Posts with tag: investors

Housing market stays steady post-Brexit

Published On: October 20, 2016 at 8:57 am

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Categories: Property News

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Despite ongoing uncertainty surrounding the Brexit vote, Britain’s housing and economy markets have showed resilience.

Residential property price growth has slowed slightly, but former Chancellor George Osborne’s predictions of a fully blown crash have failed to materialise.

Lack of panic

There has also been a lack of panic amongst investment buyers looking to get rid of their properties, with stagnation continuing in the market.

Marc von Grundherr, Lettings Director at Benham & Reeves Residential Lettings, noted: ‘Rents have flat-lined across most of the capital. We are advising all our landlords not to ask for rental increases and if the tenant has been particular good then to even consider a slight decrease or some works to retain them and avert any void.’[1]

According to Benham & Reeves Residential Lettings, tenants are readily agreeing renewals.

Housing market stays steady post-Brexit

Housing market stays steady post-Brexit

Capital gains?

Most noticeably, rent prices in prime central London have slipped for the second successive quarter. There has been an oversupply in rental properties in Belgravia, Chelsea and Knightsbridge, which is having a negative impact on rental values in the area.

von Grundherr continued by saying: ‘Prime central London arguably has the best value properties in the capital at the moment. And transformed pockets of North West London such as Colindale continue to offer excellent returns for investors who go in there early.’[1]

‘If you look at most of the Heat Map, rents have stayed the same over the past quarter. We’re in a period of uncertainty and fortunately, our landlords are listening to our advice when we tell them not to be greedy and simply value the tenants they have,’ he added.[1]

[1] http://www.propertyreporter.co.uk/landlords/rental-market-stagnant-after-brexit.html

 

70% of eviction notices could be illegal

Published On: October 18, 2016 at 10:48 am

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Categories: Landlord News

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A law firm has claimed that a large number of buy-to-let landlords who are attempting to evict their tenants are being held up by defective Section 21 and Section 8 notices.

North West solicitors Kirwans said it has seen a significant rise in the number of private landlords seeing delays in evictions. In some cases, these can take more than two months, leading to rental losses. The problem surrounds invalid notices, which are part of the Housing Act 1998. These notices are being identified, with hold ups coming as new ones are subsequently issued.

Stress

Danielle Hughes of Kirwans observed that over the last three month, 70% of landlords seeking to evict have been held up by problematic notices. This is turn has caused much stress amongst buy-to-let investors.

Hughes noted: ‘The legal changes that have taken place in this area over the past 12 months have been fast-paced complicated and many landlords are finding that the notices they have prepared themselves using online forms, or even those that have been prepared for them by well-meaning letting agents are out-of-date as a result.’[1]

‘When trying to evict someone, landlords have to follow a strict process which sees them serve notice on the tenant, then issue a claim for possession in the county court, then request a warrant for possession and make an eviction appointment. Many landlords don’t seek legal advice until they try and move on to stage two of the eviction process, when the claim for possession is issued.’[1]

70% of eviction notices could be illegal?

70% of eviction notices could be illegal?

Increases

The eviction process can be lengthy, with courts fees for all stages recently rising from £390 to £476. Hughes believes that most errors and risks occur during the first stage, when some landlords opt to go ahead without the advice of a solicitor.

Concluding, Hughes said: ‘Time and time again we are seeing defective notices. The impact of this on the landlord can be devastating, both in terms of emotions, costs and delays, particularly in situations where the tenant is no longer paying rent.’[1]

[1] https://www.landlordtoday.co.uk/breaking-news/2016/10/up-to-70-of-eviction-notices-could-be-illegal-says-law-firm

Property asking prices rise during September

Published On: October 12, 2016 at 2:08 pm

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Categories: Property News

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Property prices in the UK rose by 0.7% during September, with the East of England showing the most prominent rises.

However, a report from Home.co.uk suggests that many sellers are being too optimistic on their pricing.

Rises

Month-on-month, property asking prices rose by 0.7% in England, by 0.3% in Scotland and by 0.2% in Wales. Yearly, prices are up by 4.4%, 5.3% and 1.3% than at the same period in 2015.

In addition, supply has found to have risen by 11% year-on-year across Britain. This was particularly driven by the South and East of the England. In London, supply rose by 19%, in the South East by 23% and the East by 30%.

The largest month-on-month rise in asking price was found in the East of England, with 1.1%. This took the average asking price in the region to £342,915, some 11.5% greater than one year previously.

