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8 out of 10 tenants satisfied with landlord

Published On: September 29, 2015 at 3:03 pm

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Fresh research commissioned by Paragon Mortgages has revealed positive news for landlords and tenant relations.

The Q2 tenant market analysis, carried out by BDRC Continental suggests that 80% of tenants are currently satisfied with their current landlord. 87% said they felt their rented property was their home, as opposed to a short-term living arrangement. 800 people that are currently privately renting a property in the UK took part in the research.

Homely

Data from the report also shows that the average duration of tenants living in their current rental home is seven years. Their total typical stay in the private rented sector is 12 years.

When quizzed on their long-term housing plans, 35% of respondents said they intend to stay within the private rented sector. 24% said they intend to buy a house in the future. However, the proportion of tenants who citied unaffordability as their main reason for continuing to rent rose from 74%, from 69% in the previous survey.[1]

In addition, the research shows that 65% of tenants believe their rental payment to be either good or very good, in terms of value.

8 out of 10 tenants satisfied with landlord

8 out of 10 tenants satisfied with landlord

Satisfaction

‘This research provides a valuable insight into the sector,’ said John Heron, Managing Director of Paragon Mortgages. ‘There are many surveys of landlords and many academic reports on the Private Rented Sector. There are, however, too few surveys that poll tenants directly on their experience of renting privately.’[1]

Heron believes that, ‘this survey has identified high levels of tenant satisfaction and an appreciation of the good value that rented accommodation can offer across the country.’ He feels however that it is disappointing, ‘to see that affordability constraints are impacting negatively on future choices in housing with less than a quarter of tenants expecting to buy their own home in due course.’[1]

[1] http://www.propertyreporter.co.uk/landlords/8-out-of-10-tenants-like-their-landlord.html

 

 

Sales Drop by 13% in a Year, Reports Land Registry

Published On: September 29, 2015 at 12:56 pm

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The amount of homes sold in England and Wales has dropped by 13% over the last year, reports the Land Registry.

The Land Registry’s market trend data report, containing its latest figures, reveals that there were just 70,404 completed house sales in June, compared with 80,823 in June last year.

The data also shows that the average house price has risen annually to August, by 4.2%, making the average property price in England and Wales £184,682. Prices grew by 0.5% between July and August.

Sales Drop by 13% in a Year, Reports Land Registry

Sales Drop by 13% in a Year, Reports Land Registry

Group Managing Director for Mortgages at Aldermore Bank, Charles Haresnape, comments on the findings: “While the annual price increase of 4.2% in the average house price will bring positive news for homeowners, the 13% decrease in completed house sales in England and Wales compared to June 2014 is worrying news.

“The fall may in some part reflect the impact of tighter lending criteria, but price rises are likely to prove a constraint on the number of first time buyers.”1

The highest price rise over the past year was experienced in the East of England, with homes now costing an average of 8.4% more than they did in August 2014. London witnessed the greatest monthly growth, of 1.7%.

The highest annual price increase in the capital was seen in Newham, East London, at 15.5%.

Chairman of national agents Jackson-Stops & Staff, Nicholas Leeming, explains: “Buyers are seeking areas offering the best value and proximity to work, which reflects not only the performance in the East of England, where the Cambridge effect and regional investment are bearing fruit, but also in boroughs such as Newham and Barking and Dagenham.

“On the wider front, we are seeing a continuing trend of higher property values for reported sales, but of more concern is the reducing numbers of properties coming to the market.

“However, this supply constraint in the middle markets is not being matched in the higher value sector, where many properties are struggling to find buyers at their current guide prices, mainly because of the effect that the Stamp Duty increase last year has had.”1 

Property prices in the North West rose by the lowest amount, 0.2%, while the region also experienced the greatest monthly decline, of 1.4%.

Prices also dropped in Yorkshire and the Humber at 0.3% and the East Midlands at 0.2%.

The South East saw annual house price growth of 7.6% and London’s average price is now 6.6% higher than last year.

The data also reveals that semi-detached house prices increased more than any other property type. Annual growth of 4.7% for these properties compares to a 4.5% rise for detached homes.

The price of flats and maisonettes is now 4% higher than in August 2014 and terraced houses cost 3.7% more.

Chief Executive of housing charity Shelter, Campbell Robb, says continuing price growth is “pushing the dream of a stable home out of reach for millions”.

He continues: “Piecemeal Government schemes like Help to Buy or Starter Homes just aren’t helping the ordinary families who are completely priced out of a home of their own and left to face the huge costs and instability of private renting.

