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Em

Em Morley

Third of Homes Sold Through Right to Buy in London

Published On: September 18, 2015 at 4:53 pm

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Between April and June, 2,779 homes were sold by councils in England through the Right to Buy scheme and 307 replacements were started or bought.

The number of properties purchased through the scheme, which allows council tenants to buy their homes at a discount on the market value, was lower than the previous quarter’s figure, 3,321.

The replacement number also dropped, less than half the 710 starts and purchases in the last quarter of 2014-15.

Third of Homes Sold Through Right to Buy in London

Third of Homes Sold Through Right to Buy in London

A third of the homes sold were in London, where tenants can receive discounts of up to £103,900. Councils in the capital sold 962 properties and started or bought just 24.

Recently, it was revealed that some properties have been sold at up to 70% less than the market value, due to out-of-date valuations. Read more here: /council-homes-sold-at-70-discount/

Since Right to Buy was introduced by Margaret Thatcher in the early 1980s, over 2m homes have been sold by councils, many in the early days of the scheme. However, an increase in the available discounts in 2012 caused more sales.

The Chartered Institute of Housing reports that since April 2012, 32,288 properties have been sold, while just 3,644 have been started or bought to replace them.

Deputy Chief Executive at the Chartered Institute of Housing, Gavin Smart, says: “We understand the Government’s aim to encourage people to become homeowners, but we’re very concerned about the loss of social rented homes at a time when more and more people are in need of affordable housing.

“It’s always been clear that there would be a lag between homes being sold and homes built to replace them, but more than three years since Right to Buy discounts were increased, there is mounting evidence that one-for-one replacement is nowhere near being achieved.”

The Conservative’s general election manifesto proposed an extension of Right to Buy to 1.3m housing association tenants, leading to warnings that high levels of social housing stock could be sold and not replaced.

Smart adds: “An alternative option for the new Right to Buy would be giving tenants portable discounts they could use to buy properties of their own choosing, so that social rented housing could be kept and used to help people unable to afford to buy their own homes.”1

1 http://www.theguardian.com/money/2015/sep/17/london-nets-third-of-latest-2779-right-to-buy-sales

Will Online Letting Agents Destroy High Street Firms?

Published On: September 18, 2015 at 3:48 pm

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Online letting agents may be on the rise, but do they operate much differently to high street firms and do they pose a threat to traditional services?

Industry expert Rayhan Rafiq Omar, of the Real Estate Pundit, says low-price online agents are “now the mainstay of DIY landlords – those who self-manage.”

He says that Upad and OpenRent are the largest in terms of listings on Rightmove and Zoopla.

However, he has uncovered many differences between agents, finding that some put most of their listings on Zoopla.

For example, he revealed that OpenRent has 1,062 listings on Zoopla but just 677 on Rightmove, and Purplebricks has 3,740 on Zoopla with only 277 on Rightmove.

Omar adds: “Online agents are filling Rightmove and Zoopla’s coffers and not truly differentiating.

“Why won’t any of these agents kill off or disrupt traditional agents? They aren’t adding value.”1

He has ranked online agents, with his figures updated on 14th September:

Position

Agent Listings on Rightmove

Listings on Zoopla

1 Upad 703 667
2 OpenRent 677 1,062
3 Urban.co.uk 357 837
4 Visum 311 222
5 Purplebricks 277 3,740
6 easyProperty 246 293
7 Rentify 166 366
8 HouseSimple 129 1,598
9 Makeurmove 126 127
10 My Online Estate Agent 116 0
11 The Online Letting Agents 101 0
12 Lettingaproperty.com 97 0
13 I Am The Agent 61 0
14 Gordon’s The Online Estate Agent 37 0
15 Online Agent UK 27 0
16 Igloo 21 0
17 Tepilo 17 0
18 House Network 15 0
19 LoveYourPostcode 8 0
20 Home Online UK 7 0
21 9yds 6 0
22 Your Online Letting Agents 3 0
23 FindAHomeOnline.co.uk 2 0
24 eMoov 1 0

1 http://www.realpundit.com/home/2014/who-is-the-best-online-letting-agent

Report shows volatility of PCL market

Published On: September 18, 2015 at 3:47 pm

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New data from Countrywide Group highlights how much volatility there is in the sought-after Prime Central London housing market, simply because of its small area.

The possibility of multi-million pound sales in the region means that the Prime Central London market makes headlines in the industry. However, Countrywide’s report shows that only 5,500 homes were sold in the area last year, including 500 new-builds.

Sales

‘By comparison the mid-market across Greater London-priced £500,000 to £1m-had 25,000 sales, including 2,500 new homes, which is 28% of the UK market in both instances,’ noted Johnny Morris, head of residential research at Countrywide.[1]

‘Prime Central London is now increasingly volatile,’ Morris continued. ‘It is vulnerable to currency fluctuations, international political concerns and the risk of over-supply with massive schemes like Nine Elms (ultimately delivering 18,000 homes) and Earls Court (7,583 homes) all on steam.’[1]

Report shows volatility of PCL market

Report shows volatility of PCL market

Morris believes that this is the reason that some high-end developers, who had previously centered their activity in some of London’s prime areas, were considering moving elsewhere in the capital.

