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Em Morley

Scotland to bring in tighter rent controls

Published On: September 3, 2015 at 4:24 pm

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In a reshuffle to the country’s private rented sector, Scotland is to introduce stricter rent controls and ban, ‘no fault’ evictions.

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon recently released the Scottish National Party’s latest programme for Government for the upcoming year.

Changes

The programme includes a Private Tenancies Bill, which has measures that promise to, ‘provide more predictable rents and protection for tenants against excessive rent increases, including the ability to introduce rent controls for rent pressure areas.’[1]

In addition, the changes will see the removal of the, ‘no-fault ground for repossession, meaning a landlord can no longer ask a tenant to leave simply because the fixed-term has ended.’[1]

However, the Scottish Property Federation says that rent controls could deter investment within Scotland’s private rented sector, alongside being detrimental to housing supply.

What’s more, the SPF is worried that rent controls could see future investment in the build to rent market wiped out. The organisation believes that build to rent has potential to substantially boost Scotland’s housing stock.

Scotland to bring in tighter rent controls

Scotland to bring in tighter rent controls

Considerations

David Melhuish, director of the Scottish Property Federation commented, ‘we will consider the detail of the Bill carefully when it is published but we have been trying to encourage investment into Scotland’s purpose-built rental market for a long time, and it has been great to see momentum build over the past few months with some big deals taking place.’[1]

‘A clear message we have had from the industry, however, is that the mere prospect of rent controls, could be enough to spook potential investors bring us back to square one again,’ Melhuish continued.[1]

Concluding, Mr Melhuish said, ‘f the Scottish Government wants to increase housing supply, then the introduction of rent controls is not the way to do it. The purpose-built private rented sector has the potential to deliver a large amount of new homes across Scotland, and we should be doing everything we can to encourage investment in this sector rather than regulate this sector before it has had chance to take root.’ [1]

 

[1] https://www.landlordtoday.co.uk/breaking-news/2015/9/scotland-to-introduce-rent-controls

 

 

Will Generation Rent Suffer for Much Longer?

In just one week, Britain’s housing market has demonstrated the problems faced by so-called generation rent.

In Exeter, a letting agent demanded £800 in fees for a one-bedroom flat and £360 just to change the name on a photocopied contract. In West London, an estate agent chain charged £1,500 to buyers, as well as requesting thousands from the vendor. And in Leicester, a couple were forced to pay £250 to a letting agent as a reservation fee, before they’d even applied for a property.

These are the stories behind the headlines of average house prices reaching a new record high of £200,000 and over £450,000 in the capital, and seven potential buyers for each property.

The young people in the midst of this chaos may be surprised, and irritated, to learn that not so long ago, house prices didn’t change much for many years.

Between 1950 and 1960, the price of an average home rose from £1,800 to just £2,000 and fell in relation to wages. The post-war building boom saw housing completions soar to 350,000 per year in the mid-50s, when the UK population was 52m.

This rapid rate of construction prevented house prices from spiralling, in the decade that seems to have been the golden era of affordability, taking Britain from a nation of renters into buyers.

Will Generation Rent Suffer for Much Longer?

Will Generation Rent Suffer for Much Longer?

However, by 2013-14, the pace of building was crawling, just 141,000 new homes were built in a country with an extra 12m citizens.

But the housing shortage is just one side of the coin. The other is finance. Whether you can afford a house is largely determined by how much the bank will lend against the property.

Finance expert Patrick Collinson explains how it used to work: “Until the end of the 1970s, mortgages were strictly controlled by a building society cartel, which capped the amounts individuals could borrow.

“I grew up in a house in Romford, Essex, bought by my first time buyer father for £2,400 in 1956, when the maximum he could borrow was 2.5 times his salary – with a point-blank refusal to take into account my mother’s income. Such controls curbed the amount anyone could bid for a property.”

Collinson compares this to how it works now: “Contrast that with today, when first time buyers on that same property in Romford will be offered up to five times their joint income. It explains why houses on that road of three-bed semis now fetch ten times average income.

“An uncomfortable truth is that the breakthrough of more women into the labour market has resulted in a large part of their incomes being squandered in inflated mortgage repayments.”1

The record low interest rates of today have a huge impact on the mortgage size that buyers can afford. A £200,000 flat with a 3% interest rate costs around £950 per month, much less than the cost of repaying a £100,000 flat at a 10% rate. Today’s buyers face the risk of rates returning to previous levels.

