Posts with tag: tax changes

Tax Changes Restricting Access to Homes for Vulnerable Tenants

Published On: March 9, 2017 at 10:38 am

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The Government’s tax changes for landlords are restricting access to rental homes for vulnerable tenants, warns new research.

Tax Changes Restricting Access to Homes for Vulnerable Tenants

Tax Changes Restricting Access to Homes for Vulnerable Tenants

Following yesterday’s Budget that failed to address the housing crisis, the Residential Landlords Association (RLA) is highlighting figures that show that surveyors believe private sector rents will rise by more than 20% over the next five years, severely restricting access to homes for vulnerable tenants.

The forecasts arrive just weeks before changes are introduced that will mean landlords are taxed on their turnover rather than profit, and mortgage interest tax relief will be reduced to the basic rate of Income Tax.

The new research confirms assertions by David Miles, a former member of the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee, that rents will be pushed up by between 20-30% in order for landlords to offset the impact of the measures, alongside the Stamp Duty surcharge on the purchase of investment properties.

Research by both the Council of Mortgage Lenders and Paragon Mortgages has, in recent weeks, suggested that landlords are already raising rents. This echoes concerns first raised by the RLA in its own study conducted shortly after the tax changes were announced.

According to the research released by the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors, around one third of those who responded believe vulnerable tenants are finding it more difficult to access rental housing.

Last year, Dame Kate Barker, who authored an independent review of UK housing supply for the Government, issued a warning that the tax changes risked vulnerable tenants losing their homes, “because the buy-to-let landlord no longer finds the yield acceptable or can’t afford it”.

The Policy Director of the RLA, David Smith, responds: “Today’s survey is a reminder that it is tenants who will ultimately suffer as a result of the Government’s punitive tax changes.

“We need a tax system that supports rather than hinders housing growth, but yesterday’s Budget did nothing to achieve this, despite repeated warnings from the RLA and others over the last 18 months that these changes would have negative effects on landlords and tenants.”

He adds: “Even at this late stage, we call on all sides to work with the RLA as it develops its own blueprint for a sector that provides the homes to rent we so desperately need.”

NLA Disappointed with Lack of News for Landlords in Budget 2017

No news is generally considered good news, but that’s not the case for landlords, who were virtually left out of Chancellor Philip Hammond’s Budget 2017 yesterday.

NLA Disappointed with Lack of News for Landlords in Budget 2017

NLA Disappointed with Lack of News for Landlords in Budget 2017

The National Landlords Association (NLA) was quick to express its disappointment following the announcement, in which Hammond failed to address forthcoming tax changes for landlords.

Despite the NLA issuing its own Budget 2017 wish list ahead of the announcement, the Chancellor did not follow its suggestions and instead virtually left landlords out of the plans altogether.

The Chief Executive Officer of the NLA, Richard Lambert, responds to the Budget 2017: “The Chancellor has passed up his last opportunity to reverse the damaging plans to restrict mortgage interest relief for landlords before they hit, or even to act on suggestions as to how he might ease the immediate impact.

“Sadly, he still seems convinced by the Treasury’s analysis of the consequences, and it looks like he will only change his mind when the reality proves different.”

He explains the negative effects of this: “That’s little comfort to the landlords who will be forced up a tax bracket as a result of the changes or potentially forced out of business, nor their tenants, who will be faced either with higher rents or the struggle to find another home in an already pressured housing market.”

The latest industry forecast regarding the reduction in mortgage interest tax relief came from a former member of the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee, who believes that rents could be pushed up by as much as 30% as a result of the change.

Nevertheless, Lambert was pleased with one aspect of the Budget: “However, we’re pleased the Government has listened to our calls to delay the implementation of the Making Tax Digital programme, as it has the potential to cause chaos as landlords struggle to get to grips with the demands of submitting quarterly tax returns online.”

Are you disappointed by the Budget 2017?

Buy-to-Let Still Profitable in Major UK Cities

Due to the Government’s recent so-called attack on buy-to-let, you would be forgiven for believing that property investment is no longer a viable option. But if you invest in major UK cities, excluding London, it still could be…

Combined with Brexit, stricter lending criteria and an unaffordable property market, the Government’s tax changes are making buy-to-let seem like a broken market.

But investing in buy-to-let could still be a lucrative option if you choose major UK cities, explains Paul Mahoney, the Managing Director of Nova Financial, a property investment and finance advisory company.

