Posts with tag: Manchester

Investment Firm Expands in Manchester Following High Landlord Demand

Published On: September 22, 2016 at 9:57 am

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Investment Firm Expands in Manchester Following High Landlord Demand

Investment Firm Expands in Manchester Following High Landlord Demand

Investment firm The Mistoria Group has expanded its business in Manchester, following high levels of landlord demand.

The high yielding property investment specialist has recently opened a new office in the heart of Castlefield, in Manchester’s city centre.

The new office, located at 2 Burton Place, is The Mistoria Group’s third office, alongside Salford and Liverpool. Acting as a hub for international enquiries, investment and sales for both UK and international investors, the new office will be staffed by a team of five.

The new Manchester office has been launched on the back of a surge in landlord demand for high yielding properties in the North West and a 35% rise in demand from international property investors.

The Managing Director of The Mistoria Group, Mish Liyanage, comments: “We have had a very successful year so far, achieving almost full occupancy for all the properties we manage on behalf of landlords, achieving 100% in Salford and 98% in Liverpool. We have been inundated with enquiries and still have a long waiting list for students wanting high spec, shared accommodation.

“Our new Manchester office will help us to continue grow our strong presence in the North West, supplying some of the best rental yields and investment opportunities that are available in the region. With the new international website underway, we have high hopes for the new office in developing our international aspirations, by expanding our offering to current and new overseas investors. Jerry O’Brien will head our international sales division.”

He explains: “We wouldn’t be able to achieve this success if it wasn’t for the great team we have working across the different divisions at Mistoria. It has been a very busy period for our lettings, marketing team and MCC Accountants. Everyone has worked very hard to ensure the smooth running of the business in the period approaching the 2016/17 academic year.

“Over the next 12 months, we will continue to do what we do best in providing some of the best high yielding investment in the UK and overseas.”

The Mistoria Group is a high yielding, student buy-to-let investment specialist, offering Houses in Multiple Occupation (HMOs) and armchair investments in the north of England.

Manchester Plans to Reintroduce Landlord Licensing Schemes

Published On: September 6, 2016 at 10:57 am

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Manchester City Council is currently conducting a consultation into its plans to reintroduce landlord licensing schemes across the city, after a previous scheme was allowed to lapse without renewal after its five-year set period.

The council claims that the previous scheme was allowed to lapse as it “focused on the license process, rather than improving conditions”.

Manchester Plans to Reintroduce Landlord Licensing Schemes

Manchester Plans to Reintroduce Landlord Licensing Schemes

It has since tried other methods to ensure high standards in the private rental sector, including a rental pledge that was adopted in March 2015. This scheme now covers 25,000 properties.

However, the city council has now decided to consult on mandatory landlord licensing schemes, which could cost investors between £500-£750 per license for each property.

As the proposed licensing areas are small, the council says it will be able to identify, with a 95% certainty, which landlords they must approach to advise them of their need to license.

Manchester’s selective licensing schemes would initially concentrate on three specific areas, starting with Crumpsall.

The council believes that the proposed landlord licensing schemes would work better than the previous attempt, as it now has access to more information and will not rely on landlords approaching it.

A spokesperson for the council says: “We did not have the data sophistication that we have now and so it was almost impossible to measure objectively what impact licensing was having on an area.”

Officers will choose licensing areas by analysing data on a range of issues, picking out locations where they believe a scheme is justified and can be objectively measured.

The Policy Manager at the Residential Landlords Association (RLA), John Stewart, says that although the RLA does not believe in landlord licensing, this scheme is “not too bad” because it would cover small areas.

The RLA claims that local authorities have enough existing powers that, if used effectively, could deal with any private landlord issues.

The body is due to meet with Manchester City Council to discuss the details of the schemes and help assess the justifications for their use and ensure they are resourced properly

The ten-week consultation will close on 31st October 2016.

Last month, Labour’s mayoral candidate for Manchester, Andy Burnham, pledged to introduce a landlord licensing scheme in Greater Manchester if he is elected next May.

However, Manchester should beware! Recently, we reported that North Somerset Council has dropped its plans for a landlord licensing scheme, after receiving opposition from landlords in the area.

What do you think of Manchester’s plans?

Student Property will be Top of the Asset Class for Landlords, Says JLL

Published On: August 22, 2016 at 9:25 am

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As college students across the UK prepare to go to university, property firm JLL believes student property will be top of the asset class for landlords following Brexit.

Student Property will be Top of the Asset Class for Landlords, Says JLL

Student Property will be Top of the Asset Class for Landlords, Says JLL

JLL’s Student Housing team has projected rental growth of between 3-4% in London and 1-5% across the UK market for student property. Prime yields are also expected to remain robust, with good occupancy rates and attractive income growth for the 2016/17 academic year.