But buying a house is still the aim of many, as the belief that the best investment is bricks and mortar prevails.

And ordinary people have been making large sums through buy-to-let. Landlords have achieved returns of almost 1,400% since 1996, surpassing the earnings of those investing in shares, bonds and cash.

Additionally, new pension rules introduced in April by Chancellor George Osborne have caused another surge in buy-to-let, pushing prices even higher and further out of reach of aspiring first timers.

Critics of Government schemes including Help to Buy, shared ownership and Right to Buy believe that these plans will form a housing bubble if no new homes are built.

The Conservative Government has vowed to boost the supply of new homes with its starter homes initiative, creating 200,000 more houses by 2020. Furthermore, there are proposals for new garden cities, better planning rules and support for self-builders.

Also, from 2017, buy-to-let will be a less attractive investment due to new tax rules for landlords.

There are indications that supply is improving, with developers claiming that they will increase their production to around 170,000 new homes a year by 2018. But this is still much less than the 240,000 units per year that is widely agreed to be the amount we need to accommodate the country’s housing needs.

Even if the developers are correct, it appears that the housing crisis is still going to be an issue for those slipping off the property ladder.

1 http://www.theguardian.com/society/2015/sep/02/home-shortage-and-lending-rules-why-generation-rent-is-out-of-luck

Can You Guess the Price of These Properties?

Published On: September 3, 2015 at 2:41 pm

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Categories: Property News

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The Guardian has published a new online quiz featuring homes from around the world and four possible prices for each. Can you guess the prices of these properties?

http://www.theguardian.com/cities/2015/sep/03/the-great-global-house-price-quiz-can-you-guess-these-property-values

Some may shock you…

Students warned over fraudulent landlords

Published On: September 3, 2015 at 2:38 pm

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With the new academic year just around the corner, the National Landlords Association is warning tenants to be extra careful when looking for accommodation.

Many students have more serious issues than late nights, cheap drinks and questionable eating habits. The NLA receive a large number of complaints each year from tenants who have been scammed by fraudulent landlords and many have been targeted online.

Scams

Previous instances of scamming by rogue landlords include tricking tenants to pay an advance fee for renting a property that was never available and using fake letter heading with NLA logos.

More commonly, fraudsters target foreign students looking to secure student accommodation online. Usually, once the money has been sent by the would-be tenant, the ‘landlord’ becomes impossible to contact, leaving the tenant as a victim of fraud.

As a result, the NLA is reissuing their guidance on avoiding rental fraud online. The guidelines have been released with the support and in conjunction with the NUS and the National Crime Agency.

The guidelines are as follows:

  • Do not send money to anyone upfront who are advertising online. Instead, check that they are genuine and try and view the property first
  • Be wary if asked to send any money via a transfer service as criminals can get details from the receipt to withdraw money from another location
  • Always use government approved deposit schemes
  • If in doubt, always contact the organisation that the landlord claims to be affiliated with, to verify their status
  • For overseas applicants needing accommodation for employment, they should ensure that they enlist the help of their employer or university
  • Always ask for paperwork and proof of the tenancy agreement and safety certificates
  • Remember that when something seems too good to be true, it normally is!
Students warned over fraudulent landlords

Students warned over fraudulent landlords

Ugly

‘Rental fraud is one of the uglier aspects of private renting and it tends to rear its head this time of year as students, particularly those coming from abroad, look to secure rented accommodation for the academic year,’ said Carolyn Uphill, Chairman of the National Landlords Association.[1]

‘Tenants, no matter where they are from, should not send payment to advertisers before they are certain it is genuine and should contact their university who will have list of reputable landlords and letting agents,’ she continued.[1]

Uphill went on to address would-be tenants by saying, ‘if you receive official correspondence from a landlord and are worried it might be a scam, often a good clue is that it will be written in poor English. Tenants should also remember they can check if a landlord is an NLA member or accredited by visiting www.landlords.org.uk/member-verification.’[1]

‘Any tenant that falls victim to such a scam should contact the relevant authorities in their own country and alert the police in the UK via www.actionfraud.police.uk,’ Uphill concluded.