“The autumn spending review is the Government’s last chance to show they’re serious about giving millions of people a fair shot at a stable future by investing in the genuinely affordable homes they desperately need.”1

1 http://www.propertyindustryeye.com/land-registry-says-sales-fall-by-13-in-year/

 

Shortage of Affordable Homes Causes 50% Fall in Young Homeowners

The amount of homeowners in England and Wales has fallen by almost 250,000 over the last five years, according to recent Government figures.

Since 2010, the level of homeownership has dropped from 67.4% of all households to 63.3%. At the same time, the number of families living in the private rental sector has risen by 2.5m.

The decrease in homeownership arrives despite several Government schemes aimed at helping young people get onto the property ladder. Through the latest initiative, under-35s can buy a new home with a 5% deposit.

However, research compiled by the Labour Party, before its annual conference in Brighton, indicates that under the coalition government, there was a 50% decline in the amount of young people owning a

Shortage of Affordable Homes Causes 50% Fall in Young Homeowners

Shortage of Affordable Homes Causes 50% Fall in Young Homeowners

home.

The study, using official Government data, found that just 800,000 people under the age of 34 now own a house, half of those that had their own home in 2010. The average deposit needed to buy a property is now £57,000, up from £43,000 five years ago.

Meanwhile, private sector rents have hit a record high. The average rental property now costs £803 per month, a 20% rise on 2010. Annually, rents cost £1,636 more a year than in 2010.

Labour will focus on housing in its first conference since the general election.

The party’s new leader, Jeremy Corbyn, has called for rent controls to be introduced, and the issue could be put to vote after an emergency motion was selected for debate.

In an interview ahead of the conference, Corbyn stated: “My view is the Government should introduce rent regulation.”

He added that until this happens, the benefit cap should not be cut: “The amount of money saved in the overall budget from the household benefit cap is actually quite small.”1

Corbyn has given the role of shadow housing minister to John Healey, who will take a full seat in the shadow cabinet.

Healey claims that for the past five years, the Conservatives have blamed Labour for the shortage of housing, but this will “no longer wash”.

He reports that the Government have built too few affordable homes, while also failing in their pledge to deliver one-for-one replacements for properties sold through the Right to Buy scheme.

He continues: “There’s so much more ministers could be doing to ensure more people are decently housed and to help the next generation get on.

“Millions of people are now struggling with the cost of the housing crisis – higher rents, more homelessness, the lowest rate of homeownership in a generation, and fewer homes built than at any time since the 1920s. Their inaction is indefensible. There can, and must, be change.”1

A Department for Communities and Local Government spokesperson responds: “The 2008 economic crash devastated the house building industry, leading to the lowest levels of starts for any peacetime year since the 1920s.

“We have got Britain building again, with housing completions at their highest annual level, and nearly 800,000 homes built, since 2009.

“We are also planning to build 200,000 starter homes across the country, which will enable young first time buyers to buy a home at a 20% discount.”1 

1 http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/lack-of-affordable-housing-blamed-for-50-drop-in-young-homeowners-10515982.html

Planning and land needed to satisfy demand

Published On: September 22, 2015 at 2:58 pm

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House builders in Britain have called for policy makers to increase resources for local authority planning departments alongside giving further training for the construction sector and quickening the delivery of public sector land, in order to increase supply of new homes.

The House Builder Survey from international real estate firm Knight Frank is built around the views of builders and developers across the country. The most recent report indicates that two-thirds believe the maximum number of new homes that can be built is year is 180,000. Worryingly, just 9% believe that the Government’s target of 200,000 is achievable.

Demands

Activity in the house building sector has increased over the previous twelve months, but the supply of new homes is still falling well short of satisfying demand.

60% of respondents to the survey believe that house completions will rise in the coming year, with 18% saying this could be anywhere between a 10-25% increase.[1]

A large majority of 90% said that construction costs will rise in next year, with another two-thirds expecting development land prices to also increase.

What’s more, the report found that labour and building costs are thought to pose the largest risk to the sector during the next twelve months. Respondents to the survey believe that the greatest policy change would be to recruit more people to Local Authority planning departments.

Imbalance

‘The imbalance between the demand for new homes and the number of units being built is well-recognised, by the industry and political parties alike,’ commented Grainne Gilmore, head of UK residential research at Knight Frank. ‘In the 12 months to April 2014, some 141,000 homes were built in the UK, up by 4% on the previous year,’ she continued.[1]

Gilmore went on to say that, ‘official household growth projections suggest an additional 230,000 potential households a year in the UK. Below these headline figures, there is a recognition that the right type of homes must be built in areas where there is the most housing need, typically adjacent to existing urban areas.’[1]

‘This has led to tensions about the greenbelt, with a lack of consensus on how to expand accommodation in some of the UK’s most thriving towns and cities. Nearly one half of the respondents to the housebuilder survey said that rules around developing on greenbelt land should be loosened,’ Gilmore added.[1]

Political support

Data from the report shows that policy markers across all the major political parties are keen to promote further development on brownfield land. The Royal Institution for Chartered Surveyors has published research that suggests there is adequate brownfield land available in England to build 226,000 homes by 2019.