Speaking to CityAM, Mahoney explained how the buy-to-let sector is changing:

Paul, we’ll start with the big question, is buy-to-let dead?

“Great question, and certainly a topic of hot debate at present. When considering the tax changes and higher rental coverage rates for lending, there are certainly some areas where buy-to-let property investment is becoming a lot less viable. London and the South East are the main areas that stand out, given lower rental yields that average circa 3.5% that restrict the maximum borrowings in most cases to less than 60%, so a lot more cash needs to be applied.

“And given the average property price in London is now well over £500,000, the average cash investment is well over £200,000 including costs. Due to the low yields available in these areas, properties that are leveraged at 60% loan-to-value (LTV) are barely breaking even and, therefore, landlords are exposed to interest rate rises and potential negative cash flow situations. Add to this the tax changes which will reduce the tax efficiency of an investment for anyone earning more than £50,000 if the investment is in their personal name, and you have quite a few reasons to not be investing now.”

Buy-to-Let Still Profitable in Major UK Cities

Buy-to-Let Still Profitable in Major UK Cities

Well that all sounds quite negative with regards to London. Are there other areas worth looking at?

I’m glad you asked. Many of our clients have been investing in other major UK cities such as Birmingham, Manchester and Liverpool. The most interesting trend affecting the property market currently is North Shoring, which is the movement
of employment from London to 
the North West. Net migration is strongly positive from London to the Midlands and the North West, which is being driven by strong job growth. Manchester alone has benefitted from over 60,000 new jobs since 2011, and major companies, such as Ernst & Young, Price Waterhouse Cooper and Deutsch Bank, to name a few, are contributing. This is driving strong population growth to cities such as Birmingham, Manchester and Liverpool, and changing the dynamics in a very positive way.”

That’s very interesting. I suppose the general consensus has been that London is more stable and will provide more growth – what are your thoughts on that?

Well, if we look at the changes that have occurred in Liverpool over the past 12 months, job growth year-on-year to June 2016 was 38.1% and the economy grew by 15%, which is incredible. There is also over £10 billion of infrastructure spending currently underway in central Liverpool, which is expected to create over 100,000 new jobs over the next decade. That will affect the property market in a positive way.

“Each of the cities on average have outperformed London over the past 12 months for capital growth and are providing circa double the yields, so there seems to be a swing coming about in the UK property market.”

How do the tax and lending changes affect cities like Birmingham, Manchester and Liverpool?

Given that yields generally range from 6-8%+, there is no problem with rental coverage at all and, although the tax changes may slightly impact upon some investors’ cash flow, there is a stronger buffer given the difference between interest rates and the yield is greater.

“These changes
 are therefore far less likely to impact the above mentioned cities and, in
 fact, have already started to impact them positively as the shine comes off London, and investor interest is shifting to each of these cities from both domestic and international investors.”

So where have most of your clients been investing and what returns are they getting?

The vast majority of our clients have been investing in the Liverpool and Manchester city centres renting to young professionals. With the ability to borrow up to 75% LTV at interest rates of circa 2.5% and generate yields of 7%+, the net return on investment is mostly 10%+, excluding growth.

“A fairly average growth rate of 5% per annum offers a 20% return on your deposit, as you’ve leveraged four times, so when you 
add that to cash flow, that is 30%+ per annum. This may seem very high, even too high to be true, but it is due to the borrowings which accelerate returns on your cash deposit four times.”

Is there any way that people can avoid the tax changes?

Yes, many of our clients have been investing through limited company structures or in a spouses’ names, but you should seek advice before doing either.”

Government Challenged on Need for Landlord Tax Changes

Published On: March 6, 2017 at 10:34 am

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The Government is facing a challenge from the Residential Landlords Association (RLA) on the need for forthcoming landlord tax changes.

Government Challenged on Need for Landlord Tax Changes

Government Challenged on Need for Landlord Tax Changes

The Government is being challenged to admit that the reasons for changing the way that landlords are taxed are flawed.

In a recent statement in Parliament, a Treasury Minister, Jane Ellison MP, argued that plans to restrict tax relief on landlords’ finance costs “will reduce the tax advantage landlords have over homeowners in the property market”.

This assertion was rejected last year by Paul Johnson, the Director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, who said that the tax system “is not, and was not, even before the recent changes, more generous to people buying to let”.

Unlike homeowners, landlords pay Capital Gains Tax (CGT) when they sell a property, as well as paying Income Tax on their rental yield.