[1] http://www.propertyreporter.co.uk/landlords/rental-fraud-warning-issued-to-students.html

 

 

Rogue Letting Agent has Proceeds of Crime Hearing Delayed

Published On: September 3, 2015 at 1:46 pm

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A criminal letting agent’s Proceeds of Crime hearing has been delayed until next year.

This news arrives after a long trial involving Helen Gregory, 55, who did not repay £67,000 in tenant deposits.

When Gregory was paid £45,000 at the end of last year, she transferred the funds into her partner’s account and he bought the couple a £25,000 car.

Rogue Letting Agent has Proceeds of Crime Hearing Delayed

Rogue Letting Agent has Proceeds of Crime Hearing Delayed

The Derby Crown Court judge told Gregory in April this year: “There are victims who are quite understandably furious. Not just that they lost their money, but the case has been strung out for two years or more.”1

Investigations began in 2011, when Trading Standards responded to a tenant’s complaint that they had not had their deposit money returned. Gregory was arrested in December 2012 and charged in July 2013.

The charges concerned three businesses in Matlock and Chesterfield, Derbyshire – Beechwood Lettings, Beechwood Property Portfolio and Letzlet – in the period from April 2007 to October 2012.

Deposits received by Gregory that should have been placed in a deposit protection service were not.

In February 2012, The Property Ombudsman (TPO) expelled Beechwood after it failed to pay an award and delayed paying rent into a landlord’s account on 12 occasions spanning 19 months.

A month later, TPO found that Beechwood Property Portfolio was illegally displaying the TPO logos for sales and lettings, despite not belonging to a redress scheme.

Previously, TPO delayed the expulsion of Letzlet, trading as Beechwood Lettings, while the landlord was aided in obtaining a county court judgment of £2,176.

Gregory, of Spital, Chesterfield, pleaded guilty to three charges of engaging in unfair commercial practices in August 2014.

She was supposed to be sentenced last summer, but this was delayed, initially by six months, after she reassured the court that she would be able to repay the £67,000 owed to her victims.

Finally, she was sentenced to ten months in prison at Derby Crown Court in April this year and told that she would serve half of her sentence behind bars.

The court was told that she had not repaid the tenants and a Proceeds of Crime hearing was set for next week, 10th September. It is claimed that this will now take place in January.

Although Gregory has been banned from working as a company director for six years, she could legitimately work in the lettings industry or in estate agency.

She has not been banned from estate agency and her name is not included on the register published by the National Trading Standards Estate Agency Team. There is currently no legislation that bans agents from working in the lettings sector.

1 http://www.propertyindustryeye.com/agent-who-hang-on-to-tenants-deposits-has-proceeds-of-crime-hearing-delayed/

 

 

Another London Council Considers Additional Licensing

Published On: September 3, 2015 at 12:47 pm

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The London Borough of Barnet is the latest part of London to consider additional private rental sector licensing, as it edges closer to the end of its consultation on the matter.

Another London Council Considers Additional Licensing

Another London Council Considers Additional Licensing

Landlords in the borough currently require licenses if they manage larger Houses in Multiple Occupation (HMOs) of three storeys or more, with five or more people living in two or more households and who share a kitchen and/or bathroom.

Barnet Council wishes to introduce further licensing for smaller and other types of HMO.

The consultation closes on Thursday 17th September.

The council proposes additional licenses for smaller HMOs, including those of two or more storeys with four or more people living in two or more households and some or all shared facilities, and for some types of buildings and houses converted into flats.

This could include shared houses, flats and bedsits, houses rented out in rooms, hostels, student accommodation and homes with a live-in landlord.

Full details of the types of HMO included in the plans can be found in the consultation documents on the council’s website: https://engage.barnet.gov.uk/environment-planning-and-regeneration/hmo-additional-licensing-scheme

A Barnet Council spokesperson states: “This consultation is about some very important proposals aimed at helping to make sure the quality of private rented accommodation in the borough is high.

“We are keen to hear people’s views and I would like to encourage as many people as possible to take the time to consider the proposals and let us know what they think.”1

1 https://www.lettingagenttoday.co.uk/breaking-news/2015/9/another-london-council-edges-towards-private-rental-licensing