Posts with tag: private rental sector

Mayor of London Receives Support for Rent Controls

Published On: May 12, 2016 at 9:21 am

Author:

Categories: Landlord News

Tags: ,,,,,

Sadiq Khan, the new Mayor of London, has received support from property professionals for his campaign to introduce rent controls in the capital.

The average private rent price in London has hit a huge 62% of the typical wage, making housing unaffordable for the average tenant.

Khan is continuing to focus on the capital’s housing crisis, after his mayoral election campaign emphasised the issue that affects many Londoners.

However, Khan’s plans will require the co-operation of central Government to enforce any regulations on the private rental sector.

His measures have been criticised by Shaun Bailey, a Conservative politician elected to the London Assembly, who called them “Soviet-style rent controls”1.

Mayor of London Receives Support for Rent Controls

Mayor of London Receives Support for Rent Controls

Despite this, some property experts have spoken out in support of rent stabilisation measures.

The Head of Residential Research at JLL estate agent, Adam Challis, explains: “This is being described as rent control, but it is more properly described as rent indexing, and, set at the right level, it is completely palatable to investors. It offers a sense of relative certainty over what future rental growth is going to be.”

Richard Donnell, the Director of Research at Hometrack, believes large-scale landlords will accept a measure of control on rents – a finding reflected by a University of Cambridge study for the London Assembly last year.

These measures are often accompanied by longer tenancies, which was included in Zac Goldsmith’s – Khan’s main rival – mayoral manifesto.

However, Lucian Cook, the Director of Residential Research at Savills estate agent, claims: “Anything that involves capping rents may be a double-edged sword.”1 He insists that the fundamental problem lies in the shortage of supply of new homes.

More politically achievable is a London living rent, which Khan says would take the form of rents capped at one-third of the local average income, rather than market rents.

Challis claims this could replace existing affordable rents, which are often required within new developments under planning agreements. Part of Khan’s housing plan is to insist that 50% of all new home developments are affordable.

In the private rental sector, affordable rents can currently cost up to 80% of market rates.

Challis believes: “To implement this on new properties would be relatively easy – it’s already what we do in various forms within the affordable housing spectrum. That’s something that would probably be supported by the local population and by local authorities.”1

Julian Goddard, a partner at property advisers Daniel Watney, thinks there are more serious issues to look at: “My recommendation would be to look at the supply side and take measures to ease the viability of new schemes.”1

The Policy Manager at Generation Rent, Dan Wilson Craw, insists that rents linked to wages should be introduced across the market: “The living rent seems to be spooking a lot of landlords, but it is not big enough for them to worry about – we would like it to be far more widespread.”1

Yesterday, we reported on Khan’s plans to release a new list of rogue landlords. The database would ensure that tenants could check whether a landlord has committed any housing offences.

Do you believe that Khan’s plans will benefit all in London’s private rental sector?

1 https://next.ft.com/content/f432c7aa-16bd-11e6-b197-a4af20d5575e

Generation Rent Responds to Election of Sadiq Khan

Published On: May 9, 2016 at 8:29 am

Author:

Categories: Property News

Tags: ,,,

Generation Rent Responds to Election of Sadiq Khan

Generation Rent Responds to Election of Sadiq Khan

On Friday evening, Labour’s Sadiq Khan was elected the Mayor of London. Tenant lobby group Generation Rent has responded to the appointment, explaining what it will mean for the housing market.

With housing such a serious and widespread issue in the capital, many groups have spoken out about what the new mayor must do to help ease the chronic shortage of affordable homes.

Last week, the Director of Your Move and Reeds Rains, Adrian Gill, called on the new mayor to boost private rental supply in London. He believes that Khan must regard the private rental sector as an ally, not an enemy.

Both Khan and his main rival, Zac Goldsmith, put housing at the core of their mayoral manifestos, highlighting the importance of this continuing issue.

Khan has promised to build 80,000 new homes in London every year, 50% of which will be affordable. He plans to deliver these properties on brownfield land. Khan also hopes to form a new homes division in City Hall, set up a not-for-profit letting agency, restrict rent rises, and further invest in the London Affordable Homes programme.

The Residential Landlords Association has also recently released its own manifesto, detailing what it believes the new mayor should do for the private rental sector.

Following Khan’s appointment on Friday, Generation Rent spoke out about his responsibilities now that he is mayor.

The group’s Director, Betsy Dillner, says: “Generation Rent congratulates Sadiq Khan for winning this referendum on London’s housing crisis. The new mayor has years of underbuilding to overcome, and in the meantime, two million private renters are facing high rents and insecurity, with no way out.

