties continue to be let there, alongside other London boroughs (Camden and Newham) and in Hertfordshire.
  • A local councillor described Gary Fixter as a “despicable” landlord after he was convicted of housing offences in Scarborough, North Yorkshire in 2016. He was convicted again in Wirral in April this year, when he was told by a judge to “give up” letting property, due to the “totally unacceptable” conditions of his rental homes. Since then, he has been letting properties in Chester and Wirral.
  • Adrian Webb, a former firefighter, was convicted of letting a Liverpool property that breached fire regulations in 2016. He has also failed the city council’s fit and proper person test. He is currently letting property in neighbouring St Helens, where he was also successfully prosecuted in 2016 for failing to deal with damp and mould in one of his properties.
  • David McGuinness is a landlord who let a home described as a “shed in the back garden of a shabbily converted bedsit property” in 2012, and is one of 28 individuals Newham says that it has “banned” after failing the council’s fit and proper person test. McGuinness owns property in Ilford, which is licensed by the neighbouring London Borough of Redbridge to be let by a third-party agent.
  • Katia Goremsandu, once named the “country’s worst landlord”, has been convicted on multiple occasions. Goremsandu has now been banned from managing two homes in two London boroughs – Westminster and Haringey – under legislation usually used to control gang members or prolific drug offenders. She continues to own property in London that is let to tenants, and someone is occupying a luxury flat that she owns in Kensington, west London.

Under the existing legislation, a landlord can fail the fit and proper person test in one borough, but continue to legally let properties in other boroughs.

The law also allows landlords to continue letting homes in the borough where they are banned, so long as an approved third party manages them. Failing a fit and proper person test does not mean that all or any of the landlord’s properties are unfit.

Landlord licensing was introduced as part of the Housing Act, which came into force in 2006, and was billed as a way of forcing rogue landlords to clean up their acts. It gave councils the power to refuse a landlord a licence if the local authority did not deem them to be a fit and proper person to let property to tenants.

The Law is Failing to Stop Rogue Landlords, the Guardian and ITV News Reveal

The Law is Failing to Stop Rogue Landlords, the Guardian and ITV News Reveal

In order to decide whether a landlord is fit and proper, the legislation states that local authorities must consider whether “the landlord has contravened any provision of the law relating to housing or of landlord and tenant law”. However, it is rare for councils to judge that a landlord is not fit and proper.

The Guardian and ITV News’ findings have prompted experts to question whether local authorities have the resources to use existing laws, as well as recently enhanced enforcement powers.

Jacky Peacock, a Director of tenant charity Advice4Renters, says: “Having campaigned for many years to get [landlord] licensing on the statute books, we’ve been devastated that implementation has been so flawed.

“We see licences being issued even where a landlord has had previous convictions, so shouldn’t reasonably be deemed to be a fit and proper person, as the law requires. Even if he is prevented from holding a licence in one area, there’s a good chance he will be operating somewhere else.”

One leading housing academic believes that legislation governing the country’s private rental sector needs a complete overhaul.

Julie Rugg, a Senior Research Fellow at the University of York’s Centre for Housing Policy, who co-authored a study published last month on England’s private rental sector, says: “There is a lot to be said for saying: ‘You know what, can we just start again?’

“The more new legislation comes in, the chances of it not working in practice, with all the other legislation that’s in play, increases. At the moment, everyone is agreed that nothing is working.”

The research found that 250,000 families in England were bringing up babies and infants in private rental accommodation that failed to meet the decent homes standard.

The scale of that finding suggests that more than just a small minority of rogue landlords blights the private rental sector.

The authors of the report back the introduction of a “property MOT” – similar to the system that exists for cars – in which all properties let for residential purposes would need an annual standardised inspection by approved experts.

Since 2013, landlord licensing schemes have expanded, but vary hugely across the country, and, even within the same local authority area, there can be less stringent licence requirements in certain wards.

In addition to licensing, new legislation was introduced in April this year that could lead to the most serious offenders being banned from letting property anywhere in England.

The Minister for Housing and Homelessness, Heather Wheeler MP, comments: “Everyone deserves a decent and safe place to live, and we are reforming the private rented sector to make it fairer for all.

“Through fines, banning orders and the new rogue landlord database – warmly welcomed by councils – we have provided authorities with new enforcement tools to help them crack down on the minority of landlords who exploit tenants.”

However, Peacock adds: “Since April this year, the Government has given local authorities the power to issue banning orders, which would prevent a particular landlord from letting any properties. But if they cannot [use existing powers to] take over control of a single property, why should anyone think they will adopt a far bolder approach?”

Eleanor Southwood, a Councillor and Cabinet Member for Housing and Welfare Reform in Brent, gives her opinion on McGowan’s case: “We are appalled by the way Mr. McGowan consistently failed to meet standards, which resulted in our two convictions against him. We take the rights of tenants incredibly seriously. We work with all landlords, because this is the best way to ensure that their tenants are protected.”

McGowan did not respond to the Guardian and ITV News’ requests for comment, and, when approached outside of his Hertfordshire office, he hid in a café toilet for half an hour to avoid questions, before calling a taxi to pick him up outside.

