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Em Morley

L&G’s First Build to Rent Scheme Welcomes its First Residents

Published On: June 8, 2017 at 9:57 am

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Legal & General’s (L&G) first Build to Rent scheme, The Slate Yard in Salford, is welcoming its first residents this week.

For the first time, these tenants will be able to experience L&G’s new service-orientated proposition.

Across its Build to Rent sites, L&G is creating bespoke, quality private rental housing that offers a positive choice for elective renters.

The Slate Yard will offer residents a lifestyle that they would otherwise not have access to – even if they owned their own homes. This includes a 24/7 onsite team, which will attend to emergencies within a matter of hours, without the residents having to wait in, and can also help to arrange everything from deliveries to events. They can even arrange housekeeping services, such as picking up and dropping off dry cleaning.

L&G's First Build to Rent Scheme Welcomes its First Residents

L&G’s First Build to Rent Scheme Welcomes its First Residents

The tenants will also benefit from favourable all-in costs, through significantly reduced energy costs, no letting fees and free services, such as Wi-Fi and a car club. This equates to a saving of around £150 a month per apartment.

Green initiatives include solar panels on the roof, which provide the building with communal lighting and power, and secure cycle storage.

The Slate Yard also boasts a stylish riverside residents’ lounge, with free coffee on tap, which offers a vibrant environment for tenants to work in, meet other residents and entertain guests.

Renters are also being offered longer and more flexible tenancies to create greater occupational security, with tenancy options ranging from six months to five years. They can also decorate their own homes and keep pets – options traditionally only available to homeowners – with a readily available tradesperson to do any alterations for them.

Located on Stanley Street, on the banks of the River Irwell and part of English Cities Fund’s New Bailey regeneration area of Salford, the 225-unit scheme is being developed in two phases. The first phase, which includes 90 apartments, has now been launched to the market and is ready for tenants to move into.

The Build to Rent Fund Manager at LGIM Real Assets, Dan Batterton, comments on the opening: “Our Build to Rent vision has now come to life. For too long, renters have found themselves at the mercy of expensive moving fees, unresponsive managers, and private landlords who often want to minimise upkeep costs and maximise rents. At the Slate Yard, we have been able to offer significantly reduced living costs because of economies of scale, which a private landlord just wouldn’t be able to do. The scheme’s build maximises energy efficiencies, and the combined weight of our negotiation power with external service providers allows us to save our customers thousands of pounds in bills each year.

“The improved service proposition and flexible leases have already attracted a wide range of residents. We have families, pet owners, empty nesters and young couples who have already reserved homes and are moving in this week, which is testament to how this new level of service and offering allows for all types of residents’ needs, and gives them choice.  We want our customers to feel like they are in their home, not staying in someone else’s.”

Mathieu Elshout, the Senior Director of Private Real Estate at PGGM, adds: “The Slate Yard is a very good example of our Build to Rent partnership strategy with L&G – investing in strong urban regeneration locations where we can build sustainable schemes that will have a positive impact on the built environment over the long term. As a responsible investor of Dutch pension capital, this is an excellent fit.  The Slate Yard is the first of our Build to Rent investments to be launched and we look forward to delivering new fit-for-purpose schemes in strategic city centre locations across the UK.”

L&G’s total investment capability for the Build to Rent sector currently stands at around £1 billion, having raised capital from major pension funds for an open-ended Build to Rent fund, as well as a £600m JV investment by Legal & General Capital and PGGM.

As well as Salford, its existing sites in Bristol, Bath, Leeds and Walthamstow are progressing well, with construction work for both Bath and Walthamstow due to begin this summer.

Focused on key urban regeneration areas centred around transport hubs, it is targeting schemes of over 150 units, taking advantage of economies of scale, in order to deliver better value and more choice for its residents, while building sustainable, vibrant communities.

Disappointing Spring for property transactions, says RICS

Published On: June 8, 2017 at 9:43 am

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The most recent data released from RICS and in general, it does not illustrate a great outlook for the UK housing market.