‘Brownfield development is more costly than that on greenfield and there must be some recognition of this,’ said Gilmore. ‘In addition, there must also be some recognition that brownfield sites are not always ideally situated to provide the right type of units where they are needed. In terms of housing delivery, nearly 60% of respondents to our survey expect to increase their housing completions in the next 12 months, with a fifth expecting to increase by up to 10% compared to the previous 12 months,’ she added.[1]

Gilmore acknowledges that, ‘while any uplift in development volumes will be welcome,’ she feels, ‘it will be a worry for policymakers that, when asked the maximum level of housing supply that could be delivered to the market under current conditions, more than two-thirds said it was 180,000 units or less.’[1]

Planning and land needed to satisfy demand

Planning and land needed to satisfy demand

Deadlines

Additionally, the report shows that since the deadline for the changes to the use of Section 106 payments to fund infrastructure passed on the 6th April, less than a third of local councils have adopted a new Community Infrastructure Levy structure instead. This means that development could be stalled as these different structures are organised.

Community Infrastructure Levy was found to be the biggest risk to the sector, with three-quarters of respondents highlighting it as a threat. 56% said it was acting as a drag on development as a whole.

‘In terms of planning, the verdict on the National Planning Policy Framework three years on from its introduction is mixed, but overall house builders say it has contributed to a rise in development values,’ noted Gilmore. ‘While there may be some issues with the NPPF, only 26% said that moving back to a more regional approach to planning was a key priority for policy makers as shown.’[1]

‘While many in the industry believe there are issues that need to be ironed out with the NPPF, there is little appetite for policymakers to launch a new form of planning legislation. However, it is notable that only a quarter of respondents said that under the NPPF the speed of securing planning permissions had fallen. This may underpin the feeling that more resources should be allocation to local planning departments,’ she also stated.[1]

Additional resources

Making more resources available to local authority planning departments was highlighted as the feature for boosting development volumes by respondents. Gilmore observed that, ‘many planning departments have been affected by public sector cuts and a result are now overstretched.’ She continued by saying, ‘while it may on the surface seem counter intuitive, house builders and developers are in favour of robust local planning departments, it follows that developers not only want speedier decision times, but also more robust discussions around planning decisions, resulting in fewer appeals and planning permissions granted subject to long lists on conditions.’[1]

Improvements and encouraging more skills training for the construction industry was found to be the second most important measure for respondents to the investigation. ‘The need for more skilled labour is underlined further in our survey, with 94% of respondents saying that the current cost and availability of labour was a risk to the industry. Some 40% of respondents said the risk was significant, while 42% said the risk was moderate. A further 12% said the risk was modest. Those working in the industry also report that lack of available labour is hampering activity,’ Gilmore noted.[1]

‘The effective release of public sector land continues to be a key concern of the industry. Last year, the government announced that from this year, the HCA would become the default disposer of centrally held government land. In last year’s Autumn Statement, it was pledged that land with the capacity for up to 150,000 homes would be released between 2015 and 2020,’ she added.[1]

Capital gains

Gilmore believes that, ‘there is a need for local councils to also get involved in disposing of land or using it as part of joint venture developments.’ She notes that, ‘in London, the pressing need to deliver more homes has been addressed by setting up a London Land Commission to help speed up the process. It is estimated that 100,000 homes could be built in the capital if all surplus land held by the GLA alone was used for development.’[1]

‘The need for more homes built where they are needed most is pressing. Ultimately it is a step change in supply which will help ameliorate affordability issues faced by some buyers, creating a sustainable long term housing market,’ Gilmore concluded.[1]

[1] http://www.propertywire.com/news/europe/uk-building-developers-planning-2015092211008.html

 

 

FCA Says it’s Not Policy to Get Older People to Move Home

Published On: September 22, 2015 at 1:25 pm

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The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has stated that it is not its policy to encourage older people to move home, after a member of its mortgages team said the UK has a “real issue with the last time buyer” at a recent conference.

Lynda Blackwell, from the City regulator, said that the Government’s focus on first time buyers might be misdirected.