[1] https://www.estateagenttoday.co.uk/breaking-news/2015/9/transaction-totals-show-volatility-of-prime-london-market

 

 

 

17% of homeowners would consider homing a refugee

Published On: September 18, 2015 at 2:55 pm

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Almost one-fifth of UK homeowners with a spare room in their property would be open to the prospect of having a refugee stay in their home for a short period, according to research conducted by eMoov.co.uk.

In conjunction with Opinion Matters, the online estate agent surveyed over 1,000 British homeowners and found that 17% would consider taking in a refugee.

Temporary help

Of those homeowners with a spare room that said they would be open to the idea of housing a refugee, 14% said they would do so for between one and three months. 2% said they would help out for under a month, with 1% saying they would house a refugee for over three months.[1]

Prime Minister David Cameron is coming under increasing pressure to act on the worsening crisis. Although the research carried out by e.Moov.co.uk suggests that some Britain’s would be happy to offer temporary help, a long-term answer is desperately needed in Europe.

17% of homeowners would consider homing a refugee

17% of homeowners would consider homing a refugee

Destitute

Russell Quirk, founder and CEO of eMoov.co.uk, said that, ‘those that receive refugee status in the UK will be provided with somewhere to stay, however it is estimated some 200,000 additional asylum seekers are still living destitute in the UK.’[1]

‘The British public have a great tendency to club together in times of need and the sentiment of our research highlights this. Although it isn’t as straight forward as taking in ½ million refugees and housing them in spare rooms, it is humbling to see how many home owners would consider opening their doors to complete strangers out of the kindness of their hearts,’ Quirk added.[1]

[1] http://www.propertyreporter.co.uk/property/a-fifth-of-homeowners-would-welcome-a-refugee.html

 

Properties Near Stately Homes See Prices Soar

Published On: September 18, 2015 at 2:51 pm

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Categories: Property News

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Properties near stately homes have experienced a surge in prices over the past decade.

The average price of a house in the same postal district as a stately home is £319,203 – £41,213 more than a property in the surrounding area.

This is known as the Downton effect, after the ITV drama series Downton Abbey.

Halifax revealed that the average price of properties near stately homes has increased by £89,506, or 39%, since 2005 – twice the growth of the national average.

Right to Buy to be Funded by Sale of 113,000 Council Homes

Published On: September 18, 2015 at 1:47 pm

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Almost 113,000 council homes could be sold off in England to finance the Government’s Right to Buy scheme extension, according to a study by housing charity Shelter.

Under the proposal, councils must sell of their most expensive assets when they become vacant to fund the extension to 1.3m housing association tenants.

Shelter has analysed how many homes in each area would have to be sold if the thresholds for selling were set at the suggested level. If the prices were set at a regional level, expensive areas, like Oxford, could be set at the same thresholds as places such as Hastings, where property prices are much lower.

Right to Buy to be Funded by Sale of 113,000 Council Homes

Right to Buy to be Funded by Sale of 113,000 Council Homes

In London, it appears that one-bedroom properties worth over £340,000 would be sold, while in the North East, one-bed homes would be sold if they are worth more than £80,000.

In Kensington and Chelsea, Shelter found that 97% of council housing stock could be sold when it becomes vacant, almost half of all stock in Cambridge and a fifth of that in York.

Camden would also be one of the most affected areas, with over 11,700 homes potentially facing a forced sale – around half of the total council housing stock in the borough.

In total, Shelter estimates that 112,883 – around one in 14 (6.8%) – council homes in England could face a forced sale.

Its report states that a large number of housing association tenants could take advantage of the extension in the North East.

It says: “This will mean that housing subsidies flow from parts of the country where housing pressures are higher – like London, the South East and the East – to those where they are lower.”1

The extension of the scheme was a major plan in the Conservative’s general election manifesto.

Ministers claim that housing associations will be compensated with money raised by forcing local authorities to sell off their most expensive homes when they become vacant, ensuring that the affordable properties that are sold are replaced.

However, the proposal has been criticised by housing associations and opponents have questioned whether the homes that are sold off will actually be replaced.

Shelter says that even if the homes are sold, there could be a financial shortfall of £2.45 billion over four years.

Chief Executive of Shelter, Campbell Robb, says that selling off “large swathes of the few genuinely affordable homes we have left,” would worsen the country’s housing crisis.

He continues: “More and more families with barely a hope of ever affording a home of their own and who no longer have the option of social housing, will be forced into unstable and expensive private renting.

“The Government needs to scrap this proposal and start helping the millions of ordinary families struggling with sky-high housing costs.”1 

Shelter used Government house price data and lettings figures to make its calculations.

1 http://www.theguardian.com/money/2015/sep/17/113000-council-homes-to-be-sold-to-pay-for-right-to-buy-shelter