“In order to improve the lives of renters, the mayor needs new powers from the Government over tenancies – something that both he and Zac Goldsmith called for. In theory, this means that all of London’s MPs, on both sides of the House, should now be clamouring for stronger rights for renters. We hope Sadiq will capitalise on this consensus.”

New London Mayor Must Boost Rental Supply, Says Gill

Published On: May 6, 2016 at 10:58 am

Author:

Categories: Property News

Tags: ,,,

The Director of estate agents Your Move and Reeds Rains, Adrian Gill, has spoken out about what the new London mayor must do to boost private rental supply in the capital.

New London Mayor Must Boost Rental Supply, Says Gill

New London Mayor Must Boost Rental Supply, Says Gill

Whoever is voted the next Mayor of London – Sadiq Khan or Zac Goldsmith – must regard the private rental sector as an ally, not an enemy, according to Gill.

He describes London as “the capital of renting”, as many Londoners are priced out of homeownership by spiralling house prices. With so many residents forced to live in the private rental sector, Gill notes that London follows an entirely different set of housing rules to the rest of the UK.

“Our capital is suffering from a serious undersupply of homes to let, which is down to an enormous undersupply of landlords taking up investment opportunities,” he insists.

He reports that average rent prices in London have increased by 19% since the last mayoral election in May 2012, and by 35% since Boris Johnson was first elected in 2008.

“In stark contrast, rents across England and Wales as a whole have risen 19% since May 2008,” Gill says. “If London sets the trend for the nation, this acceleration should be a wake-up call.”

He believes: “To prevent a whirlpool of talent draining out of the capital, the new mayor needs to throw landlords a lifeline. To build a sustainable supply of homes to let for the next four years, the mayor must avoid populist anti-landlord policies that yield easy support in the short-term, but prevent people finding a place to rent further down the line. Instead, stimulating more – not less – investment from landlords is the way to keep rents more affordable.”1

Recent research has analysed which London mayoral candidate will be best for solving the capital’s housing crisis: /london-mayoral-candidate-will-solve-housing-crisis/

We will keep you updated as the results of the London mayoral election are revealed.

1 https://www.lettingagenttoday.co.uk/breaking-news/2016/5/agency-chief-warns-new-london-mayor-to-treat-rental-sector-as-an-ally

Call for action after agent jailed for £400k theft

Published On: May 6, 2016 at 9:08 am

Author:

Categories: Property News

Tags: ,,,

A property boss has warned that the alarming case of a rogue letting agent has underlined the need for urgent change in the private rental sector.

This week, rental manager Angela Clift from Tyneside, was jailed for two years after stealing £400,000 that she was supposed to have collected on behalf of landlords. The money was intended to have been taken on behalf of Newcastle based property firm Keith Pattinson.

Breathtaking

On raiding Clift’s property, police found expensive handbags, clothing and jewellery, not to mention an expensive sports car parked outside.

Upon sentencing, the judge described Clift’s actions as ‘breathtaking.’

Now, Ajay Jagota, founder of sales and lettings firm KIS, believes immediate change is needed to stop this kind of action happening again. At present, an estimated £500m worth of rental deposits are thought to be illegally held.

Jagota said, ‘although I wasn’t in court to hear the exact details of this case, incidents like these are the inevitable outcome of an industry where too much money is flowing around unnecessarily with inadequate oversight over where it ends up. You’ve got tenants handing over hundreds and thousands of pounds in deposits and rent and landlords acting in good faith that it will be money will dealt with appropriately. Of course most agents do just that, but five minutes on Google will show you that is not always the case.’[1]

Call for action after agent jailed for £400k theft

Call for action after agent jailed for £400k theft

Solution

Mr Jagota continued by saying, ‘we’re not just talking about a few quid here and there. We’ve got £500m of rental deposits apparently held illegally and firms collapsing owning hundreds of thousands of pounds-sometimes having been given a clean bill of health by industry watchdogs. And those are just the cases we hear about. That can’t be right.’[1]

‘The simplest solution is to stop taking deposits and move to an insurance-backed model. It’s not just that it works perfectly well in other industries, it’s that you’ think it was ludicrous if people did it any other way. If you rent a car, you don’t hand over hundreds of pounds before you’re given the keys on the understanding that you’re guaranteed to crash it!’[1]

Concluding, Jagota said, ‘the overall value of UK rental deposits is estimated to be £3.2bn. Having people handing over so much cash to an under-regulated industry is something which can’t continue-not when there are simple and effective solutions under our noses.’[1]

[1] http://www.propertyreporter.co.uk/landlords/letting-agent-jailed-after-breathtaking-%C3%A3%C2%A2400k-theft.html

Worries in the Private Rental Sector as Supply Drops Sharply

Published On: April 28, 2016 at 9:40 am

Author:

Categories: Property News

Tags: ,,,,

The supply of rental housing stock on letting agents’ books has dropped sharply, causing worry in the private rental sector, according to the latest report from the Association of Residential Letting Agents (ARLA).