Next came the South East and the East Midlands, with rises of 1% recorded. This pushed the average asking price of property in these regions to £394,837 and £211,328 respectively. Annually, there were increases of 4.2% and 5.5%.

Property asking prices rise during September

Property asking prices rise during September

Muted

More muted growth was evident in the West Midlands, with asking prices up by 0.5% month-on-month and 6.5% year-on-year. The North West saw rises of 0.1% and 4.2%, Yorkshire and the Humber 0.2% and 3% and the North East 0.2% and 1.1%. Asking prices in these regions are now £225,664, £181,459 and £157,577 respectively.

The report also indicates that a sign of fragility within the market is evident with a growing number of sellers cutting asking prices. This is currently at a three-year high in Britain, with Home.co.uk expecting more to follow.

Doug Shepherd, director of Home.co.uk, noted: ‘Supply is increasingly rapidly in the East, South East and London. What’s more, the pricing of these new instructions is looking rather optimistic.’[1]

[1] http://www.propertywire.com/news/europe/asking-prices-across-uk-sellers-optimistic-index-suggests/

 

 

House price growth in UK’s largest cities slowing

Published On: September 26, 2016 at 11:31 am

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Categories: Property News

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The average annual rate of residential property growth in the UK’s 20 largest cities is continuing to slow, according to a new report.

Hometrack’s UK Cities Index suggests that increase in value slid to 8.2% in these cities during August. This was down from the 9.5% reported in July, taking the average price of a home in the 20 cities to £239,400.

Slowdown

This slowdown is being driven primarily by lesser price growth in the largest cities in the South of England-led by the capital.

During the three months to August, property prices in the 20 big cities increased by only 1.9%. This was the lowest level of quarterly growth seen since February.

Despite this, Bristol led the way for the quickest rate of yearly growth, with prices rising by an average of 13.1% in the period. London was next, with typical growth of 10.4%. However, the capital is set to end 2016 with property prices up by just 6% year-on-year.

This owes much to a slowdown in the highest value inner London boroughs. These include Kensington and Chelsea, Hammersmith and Fulham and Westminster, where prices were up by just 0.2%, 1% and 1.8% respectively.

Trends

Richard Donnell, insight director at Hometrack, noted: ‘on current trends house price growth in London will be running at circa 6% per annum by December and on course for low single digit growth by Spring 2017. Record unaffordability, tax changes impacting investor demand and high stamp duty costs are all combining to reduce market activity in the face of rising supply.’[1]

‘Despite the overall slowdown in London, it is dangerous to view the capital as a single housing market. While many of the central boroughs have seen low rates of growth, in parts of outer London where house prices are 30% lower than the London average, such as Barking and Dagenham and Havering, prices are rising by more than 15% although these areas are starting to slow,’ he continued.[1]

Similar trends are evident in most of the cities located in southern England, including Cambridge, Oxford and Bournemouth. Cambridge has seen the fastest decline in growth, with prices slipping from 16% in March 2016 to 6% at present.

House price growth in UK's largest cities slowing

House price growth in UK’s largest cities slowing

Recoveries

Cities with short-lived housing market resurgence, such as Liverpool and Glasgow have seen the largest rates of growth. Despite this, they offer some of the cheapest priced properties throughout the UK.

Mr Donnell continued by saying, ‘Regional cities such as Glasgow, Liverpool, Birmingham and Edinburgh have all posted above average growth in the last three months as low mortgage rates and affordable property prices support growth. Aberdeen has registered a small bounce back in house prices – after house prices registered a £20,000 fall since July 2015 – the rebound in growth reflects the fact that the recent fall in the oil price has now been priced into capital values.’[1]

The fall list of how the top 20 UK cities performed in regards to house price growth over the last three months and over the year can be seen below:

City Average price % yoy  August 2016 % last quarter to August 2016
Liverpool £114,300 7.2% 4.1%
Glasgow £113,900 4.5% 2.7%
Aberdeen £184,800 -6.7% 2.3%
Edinburgh £203,800 3.3% 2.2%
Birmingham £144,400 8.0% 2.1%
Manchester £147,500 7.4% 1.9%
Nottingham £137,900 7.5% 1.8%
Newcastle £127,700 4.1% 1.7%
Bristol £256,100 13.1% 1.7%
Portsmouth £217,400 9.0% 1.5%
Sheffield £128,700 3.4% 1.3%
Southampton £214,200 7.7% 1.2%
Belfast £123,100 3.1% 1.2%
London £475,700 10.4% 0.9%
Oxford £409,800 8.1% 0.9%
Leicester £151,400 5.6% 0.7%
Bournemouth £263,500 6.2% 0.4%
Cardiff £188,100 6.3% 0.3%
Cambridge £407,200 6.0% -0.4%
Leeds £148,800 4.8% -0.8%
20 city index £239,400 8.2% 1.9%
UK £202,400 7.4% 1.6%