Webb did respond: “I formally request that you do not bring myself and family any more upset on this matter by reporting this. I was a victim of circumstances and it has caused me much hardship in many ways. I am trying to put this behind me.”

Fixter, McGuinness and Goremsandu did not respond.

The Rental Market is still in Recession, Reports The DPS

Published On: October 24, 2018 at 10:04 am

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The UK rental market remained in recession during the third quarter (Q3) of 2018, according to the latest Rent Index from The Deposit Protection Service (The DPS).

The study, which is based on The DPS’s database of millions of UK rental properties, found that the average rent price decreased for the third consecutive quarter in Q3, from £764 per month to £761.

Annually, the average rent price has dropped by £14 (1.83%) from Q3 2017, and is now lower than the national average for 2016.

The Managing Director of The DPS, Julian Foster, says: “A third consecutive quarter of declining UK rents signals that there will be no immediate bounce back from the recession that hit the market last quarter.

“This negative period forms part of a slowdown that began in the summer of 2016, which we believe is linked to broader economic factors that are affecting spending power and demand.”

He points out: “Another quarter of lower rents in Q4 2018 would mean the first full year of negative growth since the global financial crisis in 2008 and 2009: a significant threshold for the market.”

Regionally, the East Midlands experienced the greatest decrease (2.47%) in Q3, from an average of £583 a month to £569.

Northern Ireland recorded the greatest rise (2.68%), from £542 to £557, which also represented the region’s second consecutive quarter of growth.

Across the UK, rent prices fell on all property types in Q3, except detached houses, for which rents increased by 0.84%, from an average of £975 to £983.

Terraced houses marked the largest decrease in rent (0.72%), from £709 to £704.

The average rent in the North East remained the lowest in the UK, at £529 per month.

Although the average UK rent is now below 2016 levels, this was driven by the decline in rent prices on flats and terraced houses.

Semi-detached and detached homes still remain above 2016 averages, albeit only just, and a further decrease of just 0.11% in Q4 2018 would see the average rent on semi-detached properties fall back to 2016 averages.

London Letting Agent Records Busiest Quarter in History in Q3

Published On: October 24, 2018 at 9:25 am

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A London letting agent has recorded its busiest quarter in history in the third quarter (Q3) of 2018.

Benham and Reeves saw a significant increase in tenant demand for rental properties in London in Q3, according to its latest lettings report.

New data shows that the letting agent experienced its busiest quarter in history in Q3 2018, with more than 1,000 new tenancies agreed across its 16 London branches over this period. This represents a 22.1% increase in transaction volumes on the same period last year.

The report also reveals that Benham and Reeves had an average of 22 applications registered per available property in Q3, which is up from 16 a year ago. This could form part of the reason for expectations of strong growth in rent prices in the capital moving forward.

But, for now, the letting agent claims that rent prices in London are, for the most part, “flat”, despite the recent hike in tenant demand and lettings transactions.

However, Benham and Reeves adds that it “sees this trend [in rent prices] changing in the next 12 months”, suggesting that values are likely to start going up on the back of high demand for rental accommodation in the capital.

The agent concludes: “From small units to large, from new build apartments to period, basement properties, demand has been high across the board, and at every price point.”

Following a period of declining prices across both the sales and lettings markets in the capital, could London be back on the right track with positive price growth over the end of the year and into 2019?

Earlier this year, Hometrack reported that house price growth was already on the mend in the capital. According to Benham and Reeves’ latest report, it seems that rent price growth may also move into positive territory in the near future.

If you’re a property investor in the capital, this should come as some good news!

Supply of Homes to Buy Rises by 15%, Reports NAEA Propertymark

Published On: October 24, 2018 at 8:53 am

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The supply of homes to buy rose by 15% in September, according to the latest Housing Report from NAEA Propertymark (the National Association of Estate Agents).

Homes to buy 

The number of available homes to buy increased by 15% in September, from an average of 40 per NAEA Propertymark member branch in August to 46.

This is the highest number recorded since March 2016, when an average of 54 homes to buy were available on estate agents’ books, and the highest for the month of September since 2014, when 51 properties were available per member branch.

Demand for housing 

The number of home hunters registered per member estate agent also increased, by 6% month-on-month, from an average of 320 in August to 338 in September.

Despite this short-term trend, demand for housing is down by 14% on an annual basis, as 394 home hunters were registered per branch in September 2017.

Agreed home sales

Following a three-year low for first time buyer sales activity in August, transactions within the group rose marginally in September, up by two percentage points to 22% of all sales.

The number of home sales agreed per member branch remained the same, with an average of nine recorded.

The Chief Executive of NAEA Propertymark, Mark Hayward, responds to the figures: “Buyers and sellers always tend to flood the market in September with the hope of completing their transactions before the festive period kicks off. Therefore, the summer is usually a good time for first time buyers to enter negotiations and try to secure a property.

“However, this summer’s heatwave led to an unusually busy August, as house buyers and sellers opted to stay at home rather than heading abroad for their summer holidays. This boosted competition and meant sales to first time buyers were down. We hope that, during next week’s Autumn Budget, the Chancellor announces further measures to improve market conditions for first time buyers.”

He adds: “Ultimately, the only thing which will make the housing ladder more accessible is reduced competition, which comes down to supply.”