Search Results For: buy to rent sector

Now is a Good Time to Invest in Property

Published On: August 18, 2014 at 5:04 pm

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Investing in the improving property market can be appealing, however, it could provide an unsuccessful investment, and declines in returns.

Now is a Good Time to Invest in Property

Now is a Good Time to Invest in Property

When looking to invest, it is always important to consider the timing. The property market has been growing in the last year, since the economy has improved. Now could be a good time to invest in the sector, as long-term strength is possible.

Nationwide recently states that house prices in the second quarter (Q2) of this year have seen greater values than 2007’s heights. Some feared that this would cause another housing bubble, however the market is still stable.

Zoopla have reported lately that 92% of people in the UK think that property prices will rise in the next six months and farther.1 This would create high capital returns in the market. If the economy increases the predicted between 2.5% and 3% by the end of the year, potential profits would only improve.

The rental market reflects this. Buy-to-let landlords are to see the highest returns of any asset class investor. HomeLet says that rental accommodation has grown by 7.5% in the last year, putting landlords in a solid position.1

Recently, landlords have been adding to their portfolios, due to rising rents, dropping arrears, and shorter average void periods. These all cause long-term strength in the private rental market.

The amount of buyers is also dropping around the country, after the Help to Buy success. There are now many potential tenants in the UK, more than there has ever been previously. This keeps demand and returns high.

1 http://www.landlordexpert.co.uk/2014/08/17/why-now-is-the-right-time-to-invest-in-uk-property/

 

 

 

Amateur landlords at all-time high

Published On: July 10, 2014 at 11:10 am

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Categories: Landlord News

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Figures released in July 2014 suggest that the percentage of ‘amateur landlords’ within the property sector are at an all-time high. According to the National Landlords Association, these types of landlord, who work part-time to support their day-job, account for over 70%[1] of the industry.

Signs of recovery

A rise in the current rental market, coupled with the upturn in economic recovery, is attracting more amateur landlords into the market. The NLA findings also suggest that around 20% of part-time landlords will look to expand their ownership of properties in the coming year.

Future planning

Chairman of the NLA, Carolyn Uphill, was not surprised by the findings. Uphill said that a growing number of people are choosing to, ‘buy to let as an alternative means of saving for the future.’

These comments can be backed up by the statistics, which suggest that the average amateur landlord has four rental properties, generating gross income of around £31, 000. The NLA report indicates around a quarter of this gross income is used for maintenance costs.

Amateur landlords at all-time high

Amateur landlords at all-time high 

A need for caution

The figures suggest that around 40% of amateur landlords have utilized buy-to-let finance schemes to assist them with their purchases in the rental market. Buy-to-let lenders soared during the last-year, up by 32% on the last recording period.

Prospective part-time landlords however should not expect to sign up and simply watch the money roll in. Despite the obvious potential rewards, Uphill errs potential landlords to the side of caution. ‘Anyone considering a move in to buy-to-let,’ she said, must be, ‘thoroughly researched and aware of what it involves.’

Uphill also noted that with already having a regular job, becoming an amateur landlord can be, ‘very challenging,’ when trying to perfect, ‘juggling the demands of daily life.’

Support

It is vitally important that all prospective landlords are confident, educated and aware of what going in to the buy-to let market involves. Initial guidance is important for all amateur landlords.

[1] http://www.landlords.org.uk/news-campaigns/news/amateur-landlords-reach-highest-ever-level

 

 

Why Now is the Time to Invest in UK Property

Published On: July 8, 2014 at 5:13 pm

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Categories: Property News

The economy should see substantial growth, after the first half of 2014 saw an increase in property prices.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) has also revealed that the Government met their 2.0% inflation target at the end of the fourth quarter (Q4) of 2013. The amount of people unemployed has also dropped to 7.1%.

2014 looks to follow the growths of last year. UK Land Registry have also claimed that average property prices in England and Wales increased to £172,069 in April; a yearly growth of 6.7%. Prices in the housing market have risen at their quickest pace in around four years.

Evidently, now would be a good time to invest in the property sector. The five reasons why now is the time to invest in UK property are as follows:

High rental yields

Rents and demand for rental accommodation are at a record high, due to tenants renting for longer periods of time.