She explained: “We’ve got a big supply issue in this country. There’s a lot of questions about whether it is right that the Government should focus on the first time buyer when we’ve got a real issue with the last time buyer.

“There’s older borrowers who basically pay off their mortgage and sit quite happily in a very big house.”1 

Her statement was made during a panel discussion on the housing shortage. It provoked a strong reaction from Saga, which described the comments as unhelpful and insulting.

FCA Says it's Not Policy to Get Older People to Move Home

FCA Says it’s Not Policy to Get Older People to Move Home

An FCA spokesperson said: “These comments, which were made as part of a panel discussion at a trade body event, do not represent FCA policy.

“Last week, we published a range of materials as part of a conference on the mortgage market organised by the FCA. That conference covered a wide range of issues concerning the mortgage market, including older homeowners.”1 

Director of Communications at Saga, which represents older people’s interests, Paul Green, responded to the remarks: “If people have saved and paid for their house over their working lives, it’s down to them if they want to fill it with family or live on their own, but setting the generations against each other or talking about ‘tackling older homeowners’ is not just unhelpful, it’s insulting.”

However, he did acknowledge that looking across the market could help first time buyers.

“First time buyer scheme for the young are a good start, but we need to consider incentives to help encourage those that would like to move, to take that step,” he said. “The FCA are right, we definitely need to do more and do it better, but using divisive language will only alienate the very people we need to help and encourage.”1 

Although the shortage of new homes is the main cause of the affordability crisis, which is pricing first time buyers out of the market, the lack of existing properties being put up for sale is also an issue.

Recent data from the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) shows that the number of homes for sale is at a record low, contrasting to a rise in the amount of hopeful buyers.

At an event on the London rental sector, Christine Whitehead, Professor of Housing at the London School of Economics, said the ageing population is one of the key issues in the capital’s housing market.

“We are now housing four generations rather than three and we have not addressed that right across the board,” she stated. “The result is that those who have to get into the market are being excluded by people like me who live too long.”1

Chief Economist at the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML), Bob Pannell, says that the UK has “an ageing population that holds a disproportionately large amount of national housing assets.”

Statistics show that older people are more likely to under-occupy homes, but Pannell adds that they are also often “reluctant or unable to move to homes that might better suit their needs”2.

He adds that encouraging more activity across the whole market could cause better use of existing properties and the marketability of new homes.

A CML spokesperson insists: “No one is suggesting that anyone should be forced to do anything they don’t want to do, however, there may be ways to remove the barriers that people who wish to move face.”1

She says some homeowners who would like to move have found that after Stamp Duty and other costs, they would end up out of pocket by selling up.

Saga’s research reveals that two-thirds of older homeowners would consider moving house for retirement, but they are prevented by the lack of suitable properties or the cost.

1 http://www.theguardian.com/money/2015/sep/18/its-not-policy-to-get-older-people-to-move-house-says-fca

2 http://www.cml.org.uk/news/when-building-more-homes-isnt-enough/

Property price rises at 13 year high

Published On: September 21, 2015 at 4:01 pm

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The price of property is showing no sign of slowing down, according to a new report conducted by Rightmove.

According to the online real estate portal, the value of properties coming onto the market during this month have risen by 0.9%, to take them to a new national high of £294,834.[1]

Record rise

An average property price rise of £2,550 is the biggest amount seen in September since 2002.

‘Prices are at an all-time high, yet borrowing is historically cheap and positive sentiment is aided by the ongoing postponement of rate rises from these six-year lows,’ noted Rightmove commercial director Miles Shipside. ‘Demand from those who can afford to buy remains high, and suitable supply remains tight, with the number of properties coming to market down 6% on the same period in 2014,’ he continued.[1]

Rightmove suggest that it is the average family-home market sectors that have seen the most growth during the month. In this section, all property types with three or more bedrooms went up by 1.2%. Contrastingly, first-time buyer type homes with two bedrooms or less dropped by 1.1%.[1]

Struggling

Shipside believes that, ‘some of those buying typical first-time buyer properties are now struggling to afford prices in this bracket that have on average gone up by nearly £10,000 in the last year, hence new sellers are asking for less.’[1]

Property price rises at 13 year high

Property price rises at 13 year high

However, those owning more expensive property assets are found to be benefiting most from the current market conditions. The top 15 most expensive counties have all seen price increases over the last month.

The average monthly increase is 1.8%, recorded in Surrey, Oxfordshire, Buckinghamshire and Berkshire. Bedfordshire saw the highest annual growth of 12.3%.[1]

[1] https://www.estateagenttoday.co.uk/breaking-news/2015/9/rightmove-says-biggest-september-asking-price-rise-for-13-years