Data from the report reveals that new buyer enquiries, selling instructions and agreed sales slipped further during May.

What’s more, price growth also saw a loss in momentum and is forecasted to slow more over the next quarter.

Election Uncertainty

Respondents to the RICS survey feel that the declines could well be due to the General Election, with many investors are adopting a wait and see tactic.

During May, 25% of those questioned said that there was a decline in new listings, which in turn gave the most negative reading since July 2016. What’s more, new buyer enquiries fell across the UK, after remaining consistent over the previous six months.

Agreed sales also continued their decline, for the second straight month. The national indicator showed 8% less respondents seeing a slide in agreed sales. Expectations for the next three months have seen little change. However, for the next year, respondents seem more optimistic, with 26% believing that activity will increase.

Simon Rubinsohn, Chief Economist at RICS, said: ‘Although the latest survey suggests that uncertainty related to the General Election may have contributed to what appears to have been a disappointing level of transactions in the housing market over the spring, perhaps the most ominous signal emanating from the data released today is that contributors still expect house prices to increase at a faster pace than wages over the medium term despite the difficulty many first time buyers are clearly having in taking their first steps onto the property ladder.’

‘The increasingly tight second hand market remains a cause for concern with the RICS series tracking new instructions to agents recording its fifteenth successive negative reading. It is hard to see this as anything other a major obstacle to the efficient functioning of the housing market.’[1]

Disappointing Spring for property transactions, says RICS

Disappointing Spring for property transactions, says RICS

Boost

Robert Grigg, Managing Director of Property Finance at Hampshire Trust Bank, observed: ‘To make homeownership a reality for more people, we need to boost housebuilding activity and we believe SME housebuilders are key to unlocking potential new developments across the UK. Smaller housebuilders not only help to increase housing stock, but with many based and operating within their local area, they are more attuned to ensuring the right properties are built in the right place. With our SME Growth Watch report highlighting economic uncertainty as the greatest barrier to growth for smaller construction firms, following the outcome of today’s General Election, we urge the government to work with SME housebuilders to create a stable environment for future growth.’[1]

Brian Murphy, Head of Lending at the Mortgage Advice Bureau, also stated: ‘What’s apparent from the report is that house price growth is still in positive territory with ‘modest gains’ in most areas – that’s hardly cause for concern and isn’t the same as the market seeing key indicators for a fall or sharp correction.’

‘The continuing lack of supply isn’t a surprise, with the current political goings on deterring those ‘discretionary sellers’ who normally add a valuable additional number of available properties to the Spring market, inevitably providing buyers with more choice,’ he continued.[1]

Concluding, Mr Murphy said: ‘It’s probably reasonable to suggest then that, when all is said and done, surveyors up and down the UK are observing on the ground what many others in the industry suspect; those who need to move are doing so, and those who are seriously considering it are just ‘holding off’ for a few weeks and then, regardless of the Election result, are likely to get on with it. Whilst that may mean the market has been slightly more subdued last month, there’s nothing to suggest that this is anything more than the normal pattern for the housing market around an Election, and that consumer confidence in UK property remains undeterred.’[1]

[1] http://www.propertyreporter.co.uk/property/spring-transaction-levels-disappointing-says-rics.html

Demand for Specialist Residential Mortgages Increasing

Published On: June 8, 2017 at 9:25 am

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Demand for specialist residential mortgages increased in the first quarter (Q1) of 2017, according to the latest Financial Advisors Confidence Tracking (FACT) Index from Paragon Mortgages, which is based on interviews with 200 mortgage intermediaries.

Demand for Specialist Residential Mortgages Increasing

Demand for Specialist Residential Mortgages Increasing

There was a rise in demand from both self-employed (24%) and complex income (17%) customers, suggesting an increased requirement for specialist residential mortgages and wider availability of products that meet the demands of underserved segments of the mortgage market.

Other customer types were largely unchanged in Q1, with high loan-to-value (LTV) lending at 15%, interest only at 13%, lending into retirement at 11%, low income at 9% and adverse credit at 7%.

