Search Results For: buy to rent sector

Extra 3% Stamp Duty Charge Comes Under Attack

Published On: February 1, 2016 at 12:53 pm

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The extra 3% Stamp Duty charge to buyers of buy-to-let properties and second homes has come under attack, as the consultation on the proposal comes to an end.

A consumer group, the HomeOwners Alliance, says the additional tax will bring “massive unintended consequences”.

Today, the official consultation on the extra Stamp Duty ends, after just seven weeks.

If the charge is approved, it will apply from 1st April this year.

The HomeOwners Alliance calls the measure “dangerously flawed” and insists the Government goes “back to the drawing board”.

It says it supports the charge on second homes, but believes the way the Government plans to introduce the surcharge is “overly complex and flawed”.

The group is especially concerned over the surcharge’s 18-month window; those buying a new home before selling their first must pay the extra 3% Stamp Duty, then, they have an 18-month window to sell their first home in order to receive a refund.

If they do not sell within 18 months, they lose the right to a refund.

The policy would also affect people relocating, for example for work, and who might normally rent out their first home while buying in a new area. If they do this, they must pay the surcharge.

Extra 3% Stamp Duty Charge Comes Under Attack

Extra 3% Stamp Duty Charge Comes Under Attack

The Chief Executive of the HomeOwners Alliance, Paula Higgins, states: “It is great the Government is trying to use Stamp Duty to help homeowners, but they have made a real hash of it.

“The ridiculously complex way they are planning to introduce the scheme will end up harming many of the very homeowners it is meant to help, and lead to widespread confusion among homebuyers.”

She continues: “We are already being contacted by distressed homeowners who have worked out they will be caught by it and not be able to buy the home they want to.

“Rather than push ahead with a well-intentioned but dangerously flawed scheme, it should go back to the drawing board and put it right.”1

Meanwhile, the Intermediary Mortgage Lenders Association’s Peter Williams has criticised the short consultation period, which is too short by the Government’s criteria.

He believes the Government has “no view about how this tax will impact on the market as a whole, let alone the buy-to-let market.”

He says that buyers will eventually be able to absorb the extra tax, but it will push rent prices even higher.

“It doesn’t seem at all sensible,”1 he adds.

Furthermore, the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML) has also voiced its concerns.

Paul Smee, the CML’s Director General, says: “There is a risk of overkill in dampening investor sentiment to the extent that the flow of available private rented property could be disrupted, without any necessarily corresponding increase in the ability of households to become homeowners.

“In addition, with around a fifth of households currently renting in the private sector, there is the perverse risk that the SDLT increase could cause landlords to charge higher rents, and so actually make it harder for tenants who want to buy to save the deposit needed to do so.

“We urge the Government at least to move away from a position where people will have to pay and then potentially claim back to one where payment is deferred, and only triggered if the buyer genuinely falls into the intended target category.”1 

For further information about landlord finances, here is a round up of forthcoming changes to buy-to-let: /contrary-to-popular-belief-buy-to-let-is-not-dead-insists-finance-firm/

1 http://www.propertyindustryeye.com/stamp-duty-surcharge-comes-under-savage-attack-ministers-told-to-turn-back/

BTL lending at Paragon up 80% in Q4 of 2015

Published On: January 28, 2016 at 10:24 am

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New figures released by Paragon Mortgages suggests that investors are looking to purchase property before the tax changes in April.

The lender said in the final quarter of 2015, its lending to buy-to-let landlords nearly doubled. Mortgages for rental accommodation reached £401m, a rise of 80.6% on the same period in 2014.

What’s more, Paragon’s pipeline of future loans rose by 43% to hit £595.7m.

Profitable

This fantastic quarterly performance was a key feature in Paragon Group making a profit of £35.2m during the period. This was a rise of 14% on the year before.

John Heron, Director of Mortgages at Paragon, said, ‘our buy-to-let business has continued to grow and perform exceptionally well. Whilst over time recent policy developments may cause some softening in the rate of growth of buy-to-let at a market level, demand for private rented housing continues to remain strong and all indications suggest this is only likely to increase in the coming years.’[1]

BTL lending at Paragon up 80% in Q4 of 2015

BTL lending at Paragon up 80% in Q4 of 2015

Sensible

Despite the sudden surge in lending during Q4 of 2015, experts believe that Paragon’s buy-to-let growth will slow at a similar rate. However, Justin Bates, analyst at Liberum, believes the lender has not taken unhealthy risks to aid its quick expansion.