The March Private Rental Sector report found that the supply of rental accommodation fell to the lowest level since the start of last year in March.

Demand was also down last month, with ARLA agents reporting an average of 33 prospective tenants registered per branch, down by 11% from the 37 seen in February. This is also down on last year, from an average of 33.

Worries in the Private Rental Sector as Supply Drops Sharply

Worries in the Private Rental Sector as Supply Drops Sharply

Supply has also dropped on an annual basis. In March 2015, the average number of properties managed per letting agent branch was 192. This year’s figure of 169 properties marks a decrease of 12% and is the lowest level seen since records began in January 2015.

However, the private rental sector appears to be healthy in Scotland, where agents had an average of 273 properties on their books. In Yorkshire and the Humber, agents have 207 properties to manage. Contrastingly, there are just 122 rental properties available per letting agent branch in London.

Due to the 1st April’s introduction of a 3% Stamp Duty surcharge for buy-to-let landlords and second homebuyers, two-thirds (65%) of ARLA agents predict that current and prospective investors will leave the market, causing a decline in the supply of rental properties. Indeed, many have questioned whether buy-to-let is still a lucrative investment opportunity.

In March, rent prices rose for a third (32%) of tenants, and three in five (61%) ARLA members fear that they will increase further as a result of the changes. It has long been considered that buy-to-let tax changes will push rents up for tenants.

The Managing Director of ARLA, David Cox, comments: “We don’t expect falling supply to stop here – the recent Stamp Duty changes are very likely to cause supply to decrease even further, as landlords withdraw from the market.

“Not only do our agents predict that rent costs will increase further, but rental homes may also face a decline in quality over time, as landlords struggle to keep up with maintenance costs alongside the higher Stamp Duty charge.

“While landlords adjust to the increase in costs, we can expect to see one of three outcomes prevailing in the buy-to-let market: landlords absorbing the cost and taking the hit; landlords withdrawing from the market causing supply to fall; or landlords regaining those costs through hiking rents. Next month we can start to assess the damage.”

Wealthy Londoners Turn to the Private Rental Sector

Published On: April 18, 2016 at 11:17 am

Author:

Categories: Property News

Tags: ,,,,,

The number of wealthy Londoners looking to rent their homes rather than buy has risen by a third in the past year, according to Knight Frank.

The estate agent reports that super-rich renters are flooding the private rental sector, as the number of tenants moving into homes worth more than £10m has soared over the last 12 months.

Higher Stamp Duty rates and a drop in house prices in the capital’s wealthiest areas have caused the jump, believes Knight Frank.

Wealthy Londoners Turn to the Private Rental Sector

Wealthy Londoners Turn to the Private Rental Sector

However, letting agents believe that concerns over the forthcoming EU referendum and the recent Panama offshore tax scandal are prompting the super-rich to rent rather than buy.

Indeed, we recently reported that the EU referendum and Stamp Duty changes could bring house prices and sales down.

Knight Frank conducted research on the prime central London market between March 2015 and March 2016. It found that sales of homes worth £10m or more have dropped by 33%.

Under Stamp Duty changes from 2014, buyers of a £15m property will be charged around £1.7m in the tax, which is around three years worth of rent for a similarly priced house.

Additionally, Stamp Duty is now even higher for those buying second homes or buy-to-let properties. As of 1st April, these buyers will be charged an extra 3% in Stamp Duty.

Property expert Henry Pryor says: “No one is predicting that homes at the top end will be worth 10% more in the near future and most people think they will be worth less.

“It is much easier to make a decision to rent and make sure that if you do buy, it’s something you really want.”

Knight Frank also reports that yields for landlords of properties costing £5,000 per week in rent can go above 4% in areas such as South Kensington, Knightsbridge, Mayfair, Holland Park and Regent’s Park.

Pryor adds that the recent Panama Papers scandal means “no one can buy quietly”1 anymore, which is putting buyers off.

Knight Frank warns landlords of pricey homes to expect high-maintenance tenants moving into their properties.

1 http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3544889/Rise-super-rich-renters-Number-lettings-homes-worth-10m-year-wealthiest-avoid-stamp-duty-increase-fears-grow-Brexit.html