The Director of JLL’s Student Housing team, Huw Forrest, reports: “While it is too early to have definitive views on the impact of Brexit on the student housing sector, it is likely to remain more resilient than other sectors. This is due to the continued attraction of the UK university market, coupled with the depreciation of sterling, which will make the UK a more affordable destination to study for international students. It is also important to remember that EU students make up only 6% of students.

“We are currently seeing good levels of investment demand following the referendum and, generally, transactions we are working on have seen little impact as a result of the Brexit vote.”

JLL’s 5% rental growth prediction for student property is echoed by Jean Liggett, the CEO of Properties of the World, who believes that Manchester in particular will see such growth.

She comments: “The UK provides world-class education in a number of highly regarded institutes across the country. In fact, three of the top ten universities in the world are located in the UK. As a result, there will continue to be a growing demand for accommodation close to these universities, causing an increase in rents that will in turn provide higher returns for potential investors.

“What buyers like about this type of investment, post-Brexit, is the fact that they provide a fixed rate of return, have no extra costs during ownership and mitigate risk, subsequently giving them peace of mind. There will always be a high demand for good quality student accommodation. In our eyes, the sector will remain resilient.”

Manchester is already home to a booming student population, which is only expected to expand again this academic year. A spokesperson for the University of Salford states that it is expecting to see an increase in applicants for the start of the 2016/17 year.

Landlords, are you considering a student property investment? Remember that students can be some of the most reliable tenants, which is vital at this time of economic uncertainty.

Manchester Mayoral Candidate Calls for Homes for All

Published On: August 18, 2016 at 10:52 am

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As part of his plan to create homes for all, Manchester mayoral candidate Andy Burnham has called for councils to receive a fund to help them purchase private rental homes in a poor state of repair.

The Labour MP also pledged to introduce a licensing scheme for private landlords across Greater Manchester, and gain powers to regulate rent rises and property standards, if he is elected as mayor.

In a blog for Inside Housing magazine, Burnham proposed measures to tackle the housing crisis and drive out the “scourge of absent, private landlords that bedevils much of Greater Manchester”.

Manchester Mayoral Candidate Calls for Homes for All

Manchester Mayoral Candidate Calls for Homes for All

Burnham suggests that councils should be provided with loan finance to buy out private landlords if they believe they are not keeping their properties up to the decent homes standard.

His plans for a community buy-back fund would “have a number of benefits”, he says.

He explains: “First, it will quickly expand public housing stock. Second, it will bring rents down to an affordable level. Third, it will enhance the ability of councils to turn around struggling neighbourhoods. Fourth, it will bring down the housing benefit bill.”

However, the Head of Policy, Public Affairs and Research at the National Landlords Association (NLA), Chris Norris, has hit back at the suggestions of rent controls and licensing scheme.

“What is disappointing is the almost immediate reversion to policies of intervention and control, which are both outmoded and proven to fail,” he says. “The people of Greater Manchester deserve better than promises to seek powers to cap rents and drive investment from the area by licensing the good and well-meaning whilst the criminally negligent continue to ignore the law.”

But Norris adds that Burnham was “right to recognise the paramount importance of having a home” and to create homes of different tenure.

He seemed to applaud the policy to buy out rogue landlords, but is cautious: “We might question whether the local community will thank Mr. Burnham for effectively rewarding the poor and sometimes criminal performance of bad landlords with a golden handshake.”

Norris suggests that Burnham may be better to work with good landlords in Manchester and ensure they are “treated like the valuable part of the community they are, so they could help lead the local buy-back he so desires”.

Burnham also wants to increase council and social housing across Greater Manchester’s ten boroughs by extending the £300m housing fund to pay for these homes. Currently, the fund is limited to commercially-led housing development.

He believes that the majority of the fund should help provide loans and guarantees to councils and housing associations to build more affordable homes to rent.

“A small proportion of the new homes will be designated rent-to-own; available on a long-term lease to people under 35, and giving hope of homeownership to generation rent,” he states.

The Manchester mayoral election will be held in May 2017. Burnham’s opponents are yet to be announced.

Is There a Solution to the Housing Crisis?

Published On: August 6, 2016 at 8:36 am

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It’s well known that homeownership is in decline. In fact, it’s at the lowest level for three decades. But is there a solution to the housing crisis?

Claire Carponen, of the HomeOwners Alliance, has taken a look at the main problems and possible solutions to the UK’s housing crisis.