With a former member of the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee expressing fears that landlords will need to raise rents by between 20-30% to accommodate the extra costs of the landlord tax changes, the RLA is warning that the policy risks “considerable hardship for tenants”.

The organisation is writing to the Office for Budget Responsibility to provide clarification on the tax burden on landlords compared with homeowners.

From 6th April 2017, the amount of tax relief that landlords can claim on their finance costs will be reduced to the basic rate of Income Tax.

The Chairman of the RLA, Alan Ward, says: “We are now weeks away from a tax change that risks investment in new homes and will cause considerable hardship for tenants.

“It is troubling that ministers have not published any evidence to back up their assertions that landlords are taxed less heavily than homeowners. This is no way to make policy.”

He urges: “We call on the Government to use the Budget this week to halt its planned tax changes, which will do little to provide the new homes to rent they claim to want.”

Demand in Buy-to-Let Sector “has Never been so Low”

Demand from landlords in the buy-to-let sector “has never been so low”, according to a leading letting agent.

Demand in Buy-to-Let Sector "has Never been so Low"

Demand in Buy-to-Let Sector “has Never been so Low”

The number of people investing in the buy-to-let sector is falling at an alarming rate, recent reports have shown, while many existing landlords are selling their portfolios ahead of changes to tax relief on finance costs.

Buy-to-let lending improved during the fourth quarter (Q4) of 2016, with the share of lending for acquisitions in the buy-to-let sector increasing from 28% in Q3 to 38% in Q4, which is comparable to the 38% recorded in Q2 last year, shows the Mortgages for Business complex buy-to-let index.

But with tax relief on landlords’ finance costs set to be phased out from next month, and now that the Bank of England’s Financial Policy Committee has been granted greater powers over the buy-to-let sector – making it more difficult for many property investors to get a mortgage due to new, stricter affordability tests – activity in the sector is slowing dramatically, warns the Director of Milton Stone, Sacha Moussaieff.

The central London letting agent comments: “In my 20 years of agency, the demand for buy-to-let property has never been so low and landlords have been driven out of the market.”

He also believes that “the extra 3% Stamp Duty”, on top of additional taxes, “means that becoming a landlord is extremely unappealing”.

Worryingly for tenants, Moussaieff also says that he fully expects to see rent prices rise to combat the “new tax laws on rental income”.

He is not the only industry professional to caution about rent rises; a leading economist fears that rents could rise by up to 30% for tenants as landlords come to terms with the impact of the forthcoming tax changes on their buy-to-let businesses: https://www.justlandlords.co.uk/news/government-attack-buy-let-push-rents/

Are you planning to put your rents up to mitigate financial changes?

 

 

 

 

 

More calls for brokers to advise clients on BTL tax changes

Published On: February 28, 2017 at 10:44 am

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First Complete and Pink are calling on brokers to make sure that any landlords that they have on their books are talking with a qualified accountant, to ensure they are up to speed with the implications of upcoming tax changes.

From April 2017, the Government will start to phase out the higher rate of tax relief over a period of four years. This means that buy-to-let investors will no longer be able to claim 45% tax relief on their monthly interest payments. Instead, they will only be able to have the basic rate of 20%.

Add to this harsher underwriting standards for landlords and it looks like another tough few months for the buy-to-let market.

Workshops

First Complete and Pink recently hosted seven buy-to-let workshops, which gave brokers the chance to speak with experts on how the changes will impact on them and their clients.

Brokers were given an overview of the new tax regime and talked about HMOs and limited companies.

More calls for brokers to advise clients on BTL tax changes

More calls for brokers to advise clients on BTL tax changes

Toni Smith, sales operations director for First Complete and Pink, noted: ‘The specialist buy-to-let workshops are one of many events that First Complete and Pink runs to support its advisors. Events like these demonstrate our commitment to continually offering a market leading network proposition to brokers in an evolving marketplace.’[1]

‘Brokers have a vital role to play in flagging the impact of the tax changes to clients, and to point them in the right direction of a qualified accountant. It is equally important that brokers avoid giving further detailed commentary or debate around the topic of tax treatment of BTL portfolios – as this could be constructed as advice and relied on by the client,’ he added.[1]

Concluding, he said: ‘There are challenging times ahead for landlords and they will need all the help and support they can get. Mortgage brokers – as ever –  will be a key point of contact as new complexities continue to emerge for landlords.’[1]

[1] http://www.propertyreporter.co.uk/landlords/calls-for-brokers-to-upd4te-landlords-and-clients-on-btl-changes.html