Is the Private Rented Sector heading back to the 1970s?
Strikes, rocketing-interest rates and high demand for housing. You would be forgiven for thinking that we were back in the 1970s!
Fashion may have changed drastically since then but with housing affordability at its worst in decades, renters and homeowners now face heading back to the past.
View Full Article: Is the Private Rented Sector heading back to the 1970s?
Will the looming PRS reforms make evicting badly-behaved tenants more difficult?
After years of campaigning and lobbying by tenant groups the Government has committed to huge changes for landlords when evicting tenants.
This includes most controversially binning Section 21 notice evictions, which enable landlords to give notice to tenants without naming a ‘fault’, commonly known as no-fault evictions.
These are used most often to remove tenants who have stopped paying the rent and built up significant arrears, or who are behaving badly or breaking their rental contracts in other ways.
Rishi’s promise
Rishi Sunak recently promised to ensure that landlords will still have the ability to remove tenants who behave badly as part of his campaign to stop anti-social behaviour in our wider society.
But what will all this mean for private landlords once the Renters (Reform) Bill goes live next year, and will evicting rogue or badly behaved tenants become more difficult?
Answering these questions in the latest ThePropertyCast episode are experts Paul Shamplina and Paul Sowerbutts of Landlord Action, along with HFIS chief executive officer Eddie Hooker. Listen in here or watch them on Youtube below.
View Full Article: Will the looming PRS reforms make evicting badly-behaved tenants more difficult?
Rents hit new high as landlords deal with ‘queues of prospective tenants’
Tenants are feeling the squeeze as new rents outside of London have hit a new record high of £1,231 – that’s 33% or £300 more than pre-pandemic 2019.
Renters in London are now forking out £2,567 for a new tenancy with rents 28% or £559 higher than in 2019.
View Full Article: Rents hit new high as landlords deal with ‘queues of prospective tenants’
OPINION: A fall in inflation bodes well for property, but we’re not out of the woods yet!
The FT reports a surge in property stocks as inflation falls, and bricks and mortar property values could soon follow stocks?
The latest Office for National Statistics (ONS) measure of inflation and prices, which includes consumer price inflation, producer price inflation and the House Price Index, rose by 7.9% in the 12 months to June 2023, that’s encouragingly down from 8.7% in May. It indicates a clear trend.
The indication is that CPI may have peaked and is on the way down, certainly encouraging news for mortgage borrowers. What’s more the governor of the Bank of England Andrew Bailey had said at a recent Mansion House speech recently that inflation will fall “markedly” over the rest of the year.
[Source: ONS]
The rate of price increases, thinks Andrew Bailey, will come down due to lower energy costs, which should result in falling food bills for shoppers.
BoE forecasts
The Bank has been criticised for its previous inaccurate inflation forecasts and for not taking action to bring down the rate of rising costs sooner, so the jury is still out on these predictions.
Under recent rigorous questioning from MP members of Treasury Committee, Mr Bailey said in May that there’s “a lot to learn” about operating monetary policy in a world of big shocks, such as the war in Ukraine and the COVID-19 pandemic.
The whole thing could easily go into reverse at any moment with the unpredictability of the war in Ukraine, economic and military threats from China, and for example Russia’s recent failure to sign another grain deal, which could have knock on effects for food prices yet again.
Core inflation more important
Perhaps of more interest to the City, and the main reason for the surge in stock prices, is the underlying inflation trend. The annual core inflation rate in the United Kingdom decreased to 6.9% in June 2023 from May’s 31-year high of 7.1%, compared to earlier forecasts of 7.1%
The core CPIH (includes owner occupiers’ housing costs) annual inflation rate was 6.4% in June 2023. This is down a modest amount from 6.5% in May 2023, which was the highest rate since November 1991, when it also stood at 6.5%. Owner occupiers’ housing costs (OOH) rose by 4.4% in the 12 months to June 2023, up from an annual rate of 4.2% last month and 3.2% a year ago.
The US data is even more encouraging. There the annual core consumer price inflation, which excludes volatile items such as food and energy, fell to 4.8% in June 2023, the lowest level since October 2021, from 5.3% in the prior month and below market expectations of 5%.
UK property
That UK property stocks drove a FTSE 100 rally after these inflation figure falls at least offers the prospect of an end to the recent bout of monetary tightening – hiking interest rates – by the Bank of England.
This policy has really hammered the property sector of late, putting intense pressure on the commercial property sector as their re-financing deadlines approach, also households as their mortgages renewal dates draw near, and the consequent knock on effects for rents.
Housebuilders will also breath a sigh of relieve if this trend continues as their construction programmes, many of which are in danger of going on hold, at a time when more homes are desperately needed, are extremely rate rate-sensitive. Not only that, a housebuilding slowdown would have a serious knock on effect to the resent of the UK economy.