‘I’ve always considered Paragon to be a cautious, sensible lender at that is borne out in the credit quality statistics which are way ahead of industry averages,’ he noted. [2]

‘We see comments on the eye-catching growth rate of 80%, but that is not all new lending on new properties-around 60% of Paragon’s lending is remortgaging activity,’ Bates added.[2]

[1] http://www.propertyreporter.co.uk/landlords/btl-lending-up-80-according-to-paragon.html

[2] http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/banksandfinance/12125251/Paragon-Bank-booms-with-80pc-growth-in-buy-to-let.html

 

Average Asking Price to Surpass £300k by End of Year

Published On: January 26, 2016 at 9:28 am

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Average Asking Price to Surpass £300k by End of Year

Average Asking Price to Surpass £300k by End of Year

The average asking price of new properties for sale will be £307,000 by the end of this year, according to predictions from Rightmove.

The property portal expects asking prices to increase by an average of £17,000 over the next 12 months.

It forecasts that the average new asking price in London will rise by 3% over 2016, to £635,000.

Rightmove’s January House Price Index found that the average price of property coming onto the market is up by 0.5% (£1,509) on December – the second highest Christmas/New Year period increase since 2007.

The average asking price of a new home coming onto the market is currently £290,963 across the UK and £610,741 in London.

The portal also predicts a surge in traffic to its website in the spring, as rental demand will continue to grow as house prices rise further. In the first week of 2016, visits to Rightmove rose by 21% compared to the same period in 2015.

The expectations arrive after the Association of Residential Letting Agents (ARLA) reported a lull in rental supply and demand for December. This seasonal slowdown is normal. However, letting agents fear that the forthcoming changes to Stamp Duty for buy-to-let investors could cause private landlords to leave the sector and thus, lower supply further.

Find out more about the changes and what they could mean for the private rental sector here: /17794-2/

£5m Rogue Landlord Fund Will Not Work if Legal System is Not Updated

Published On: January 25, 2016 at 1:07 pm

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Categories: Landlord News

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Last week, the Housing Minister, Brandon Lewis, announced a £5m fund to help local authorities tackle rogue landlords. However, the body that represents councils believes that the funding will not work if the current legal system is not updated.

£5m Rogue Landlord Fund Will Not Work if Legal System is Not Updated

£5m Rogue Landlord Fund Will Not Work if Legal System is Not Updated

The fund will be split between 48 councils in England. It is aimed at eradicating “the cowboy operators in their area and bring an end to tenants living in miserable homes in the name of profit”. Find out if your council will receive a share here: /5m/

The new fund is part of the proposed Housing and Planning Bill, which also looks to introduce banning orders for persistent rogue landlords and letting agents.

The Local Government Association (LGA) has responded, saying that the system for prosecuting rogue landlords must be modernised.

The spokesperson for the LGA, Peter Box, states: “The private rented sector is growing and, with limited resources and competing funding pressures, councils are working hard to ensure that rogue landlords are dealt with robustly and effectively.

“However, they are too often being hamstrung by an outdated system. It can take more than a year to prosecute a rogue operator and in many cases, paltry fines are handed out to criminal landlords.”

He continues: “Proposals in the Housing and Planning Bill for banning orders for the worst operators in the private rented sector will help councils tackle this issue, as will the flexibility to issue fines to private landlords as an alternative to prosecutions.

“We will be working with the Government to ensure measures in the bill are properly resourced so councils can make full use of them.

“Our chronic housing crisis is making it easier for bad landlords to exploit tenants.”

He adds: “Councils must be given a lead role in building new affordable rented homes so that people who can’t afford to buy are not forced into the more expensive private rented sector.”1

1 http://www.local.gov.uk/media-releases/-/journal_content/56/10180/7657355/NEWS

 

 

 

Seasonal lull in BTL ahead of expected surge

Published On: January 25, 2016 at 11:46 am

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A typical, seasonal lull occurred in the rental market during the last month, with the supply of properties falling alongside demand.

These were the findings of the latest report by ARLA, whose agents registered an average of 29 prospective new tenants in December. This was down on the 34 recorded in November, a fall of 15%.

Supply also dipped in the last month, with an average of 182 properties managed per branch, as opposed to 189 in the previous month. Potential renters in the capital however were not spoilt for choice, with an average of only 108 properties managed per branch, 43 less than the overall national average.

Rent relief

In addition to falling supply and demand, rents also slid in December, with the number of tenants experiencing rental increases dropping. Just 18% of ARLA letting agents reported an increase in rents, a drop of 5% since November. Additionally, this was the lowest total recorded in the whole of 2015.

‘As we’d expect in December, the UK saw a lull in activity, with people putting off any moves until January,’ noted David Cox, ARLA managing director. ‘It’s reassuring to see the number of agents reporting rent increases is still on the decline-some encouraging news for tenants as we start 2016’.[1]

A change is coming

Unsurprisingly, the views of ARLA members on the upcoming tax hikes mirror those of the wider sector. 62% believe that the changes will push up rents, while 65% believe the alterations will lead to some landlords leaving the sector, thus lowering supply still further.