The average wage in the UK is £26,500, while the average house price is over £200,000. It doesn’t take a mathematician to work out that the odds of buying a house for a first time buyer are pretty slim.

Is There a Solution to the Housing Crisis?

Is There a Solution to the Housing Crisis?

Carponen claims that the gap between wages and house prices is one of the main barriers to homeownership.

According to a report from the Resolution Foundation, homeownership has dropped to its lowest level for three decades. After hitting a peak of 71% in 2003, the number of households that own their home has now dropped to just 64%.

But don’t be fooled into thinking this is a new trend. Four years ago, the HomeOwners Alliance published a report named The Death of Dream: The Crisis in Homeownership in the UK, which found that homeownership has been in decline for years.

Although the recession did accelerate the rate of decline, it is not a short-term blip caused by financial difficulty, but rather a long-term trend.

Carponen reports that affordability remains an issue in the south of England, but is now spreading to other parts of the country. The Resolution Foundation’s report warned that while the news focuses on the housing crisis in London, those living in Manchester are actually facing greater difficulty in getting onto the property ladder.

While the south has typically had higher house prices, the north is catching up, with both Manchester and Yorkshire experiencing steep drops in homeownership.

The CEO of the HomeOwners Alliance, Paula Higgins, recently said in an article in The Telegraph: “The decline of homeownership and the lack of affordable housing is having – and will increasingly have – profound, long-lasting and adverse economic and social consequences.”

Although housing has become so unaffordable, Carponen has found that most people still aspire to own their own homes.

Being a homeowner is much more than just owning a pile of bricks and mortar, she insists. Those that own their own home are more likely to have a better quality property, a sense of stability and permanence, and a financial safety net for old age.

And while the Government is trying to help with its first time buyer initiatives, its schemes aren’t reaching enough people, believes Carponen. Although it proudly announced in March that its Help to Buy scheme has helped 180,000 first time buyers get on the property ladder, this was over a three-year period.

The fact that not enough homes are being built has been well documented. But Carponen warns that more homes may not necessarily solve the housing crisis. In central London, thousands of new homes are currently under construction or in the pipeline, yet most will be unaffordable for the majority of people who are living and working in the capital.

Higgins insisted: “We must make sure that the homes being built are of the right quality and meet the needs of the ultimate owners – last time buyers as well as first time buyers – and not the housebuilder.”

While many young people are struggling to get a foot on the property ladder, landlords must remember to provide safe, suitable and secure homes for those forced to live in the private rental sector.

Ex-footballers give squatters extra-time

Published On: October 20, 2015 at 1:02 pm

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Around 30 homeless people currently squatting in an empty property owned by two former Manchester United footballers have been told that they will be able to stay during the Winter months.

Old Trafford legends Ryan Giggs and Gary Neville are currently overseeing the renovation of the former Stock Exchange building in Manchester city centre into a luxury hotel.

Staying put

Human rights activist Wesley Hall, had a telephone conversation with Neville and was informed that the inhabitants could stay until February, when the building works are scheduled to be finished.

Mr Hall said that he was speaking to a developer working on the site, when he was given permission to speak directly to the ex-England full-back.

‘He spoke to me. He said look, I’ve not got a problem with you staying here, look after the building and respect the building,’ Hall said. He went on to stay that giving the homeless somewhere to stay was a, ‘lifeline.’[1]

‘These people aren’t getting a nourishing meal, their immune systems are low and they are dying. All it needs is someone to put a roof over their head and give them a bit of support,’ he added.[1]

Ex-footballers give squatters extra-time

Ex-footballers give squatters extra-time

Security

Hall went on to say that he was determined to adhere to Mr Neville’s request that the property and it’s inhabitants were looked after, saying, ‘we are going to do everything properly. We have already drawn up rotas for cooking, cleaning and staffing the gate. Everyone will be able to have their own room and each person will be able to lock their bedroom door.’[2]

‘We were expecting that as soon as Ryan Giggs and Gary Neville found out that we had occupied the building, they would try to get us evicted and that we would have to look for another building. Having a few months during the winter to work with homeless people without the threat of eviction hanging over our heads is brilliant,’ Hall continued.[2]

Concluding, Mr Hall said, ‘we undertake not to cause any damage to anything and to leave the building in as good if not a better state than we found it in. I have ordered smoke alarms to keep the building safe. I even suggested to Gary that he might be interest in employing some of the homeless people who are living here as labourers to help with the redevelopment work on the hotel.’[2]

[1] http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-manchester-34569111

[2] http://www.theguardian.com/society/2015/oct/18/former-manchester-united-star-occupiers-of-hotel-winter-ryan-giggs-gary-neville