UK Landlords
The UK property sector has gone through a challenging few months to say the least as the Bank of England has raised interest rates on 13 consecutive occasions since December 2021, in a bid to bring inflation closer to its target of 2%.
So far, the impact has been limited as it takes a long time (often 12 to 18 months) for changes to these rates to feed through the economic system and have any effect on the inflation figures. So these early indications of a fall in inflation are a sign of early optimism, very good news for hopes that mortgage rates will gradually come down and house prices stabilise.
Not out of the woods yet…
Barratt the house builder told the FT that demand for new homes had dropped by almost one-third in the year to June 30, and house builder Berkeley Group had said that sales of its new properties decreased 15 per cent for them on a like-for-like basis in the year to the end of April.
The 13 successive rate rises by the Bank had, “reduced buyers’ spending power, weakened sentiment in the UK property market and acted as a drag on activity”, that’s according to Chris Druce, a senior research analyst at property agents Knight Frank.
The modest reductions in inflation may be a good sign, but it’s perhaps unlikely at this stage to change a great deal. Mr Druce said: “Nerves are unlikely to be calmed and the outlook improved until buyers can gauge where the new peak in the bank rate will be.”
Others are warning that the Bank Rate has further to climb before the Bank can be satisfied that inflation has been squeezed out of the system and the inflation rate is definitely on the way back down to its target rate of 2 per cent. Some are predicting that mortgage rates could top 7 per cent before we’re done.
House prices & rents
According to the Halifax, a major mortgage provider, in June this year house prices fell at their fastest annual rate since 2011. An average rate on a two-year fixed mortgage just last week reached 6.66 per cent, the highest level since 2008.
The Office for National Statistics’ (ONS) latest data shows that private rental prices in the UK increased by 5.1 per cent in the 12 months to June 2023, the largest annual percentage change in data gathered by the ONS since January 2016.
[Source: ONS]
This puts tenants under increasing pressure as new tenancies reflect the latest market rent level. This result is, as the rental agent’s body Propertymark says, a “worrying mismatch” between demand and supply, which has added a lot of pressure to the rental sector in June 2023. There are, says Propertymark, an average of 13 new prospective tenants registering per available property.
Propertymark’s CEO, Nathan Emerson, says that:
“In terms of lettings, the number of properties available to rent is 19 per cent lower than last year, while the number of new prospective tenants registering per member branch is up 27 per cent over the same period.”
The small fall in the UK’s inflation data bodes well, and barring the intervention of extraneous events, this could be the watershed moment, but the turnaround won’t be fast and there could yet be more interest rate increases before inflation is fully under control.
View Full Article: OPINION: A fall in inflation bodes well for property, but we’re not out of the woods yet!
Khan calls for short-lets licencing in London as Airbnbs hit 80,000
Mayor of London Sadiq Khan has called on the government to bring in a licensing system for short-term lets in a bid to protect the capital’s housing supply.
More than 80,000 properties are listed on AirBnB alone – 50,401 of these are entire properties – which Khan says is exacerbating London’s housing crisis by pushing up rents.
It isn’t clear how many are being let for more than 90 days a year due to a lack of regulation or resources for local authorities, he says. A licensing system would allow them to limit the numbers of licenses issued in their area and avoid entire streets or blocks being turned over exclusively to short- term lets.
Generate cash
Charging for licences and enforcing business rates for properties let for more than 90 days would generate cash for councils, allowing them to run more effective enforcement activity against unregistered landlords.
Khan also wants ministers to back his call for new legislation requiring short-term lets platforms to share data with local and national government so decision makers can better understand how the sector is impacting the housing supply and local residents.
Adds Khan: “We need transparency about how many properties are being rented out for longer than the rules permit, and accountability to local authorities and residents.”
Last year, Camden Council recorded more than 4,400 short-term lets in the borough, of which 24% exceeded the 90-night limit. Leader Georgia Gould adds: “There are simply no meaningful consequences to deter people from breaching the current legislation and landlords regularly use avoidance tactics to bypass the rules.”
The mayor’s call to action comes as part of his response to a government consultation on introducing a registration scheme for short-term lets in England.
Read more about Airbnb and short lets regulation.
View Full Article: Khan calls for short-lets licencing in London as Airbnbs hit 80,000
How much will achieving an EPC band ‘C’ cost? I decided to find out at my BTL flat
There has been much in the press about the looming EPC ‘tsunami’ about to hit the sector as the Government prepares to enact laws that will see all private rented homes required to reach a ‘C’ energy rating by 2028 at the latest.
LandlordZONE reported only last week that the official English Housing Survey estimates upgrading work for landlords will cost between £5,000 and £15,000 depending on the property.
The report revealed that energy efficiency improvement costs for most private rental homes work out at between £5,000 and £9,999 (46%), while almost a third (30%) could be improved for under £5,000.