In May, the average price of renting a home in the UK was £1,006 per month, revealed Move With Us.

There has also been no drop in demand, as Countrywide reported that there are about ten possible tenants for each rental property in the market.

Why Now is the Time to Invest in UK Property

Why Now is the Time to Invest in UK Property

Strong commercial property

Commercial property in the UK is performing well, with yields in the first half of 2014 now matching the heights of 2010.

Commercial property values have risen by 0.8% in April, says the IPD UK Monthly Property Index. This follows twelve consecutive months of progress, as values are now 8% higher than they were a year ago.

Knight Frank predicts high levels of overseas investors in the UK commercial property market, in part a consequence of Taiwan’s relaxed rules. An arrival of Taiwanese investors could see investment levels rise by 15%.

Overseas investors

Overseas investors who buy property in the UK, particularly London, are fuelling the housing market.

Civitas has revealed that rich investors who purchase houses here are increasing prices.

Developments in mortgage lending and Government schemes are also driving up prices, with an increase in first time buyers around the UK.

However, the more buyers, the more demand, and cities are struggling to keep up. Now is a good time to invest if the property is suitable.

An array of assets available

Traditional property investments are not the only ones performing well. Student accommodation, care home bedrooms, and even car park spaces and self-storage units are also thriving.

The UK property sector is seeing higher house prices and strong rental returns.

However, most investors are only aware of the traditional assets, such as residential buy-to-lets or commercial property. Other investments can also provide high yields.

  • Student property: Knight Frank have named it the UK’s number one performing asset, and student accommodation has overtaken every other asset class since 2011. A strong demand has been fuelled by increasing student numbers and high occupancy rates, causing good returns. Knight Frank predicts that yields will continue to grow throughout 2014.
  • Care homes: Investment in the care home sector has stayed strong, due to their non-discretionary nature. The increasing aging populating of the UK has pushed these investments into the mainstream, alongside a lack of high quality bedrooms. Many investors receive high returns.
  • Alternative assets: Self-storage units and car park spaces have become popular for investors seeking to expand their portfolios. There is a high demand in the UK for both of these sectors, and the right location could provide a regular income for investors. They can also be a good option for those with a smaller budget.
  • Property ownership laws: The property sector of England and Wales provides a wide range of investment options. Overseas investors are attracted to the market by well-priced assets, and the present lack of restrictions on foreign nationals and overseas companies buying or renting properties. The market is considered trusted and established by property investors, making for a good location.

Concerns over Effects of New Mortgage Rules in UK

Published On: May 23, 2014 at 2:49 pm

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The latest mortgage rules that were introduced recently are still settling in, however, some market experts think that they will cause a deceleration in lending.

Property market professionals are carefully observing the effects with the Bank of England (BoE) stating that they are hoping for less of the tremendous lending that the market has seen in the last 18 months. The extreme borrowings have caused speculations of another housing bubble, especially in London and the South East.

Some are concerned that some of the greater loan to income amounts among firs time buyers in London and the South East could become dangerous should interest rates increase.

However, the Government are intent on their housing led recovery stimulating the overall economy.

Lenders have revealed that they have already been practising under the new regulations, before their introduction on 26th April. Neil Hudson of Savills says that if this is true, then it is unlikely that there will be a substantial drop in mortgage lending in the next few months.1

Hudson thinks that the BoE’s Financial Policy Committee’s (FPC) authority to set tougher interest rate tests on new borrowers could be more of more significance.

He says: “The FPC is likely to get these powers in the summer and it may be during this period that we begin to see prospective borrowers struggle to get financing.

“Given the importance of first time buyers in the recent surge of market activity, any limit on their ability to borrow relative to current trends could lead to a slowdown in both house price growth and overall transaction levels.

“Unfortunately, this would also lead to prospective first time buyers remaining trapped in the private rented sector. Therefore, any move by the BoE to minimise threats to financial stability via the housing market should also be met by support from the Government for the private rented sector.”1

Concerns over Effects of New Mortgage Rules in UK

Concerns over Effects of New Mortgage Rules in UK

Cash buyers could play a vital role in keeping the property market up if there happens to be a slowdown in lending. After the recession, cash buyers played an important part in pushing market activity. The last year has seen more than 400,000 cash only transactions, not just from foreign investors or buy-to-let landlords.1

Savills claims that cash only buyers are just as likely to be those downsizing and home movers. They even revealed that they could be replacing mortgage movers in some markets.