The average number of mortgages introduced per intermediary office in Q1 was 20, down from 21 in the previous quarter and the third successive fall. Despite this more recent decline, the number of mortgages introduced has held between 20-25 for almost four years, maintaining a slow recovery tracked from 2009, when the number reached a record low of 14.

The index also shows a positive forecast from intermediaries, with the expected change in overall business over the next three months up for the first time since Q1 2015, reversing consecutive declines in each of the previous seven quarters.

Meanwhile, mortgage advisors expect to do 2% less buy-to-let mortgage business over the coming year. This, however, is up on the previous quarter and, following the largest ever decline seen in Q1 2016, the average now appears to be on a modest upward trend.

Asked about the importance of the Prudential Regulation Authority’s (PRA) new affordability rules in estimating the expected change in their level of buy-to-let mortgage business over the next 12 months, more advisors (85%) said that the changes had been at least quite important, up from 80% in the previous quarter, while just 10% said they were not important.

The Managing Director of Paragon Mortgages, John Heron, comments: “It’s encouraging to see increased demand and greater availability of specialist mortgages. Customers with complex incomes deserve access to a wider choice of mortgage products and to specialist underwriting that recognises their unique circumstances.”

Homeowners more content than renters

Published On: June 8, 2017 at 8:50 am

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The majority of property owners in the UK are pleased with their property – with those aged over 55 most content.

However, tenants are not as pleased generally with where they live, according to new research from TheHouseShop.

Happiness

In all, 83% of home owners said that they were content with their property, in comparison to 54% of tenants renting a property from a private landlord.

What’s more, tenants were more likely to be more unhappy with their property. 21% of tenants asked said that they were either fairly or very unhappy with their current dwelling, as opposed to 8% of owners.

Nick Marr, co-founder of TheHouseShop, believes that the findings are not overly surprising, given groups such as Shelter and Generation Rent have long called for better standards and protection for tenants.

Homeowners more content than renters

Homeowners more content than renters

Marr observed: ‘For home owners, the commitment to a property is much more permanent than it is for renters, and buyers will spend a lot of time and effort choosing their ideal property and carrying out improvement works over the years to perfect it.’[1]

‘Tenants, on the other hand, are rarely allowed to make even superficial changes or improvements to their homes, so it is highly unlikely that they will ever achieve the same level of happiness as home owners,’ he added.[1]

Divide

The research uncovered a clear divide between the young and old age groups. The over 55’s were by far the happiest, with 85% happy with their property.

On the other hand, 25 to 34 year olds were least likely to be very happy with their properties, with only 16% stating that this was the case. Only one in twenty over 55’s said that they were unhappy with their home.

[1] http://www.propertywire.com/news/uk/owners-uk-happy-home-private-rented-sector-tenants/

We Don’t Need to Sacrifice Quality for Quantity, Insists LendInvest

Published On: June 8, 2017 at 8:14 am

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By Ian Thomas, Co-Founder and CIO, LendInvest

There have been some positive signs of late that housebuilding in the UK is turning the corner. For example, last month, the National House Building Council announced that registrations – where builders make a payment for insurance on projects which haven’t yet started – have hit the highest figure seen in ten years.

But in the rush to ramp up the number of homes being built, there is little doubt that some corners are being cut. We have had major housebuilders admit to handing over cash incentives to encourage new homebuyers to complete on homes that haven’t actually finished yet, paying compensation for unacceptable flaws with new homes or announcing that they will slow down the rate of building in order to try to improve the quality of the homes being produced.

According to a recent study by Shelter, more than half of buyers of new build properties had experienced major problems after the purchase had gone through, from construction issues to unfinished fittings and flaws with utilities. That’s just not good enough.

When the Government described the housing market as broken in its Housing White Paper this year, most took them to be talking about the market as a whole – not the actual properties being built.

We are leaning too much on the big builders

We Don't Need to Sacrifice Quality for Quantity, Insists LendInvest

We Don’t Need to Sacrifice Quality for Quantity, Insists LendInvest

It’s no secret that housebuilding has lagged significantly behind demand for a long time. A report from the House of Lords last year suggested that around 330,000 new homes need to be built each year in order to make a difference to rapid house price growth, yet last year the nation could only manage 170,000. And that was a good year by recent standards.