At the other end of the scale, 19% of homes would cost between £10,000 and £14,999 to improve to at least an Energy Efficiency Rating (EER) band C, and a further 5% of homes would require £15,000 or more.
But there is growing unease about these figures in some quarters, particularly when many landlords quitting the sector cite the looming cost of EPC upgrades as a key reason.
I would point out that the Government has yet to reveal the final form of its new EPC rules following its consultation back in September 2020.
Real cost?
But what will an EPC upgrade to a minimum ‘C’ band really cost? I decided to put this to the test at my own rental property in South West London, a purpose-built two-bedroom ground floor garden flat built during the 1890s.
Some years ago it gained a weak ‘D’ rating and ever since, like millions of other landlords in the UK, I have been fretting about what to do about the looming deadline of 2025 or 2028, whichever the Government sets as the cut-off date.
Let’s remember, landlords of rental properties after these dates will have to provide proof of an EPC ‘C’ certificate in order to rent them out legally.
I enlisted the help of James Tanner, a qualified EPC inspector who I had talked to earlier this year about the real cost of green upgrades, to inspect my property.
Boiler bonus
The good news for me, and I suspect for many other landlords with elderly properties like mine all over the UK, is that this maisonette achieved a good ‘C’ following the recent installation of Worcester Greenstar 4000 25kw boiler.
This was not because I had particularly sought to ‘go green’ but rather the old boiler was leaking water and rapidly approaching the end of its life.
So for me, the cost of reaching a ‘C’ band EPC was £3,000 which, my invoice shows, included the supply and installation of the boiler.
Poor walls
This change alone helped the property reach the ‘C’ goal despite many other areas of the flat being ‘poor’ including a lack of any wall insulation, old fashioned double-glazing and drafty floorboards.
The upgrades required to fix these two areas of weakness, Tanner concluded, would cost between £4,000 and £14,000 for the wall insulation and £800 and £1,200 for the floors. But for this purpose, they were not needed.
Before readers breathe a sign of relief, I would point out that the apartment still produces nearly two tonnes of carbon a year, and that it is therefore a long way off being ‘zero emission’, the Government’s goal for the whole of the UK by 2050.
That aside, in the short to medium term, it is clear that some of the warnings that EPC upgrades will put landlords under financial duress and even bankrupt them, may be wide of the mark. In my case they were but for others with larger and less-well-built properties, they may not. Time will tell.
Nigel Lewis is editor of LandlordZONE.
View Full Article: How much will achieving an EPC band ‘C’ cost? I decided to find out at my BTL flat
Is the rental market still profitable?
Over recent years, governments have tightened lettings legislation and increased the tax burden on landlords. Add on the current cost-of-living crisis, high mortgage rates, and the Renters (Reform) Bill making its way through Parliament, some landlords are understandably beginning to wonder if it’s still worth having a rental property.
How are prices and rents doing?
Rental income figures are currently robust. For the 12 months to May this year, ONS data shows:
- England +4.7% (excl. London)
- Wales +5%
- Scotland +5.4%
- N.Ireland +10% (year to March 2023)
Data from Zoopla shows that rents for new lets increased by 10.4% in the year to April (9.1% excl. London).
Can this level of growth continue?
Average UK rents as a percentage of earnings are now at their highest level for more than a decade (28.3%, versus a 10-year average of 27%), nevertheless, more than half of renters are reporting that paying their rent is ‘somewhat’ or ‘very’ easy, with only 15% saying that it’s ‘very difficult’.
In addition, spending 30% of earnings is considered affordable, so ‘on average’ there is still some room for rents to rise more, but this is very location specific. As a result, we’re expecting rental growth to slow, but certainly not stop.
Looking at average property prices, although Zoopla reported in June that sellers were having to accept offers that were, on average, 3.8% below the original asking price, we have to view that in the context of the excellent house price growth that we’ve seen over the past few years.
Rightmove has reported that asking prices went up by 6.3% in 2021 and by another 5.6% in 2022, and their data for the last five years shows the average asking price has increased from just under £310,000 in June 2018 to around £375,000 in June 2023.
Even with prices predicted to fall by up to 5% by the end of 2023, most landlords should have seen good enough growth since before the pandemic for that not to be an issue.
In terms of rental income and capital appreciation, the figures look good. Our own Landlord Tracker revealed in June that landlords remain generally positive about the market: 68% plan to maintain their portfolio and 6% plan to expand it.
Is the Renters (Reform) Bill bad news for landlords?
Our view is that the vast majority of landlords, who already let in a very professional manner and look after their property and tenants well, shouldn’t be negatively affected as and when the Bill passes – assuming the contents doesn’t change much. This has been reinforced by our own landlord research – when asked ‘Will the bill change your approach to property investment?’, 40% said ‘no’, compared to 33% who said ‘yes’ (27% are currently undecided).”