Hudson says: “At a fairly constant 35% of total market transactions, even during the last year, the scale of cash buyer activity will dilute any intervention in the market by the BoE, but should not prevent that intervention.”1

Some lenders have already begun taking action to limit high loans. Lloyds Banking Group, who offer mortgages through the Halifax, Lloyds Bank, the Bank of Scotland, and Scottish Widows Bank, has said that they are changes their policy for new high value mortgage lending.

From now, if the mortgage lending on a property is more than £500,000, Lloyds Group will evaluate the mortgage application by using an income multiple limit of four. They described move as a “targeted policy change”1 designed to tackle inflationary pressures seen in the London property market.

Lloyds Group’s Director of Mortgages, Stephen Noakes, says: “Whilst the housing market outside of London is starting to improve, the recovery is fragile and prices largely remain below their peak. It is important we don’t disrupt this recovery.

“But in London, house prices are almost now 30% above the 2007 peak. This is largely driven by issues of supply, which are particularly acute in London, and this is having an impact on income multiples which are failing to keep pace with asset growth.

“We’re not seeing such issues across the rest of the UK and therefore this is a targeted response to an issue largely in the upper tiers of the London housing market. This prudent update to our lending policies is intended to manage risks to our business and for our customers.”

Noakes went on to explain that the Group still supports the Help to Buy scheme, as it has boosted the housing market: “Help to Buy is not one of the factors driving London house prices.

“Just 2% of purchases in London in 2014 have been through the scheme with the significant majority of applications coming from the rest of the UK.”

Noakes adds that the Group predicts the policy change will affect about 8% of their lending in London.1

1 http://www.propertywire.com/news/europe/new-mortgage-rules-uk-201405229159.html

 

 

Purpose-Built Large-Scale Properties Coming to Britain

Published On: May 13, 2014 at 5:01 pm

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A new type of renting is arriving in the UK. Purpose-built, large-scale properties that offer long-term tenancies, stable rents, and shared services are coming to Britain.

This is a practice called professionalised private rental sector, in which large institutional investors are entering a market that has previously been led by buy-to-let landlords.

Attracted to growing urban populations, and stable, long-term yields, and pension funds, investors are either buying up lumps of existing rental property, or embarking on built to rent, a trend famous in the USA, Canada, and parts of Europe.

The development of this practise in the UK could provide tenants with an alternative to typical landlords. Investors may also be able to buy into the sector without having to buy a property themselves.

Institutions are making substantial investments, especially in London and the South East. The cost of rental property deals for large-scale investment grew from £1.6bn in 2012 to £2.5bn last year, says Savills.1

Director of Residential Research at Savills, Jacqui Daly, says: “It is happening in a bigger way.”1

One of the biggest build to rent developments is 1,439 homes in the previous Olympic Village in Stratford, east London.

The developer, Delancey, is paired up with Qatari Diar, the property sector of the Qatari sovereign wealth fund. The apartments will be let on three-year tenancy agreements, and will require no management or agents’ fees.

Purpose-Built Large-Scale Properties Coming to Britain

Purpose-Built Large-Scale Properties Coming to Britain

In other parts, M&G Investments have purchased 534 properties to rent, from Berkeley Group in a deal worth £105m. The homes are primarily one or two bedroom flats in 13 different areas. The group also bought 301 rental properties at the Stratford Halo development, and 233 homes at East India Dock.

Institutions prefer these ready-made blocks of rental properties, as they dodge any upfront costs and the risks linked to planning and construction. However, at this scale, they are hard to come by.

M&G Residential Fund Manager, Alex Greaves, says: “If we have the opportunity, we’d like to buy another one, but the reality is they don’t come up that often. And if you can’t buy it, you have to build it.”1

Many investments have arrived from overseas, where the practise of large-scale managed rental properties is commonplace.

Essential Living is a UK specialist in these developments, but is backed by M3 Capital Partners, who is funded by US pension schemes. Fizzy Living is a sector of the Thames Valley Housing Association, and is financed by Macquarie Capital, an Australian investor.