The upcoming changes in legislation seem to be having an immediate impact on investors, with ARLA agents recording a 24% increase in investors looking to purchase before the changes come into play in April.

‘With supply, demand and the number of agents reporting rent increases all declining in December, this could well be the calm before the buy-to-let storm,’ Cox continued. ‘Buy-to-let landlords determined to complete purchases before the changes come into force in April are storming the UK housing market, meaning the lull we’d usually see is less significant.’[1]

Seasonal lull in BTL ahead of expected surge

Seasonal lull in BTL ahead of expected surge

‘Subsequently, after April, we’re very likely to see the number of buy-to-let properties on the market begin to decrease and this will most certainly have a detrimental effect on renters across the country,’ he concluded.[1]

[1] http://www.propertyreporter.co.uk/landlords/is-this-the-calm-before-the-buy-to-let-storm.html

 

 

£5m pot to tackle rogue landlords announced

Published On: January 22, 2016 at 12:04 pm

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Categories: Landlord News

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The Housing Minister Brandon Lewis has today announced a £5m fund to crackdown on rogue landlords across England.

48 councils will split the cash, which will be used in order to root out irresponsible landlords that force their tenants to live in unsuitable and dangerous properties.

Improving the sector

Additionally, the money will assist councils to conduct inspections, surveys and demolish ‘beds in sheds’ and other prohibited buildings.

Since 2011, almost 40,000 inspections have taken place across the country, with 3,000 landlords served with enforcement actions, statutory notices or prosecutions.

Lewis has provided the funding to try and make sure that millions of hard-working, law-abiding tenants receive a better deal when renting a property.

Tough tackling

Mr Lewis said that, ‘many private rental tenants are happy with their home and the service they receive, but there are still rogue landlords that exploit vulnerable people and force their tenants to live in overcrowded and squalid accommodation.’[1]

‘We are determined to tackle these rogue which is why we are providing 48 councils with extra funding, so they can get rid of the cowboy operators in their area and bring an end to tenants living in miserable homes in the name of profit. We also want to raise the quality and choice of rental accommodation across the sector. The funding will ensure tenants know what level of service they can expect and have confidence to get help and take action if things go wrong,’ he added.[1]

£5m pot to tackle rogue landlords announced

£5m pot to tackle rogue landlords announced

A better buy-to-let sector

The announcement comes as part of the proposals in the Housing and Planning Bill, aimed at ensuring England’s 9 million private sector tenants are given better standards by their landlords.

Included in the Housing and Planning Bill proposals are:

  • a database of rogue landlords and agents convicted of previous offences
  • total banning orders for the most prolific offenders
  • introduction of civil penalties up to £30,000, instead of prosecution
  • a more hardline fit and proper persons test for landlords of licensable properties, such as HMO’s

Councils

A full-run down of the forty-eight councils and how much of the £5m they have been allocated is as follows:

  • Birmingham £110,250
  • Blackburn with Darwen £39,375
  • Blackpool £150,000
  • Boston £74,600
  • Bradford £45,000
  • Bristol £135,000
  • Burnley £18,200
  • Calderdale £100,000
  • City of Lincoln £96,071
  • Cornwall £127,500
  • Croydon £15,000
  • Derby £13,161
  • Ealing £150,000
  • Fenland £44,500
  • Hastings £122,734
  • Hyndburn £112,500
  • Ipswich £56,250
  • Islington £112,500
  • Lambeth £90,000
  • Leeds £70,000
  • Lewisham £151, 378
  • Liverpool £112, 500
  • London Borough of Barking and Dagenham £250,000
  • London Borough of Brent £295,000
  • London Borough of Enfield £360,000
  • London Borough of Hackney £36,400
  • London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham £91,000
  • London Borough of Haringey £100,000
  • London Borough of Hounslow £67,500
  • London Borough of Newham £428,241
  • London Borough of Southwark £31,200
  • London Borough of Tower Hamlets £100,000
  • London Borough of Waltham Forest £225,000
  • Luton £94,000
  • Manchester £60,000
  • Middlesbrough £100,000
  • Newcastle £70,000
  • North East Lincolnshire 64,250
  • Nottingham £151,079
  • Pendle £22,500
  • Peterborough £112,500
  • Plymouth £60,000
  • Royal Borough of Greenwich £175,000
  • Salford £63,952
  • Slough £90,000
  • Thanet £88,737
  • Kensington and Chelsea £91,000
  • Torbay Council £90,000

[1]

[1] https://www.gov.uk/government/news/5-million-cash-for-councils-to-stop-rogue-landlords