The problem is that we still look to the housebuilding giants, who have dominated the market over the last couple of decades, to do more. But this pressure to increase production is leading to mistakes being made and shortcuts being taken.

It may be that these large builders are simply at their maximum building capacity – if we are to improve the rate of housing production, we need to see homes being produced by a much wider range of sources.

That means doing far more to boost the small and medium-sized builders who are desperate to build homes but face a host of serious barriers, which is holding them back.

Helping the small builder

It’s not that long ago that the small builder played a far more serious role in the housebuilding market in the UK. Before 1990, they were responsible for three in every eight new homes. Today, that number has plummeted to a paltry one in eight, while 80% of small firms have gone out of business since the last housebuilding boom.

Small builders are being pushed out, denied access to public land for development and denied tax breaks open to other small businesses. This cannot carry on – we need to level the playing field, remove these barriers and give small builders the push they need.

Helping small developers build the skillset they need to make a success of their projects is hugely important, and it’s something LendInvest has tried to address with our series of Property Development Academies. That demand has been so strong – and from across the country, to the point that we are now holding them in Manchester, Birmingham, Bristol and Edinburgh – is an encouraging sign that while small builders have faced unfair hurdles for too long, the desire to clear them and get on with building homes is still there.

If small builders have the appropriate skills, the proper funding, and the access to quality land on which to build, then there can be no doubt that they can play a huge role in addressing the housing shortage.

The time for talk is over

With the General Election upon us, all of the major parties have been very open in acknowledging that the current housing problems cannot be allowed to continue. But the time for talk has long since passed, so, come June 9th, whoever it is that takes up residency in Downing Street needs to push for tangible, meaningful action.

We have a whole generation of would-be developers, who want to help produce quality homes. But they need some help getting there, and it is up to us as an industry to continue to champion them and make their case. If some of those barriers can be removed, we will quickly see the SME builders begin to flourish, and the rate of housebuilding increase.

It doesn’t have to be a question of quality or quantity. By standing up for the little guy, we can have both.

If you’re still unsure of who to vote for, read through what each of the main political parties is pledging on housing: https://www.justlandlords.co.uk/news/main-political-parties-pledges-housing/

Rental growth was subdued in May

Published On: June 7, 2017 at 11:50 am

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The most recent report from Landbay has shown that UK rental growth rather flat-lined during May.

Rental growth increased by 0.02% over the month – the slowest pace in more than half a decade. In addition, this was a fraction of the five-year average growth total of 0.14%.

Slowdown

The capital continues to be the main region driving the slowdown. Rents in London dropped by -0.94% year-on-year to May, in comparison to growth of 1.62% for the rest of the UK.

Rents have now slipped for a whole year in London – a 12 month decline in demand but greater supply- with homeowners opting to rent out properties until the sales market picks up.

In fact, London was the only region to see rents fall in May, with seven of twelve regions ending the month with a slower rate of growth than in April.

Rental growth was subdued in May

Rental growth was subdued in May

Delays

John Goodall, CEO and founder of Landbay, observed: ‘The election is one of many external factors influencing activity in the buy to let market at the moment. Yes, uncertainty about the future of the UK will cause some people to delay a decision to move, but affordability pressures are also starting to pinch the pockets of renters across the country. Wage growth is now lagging behind inflation for the first time since mid-2014, and with less money to spend on such a major monthly outlay, renters will be factoring this into their tenancy decisions.’[1]

‘On the supply side, a wave of new rental properties caused by last spring’s hike to Stamp Duty, together with falling house prices, will no doubt both be playing a small part in the ongoing softening of rental growth. Nevertheless, barring a major surprise from either the election or the Brexit negotiations, long term population and construction trends suggest that rents will soon be growing faster than inflation again,’ Mr Goodall added.[1]

[1] http://www.propertyreporter.co.uk/landlords/rental-growth-flat-lines-in-may.html