[1]

[1] https://www.propertyinvestortoday.co.uk/breaking-news/2016/9/house-price-growth-in-uks-major-cities-continue-to-slow

A burdensome approach to landlord regulation is rejected

Published On: August 3, 2016 at 10:04 am

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Categories: Landlord News

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The Government is to relent on forcing landlords of leasehold properties to have to be a member of a redress scheme. This is despite increasing pressure from conveyancers looking for a reform of leasehold legislation.

There have been calls from The Conveyancing Association for existing and incoming leaseholders to be made to join a redress system with consumer rights, similar to one of the three existing property ombudsman schemes.

Redress Schemes

Baroness Hayter of Kentish Town brought up the issue of redress schemes for landlords of leasehold properties during a Department for Communities and Local Government debate last week.

Hayter enquired if the Government was thinking of extending the requirements of the Consumers, Estate Agents and Redress Act 2007 and the Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Act 2013, in order to require landlords of leasehold properties to be permitted to belong to a redress scheme.

However, minister Lord Bourne noted that the Government, ‘is not persuaded that more burdensome approaches to regulate landlords would be effective.’

A burdensome approach to landlord regulation is rejected

A burdensome approach to landlord regulation is rejected

Tribunal

Mr Bourne said leaseholders in dispute with a landlord could apply to the first-tier tribunal (property chamber) in England and the Leasehold Valuation Tribunal in Wales to obtain redress.

He continued by saying, ‘the government is extending leaseholders’ access to redress by including provisions in the Housing and Planning Act 2016 that will address an irregularity concerning the inability of courts and tribunals to restrict recovery of a landlord’s legal costs from leaseholders as administrative charges, where they consider a restriction on recovery to be just and equitable. The Government plans to introduce related secondary legislation by summer 2017.’[1]

[1] https://www.landlordtoday.co.uk/breaking-news/2016/8/burdensome-approaches-to-regulate-landlords-of-leasehold-homes-would-be-ineffective

 

 

Property prices up by 0.6% in June

Published On: July 14, 2016 at 10:14 am

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Categories: Property News

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Latest data released by LSL reveals that the average price of a property in England and Wales rose by 0.6% during June. This comes as a welcome break following three consecutive months of falling house price values, including a 0.9% drop in May.

Rise and falls

This said, property prices in the capital fell by 1.4% month-on-month, the largest drop seen since May 2011.

Across England, year-on-year prices have risen by 6%, with the typical house sale amounting to £293,444. The East of England saw the largest increase of 9.4%.

What’s more, sales in the three months to June increased by 8% in comparison to the same period in 2015. Of course, these figures were driven up by investors surging to beat the additional Stamp Duty deadline on April 1st.

During June 2016, roughly 72,000 sales were completed, 13% lower than in 2015, but up on the 55,250 figure seen in May 2016.

Property prices up by 0.6% in June

Property prices up by 0.6% in June

Brexit consequences

Adrian Gill, director of Your Move and Reeds Rains, has suggested that the Brexit result will bring with it wide ranging consequences for the housing market.

Gill observed, ‘exactly how the implications will play out in the sector over the coming months is yet to be seen and whilst London is likely to feel the effects more acutely, it is important to remember that the outlook is not all doom and gloom. Already lower interest rates promised by the Bank of England to stave off any slowdown are set to ease affordability and support prices.’[1]

‘What is clear is that the impact of April’s Stamp Duty increase has now largely played out, and there’s little evidence to suggest it has significantly hit investor appetite: first time landlords seem no less common and there’s new interest in mixed commercial and residential purchases, such as flats over shops that escape the increase. Ultimately, with interest rates set to remain lower for longer, the Bank of England reducing banks’ capital requirements and changes in Government imminent, the short-medium term outlook for the housing market could well remain positive after all,’ Gill added.[1]

[1] http://www.propertyreporter.co.uk/property/june-house-prices-see-a-06-rise.html