Andrew Allen, Head of Global Property Research at Aberdeen Asset Management, says: “Investors are increasingly aware of this market. It feels like there’s momentum in it.”1

There are certain influences behind the increase in investment. There is still a short supply of housing in Britain, despite the huge demand, which has kept prices high.

First time buyers are still struggling to break into the market, as average earnings are stable against rising house prices, mortgage lenders are demanding high deposits, and monthly repayments are higher, due to the lack of low cost products, such as interest-only mortgages.

Research has found that generation rent is growing and growing. Over half of under 35s in low-to-middle income households currently live in rental accommodation, a huge rise from just over a quarter in 2003-4, says Resolution Foundation.1

Quality in rental accommodation, however, is often poor. Savills found in 2012 that a quarter of tenants left their last rental home because of poor management.1

These circumstances have led big investors to the large-scale rental industry. However, Vidhya Alakeson, Deputy Chief Executive at Resolution Foundation, says that these efforts of bringing big money into the sector has been going on for years.

She says: “The number of actual deals going through is very limited. It’s going to be a slow burn.”

She believes that the mindset of institutions needs to be changed: “Built to rent falls between two stools. It doesn’t have the low return but highly secure nature of social housing investments, but nor does it have the high returns that equity investors typically look for. Traditional property investors don’t quite know where to put it.”1

Institutional investors find matching their long-term liabilities to a steady income appealing. A study by Resolution Foundation found a total return on an estimated rental property portfolio of 7.2% per year over a decade.1

To kick-start the market, the Government have created measures to push build to rent. These include: a £1bn equity fund to generate development; £10bn of loan guarantees for the social and private rental sector; new draft planning guidance on built to rent projects; and a Whitehall task to oversee the fund and loan guarantees.1

Daly says that the loan guarantees will promote confidence in the sector. She says: “The guarantee could have a huge impact on how quickly the market matures. It will help to improve the returns.”1

1 http://www.landlordexpert.co.uk/2014/05/12/rent-the-next-big-asset-class-2/

 

 

One Million People will Move Home this Year

Published On: March 18, 2014 at 4:20 pm

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During 2013, around one million people are expected to move house due to an improving property market, it was recently announced.

The Ernst & Young ITEM Club have used the Treasury’s economic models to predict that the amount of housing transactions will increase by 7.5% this year. They have also referred to Chancellor Osborne’s plans to guarantee £130 billion of mortgages leading to housing transactions rising by another 7.8% next year.

One Million People will Move Home this Year

One Million People will Move Home this Year

The chief economic advisor to the ITEM Club, Peter Spencer, has discussed the predictions. He says: “With export markets continuing to disappoint, the Chancellor has focused his firepower on the home front. And the timing couldn’t have been better. Real incomes are already starting to recover, mortgages are becoming more readily available, and homes are more affordable, as the house-price-to-earnings ratio continues to fall. Although it’s not a long-term strategy, stimulating the housing market and the high street will keep GDP growth positive. Unbalanced growth is better than no growth.”

The Government’s new Funding for Lending Scheme (FLS) will allegedly lead to more people being able to buy a property, as it will decrease costs of mortgages, according to the Club. They have also supported the controversial Help to Buy scheme.

Spencer explains: “We expect [the scheme] to boost the number of housing transactions, particularly at the lower end of the market where the deposit and low equity have been a major constraint.

“We should start to feel slightly better off this year, which will help to loosen the purse strings. Consumer spending added 0.7 percentage points to GDP in 2012, and the Chancellor’s budget will help ensure the tills continue to ring for some time yet. Consumers have been burnt by the experience of the recession, and are much more cautious with their finances. Households are likely to continue paying down debt rather than racking up huge credit card bills.”1

Progresses in the property market will also benefit landlords, as there will be less pressure on the private rented sector.

Additionally, should the property market become steadier there is the chance of landlord insurance policies becoming cheaper, as there would be less risk of tenants falling into rent arrears.

The next few months will uncover whether the ITEM Club’s forecasts are accurate, and whether the housing market will bounce back to pre-recession status.

1 http://www.justlandlords.co.uk/news/One-Million-People-to-Move-Home-this-Year-1698.html