Things to check as a landlord
If you’re still unsure whether to hold on to your rental property or sell, here are 5 things to check:
- Check your cashflow. Put together a breakdown of all your ongoing expenditure and check that your property is still making money.
- Know the property’s current value. Check what capital growth you have had recently, as this may well compensate for any loss in income or monthly profit.
- Work out your break-even point based on mortgage rates reaching 7-8%. Calculate how much you would be paying if rates rose to 7-8% – would you still be making an acceptable level of profit or could you finance any losses until mortgage rates fall?
- Could you refinance at a lower LTV? If your property has increased in value significantly since you last remortgaged, you may be able to secure a better interest rate by refinancing at a lower LTV.
- Is the property still meeting your investment objectives? For example, if your investment priority was capital growth so you could realise a lump sum for your retirement, as long as the property is still covering its own costs, there may be no pressure to sell.
Before making any decision, we’d recommend you speak to local property experts, such as the Leaders team in your local branch, who can help advise.
View Full Article: Is the rental market still profitable?
Sadiq Khan demands licensing powers to clamp down on short-term lets
The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, is demanding that he be handed powers to tackle London’s rented home supply which is being ‘decimated’ by short-term lets.
Fuelled by the likes of Airbnb, the capital has seen an explosion in short-term lets in recent years.
View Full Article: Sadiq Khan demands licensing powers to clamp down on short-term lets
Some landlords and letting agents treating migrants ‘heartlessly’ say campaigners
Migrant communities face discrimination while navigating the private rental market, according to new research by Generation Rent and Migrant Organise.
Their poll of 126 migrant private renters found that 42% had struggled to find a landlord or letting agent to rent to them as a migrant and 21% found it difficult to produce a valid form of ID when looking for somewhere to rent.
Some allege exploitative and illegal treatment from landlords and letting agents; 17% reported they had not received any of the documents they were legally entitled to in their current tenancy and 30% had been threatened with eviction. Meanwhile, 57% had experienced mould or damp.
Chief executive Ben Twomey says: “Migrant renters are subjected to an exhausting, unsafe and heartless system, where they are disproportionately forced to bear the brunt of the worst of the housing sector.
The upcoming Renters Reform Bill must work to support all renters into safe and secure housing, including marginalised groups such as migrant communities.”
Exploitation
Maymuna Osman (pictured), organiser at Migrants Organise, believes the government’s hostile immigration system continues to put people at risk of exploitation, even in their own homes.
“Migrants living in temporary and private rented accommodation are consistently forced to face undignified conditions with mould, overcrowding, lack of privacy, damp, no heating/hot water and racist right to rent checks,” she adds.
“We need to remove border controls from housing. People should be able to live in safe, decent homes in their communities and this requires a universal housing standard for all.”
Read more: Leading lawyer asks landlords for help to reverse ‘morally wrong’ HMO rules
View Full Article: Some landlords and letting agents treating migrants ‘heartlessly’ say campaigners
Landlord who ‘ignored responsibilities’ given criminal conviction and £18,000 fine
A landlord who failed to licence her six properties has ended up with a criminal conviction and hefty fines totalling nearly £18,000.
London Land Holdings Ltd, London Land Holdings 1 Ltd and sole director of both companies, Susannah Meisner, were charged with operating a property without a licence and failure to comply with a statutory nuisance abatement notice in relation to broken toilets in one of the properties in Greenwatt Way, Primary Road, Slough (pictured).
Reading Magistrates Court heard that Slough Borough Council’s housing department had made many failed attempts to engage the landlords about selective licences and repairs.
Meisner told the court that the companies were set up to buy the properties and she had handed over control and responsibility to her husband.
She denied having any involvement with their day-to-day running.
Delegated
Giving evidence, her husband Joel Fried said he had delegated everything to do with the property to another person and was under the impression the licensing had been done.
He confirmed another management company was now dealing with the properties.
London Land Holdings was fined £3,236 with costs of £1,553, London Land Holdings 1 was fined £5,393 with costs of £1,553 plus a surcharge of £108 and Meisner was fined £4,228 with costs of £1,553.
Councillor Puja Bedi (picgtured) lead member for transport, housing, highways, the environment and environmental services, says landlords can’t just ignore their legal responsibilities to tenants or ignore repeated contact from the council.
She adds. “We hope other landlords learn a lesson, will be responsive to issues reported and will ensure they have all the necessary licences to operate, for the protection of themselves and their tenants.”
The council has received licence applications from the newly appointed managing agent and will work with it to tidy up the site and make repairs.
Read more about licencing enforcement.
View Full Article: Landlord who ‘ignored responsibilities’ given criminal conviction and £18,000 fine
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