The UK Rental Market is not all doom & gloom…
Buy-to-Let:
Andrew Turner, interim
chief executive of Commercial Trust, writing for the FT Adviser, thinks that buy-to-let is far from a sick patient when
it comes to providing good returns for private investors.
Responding to media
reports about how uncertainty has slowed down both the buy-to-let and
residential housing market, particularly because of Brexit, Turner is still
bullish.
Not denying there’s been a slowdown in both residential and
buy-to-let markets over the past 12 months, Turner cites UK Finance reporting
that while buy-to-let re-mortgage activity has soared, the total number of
buy-to-let purchase completions in 2018 was 11.2 per cent less than in 2017.
Also, UK Finance’s figures for January 2019 show a 1.5 per
cent reduction in the volume of residential lending, over the start of 2018. People,
Turner concludes, are sitting tight, and renting for now, rather than buy their
own homes.
Some Key Property
Market Indicators:
- There has been a slowdown in the buy-to-let sector
- There has been intervention by the government in the buy-to-let market, but
- The number of buy-to-let products shows lenders are positive about the outlook
Index of Private Housing Rental Prices indices, Great Britain, January 2011 to January 2018
A main reason for the continuing health of the rental sector
is that for many of those who are renting, saving for a deposit remains very
challenging. The average time for a young person to scrape together a
sufficient amount for a deposit on a small property in London is something like
10 years.
According to the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local
Government’s (MHCLG) in its recently published English Housing Survey for
2017-18, the private rental sector (PRS) has remained unchanged over the last
five years at 4.5m households. This is equal to almost 20% of the total.
The survey shows that around 58 per cent of tenants expect
to buy a property eventually, and 26% of them expect to do this within the next
two years. On the other hand, around 41% thought it would take around five
years before they could own.
Those timescales, Turner suggests, means that Brexit is not
a major consideration, but that landlords have “more immediate and tangible
concerns�, basically because of the accelerated government intervention in the
sector.
Tax changes such as the introduction of a stamp duty premium
on additional properties, and the gradual reduction of mortgage interest tax
relief are worrying developments for buy-to-let landlords.
In addition, regulatory changes around the tenancy laws including
new HOM (house in multiple occupation) licensing laws, tougher safe living and
energy efficiency standards, plus the imminent tenant fees ban, have all
conspired to make some landlords decide to sell up, or at lease downsize, if not
delay investment.
Small-scale and amateur landlords are finding it
increasingly difficult to keep abreast of the changes and many are at a loss to
adapt and develop a successful formula which works for them. Letting is
becoming more labour intensive due to all the “red-tape� around lettings, so
unless they are very well organised it’s difficult for them to find the time,
when they are working as well.
Larger-scale portfolio landlords are able to devote the
necessary time and position their business operation in a tax efficient way, particularly
in regard to the new mortgage borrowing requirements.
So the game is swinging away from the casual or amateur
landlord towards the portfolio landlord who is well organised, has strategies in
place that take advantage of economies of scale and risk reduction.
“There are still plenty of reasons why buy-to-let
investments can offer opportunities to those looking for solid financial
returns,� says Turner.
In the right place and with the right kind of tenancy
management, buy-to-let still compares very favourably with other forms of
investment.
The positive factors that Turner identifies are:
• There are opportunities in the market as prices come “off
the boil� meaning that opportunities are waiting out there. Buying an existing rental
might mean less work is needed when purchased.
• Forecasts as the survey above suggests, there is no
reduction in demand for rental homes as thousands are putting buying on hold. In
February, London estate agent Foxtons reported that in 2018 there was an 8 per
cent increase in renter registrations in London, compared to 2017.
• There are big difference in the performance of buy-to-let
throughout the regions, some locations giving much higher income yields than others,
especially in the north of England.
• With government investment in infrastructure such as the “Northern
Powerhouse�, businesses are relocating to the regions in the UK and workers
have followed. This has helped to create vibrant economies across the major UK cities
for buy-to-let.
• Historically, house prices have always recovered from short-term
economic or political crises, and investment in bricks and mortar has always
been regarded as a long-term strategy, and post Brexit will be no exception.
• The massive volume of buy-to-let mortgage products in the
market place (1,162 in late February 2019, according to Moneyfacts), reflects a
positive buy-to-let outlook from lenders. This choice also comes with lots of incentives
and competitive mortgage rates.
Interest rates remain historically low and there’s no sign
of a change here. For example, the rate for a five-year fixed-rate buy-to-let
mortgage is more than 2 per cent less than in 2010.
Turner sees this time as a buying opportunity not to be
missed, while these rates remain low. By delaying he says, landlords could miss
out on the lowest deals, if rates should rise in the future.
With a sound and responsive investment plan in place, Turner
argues, “buy-to-let landlords can prosper and Brexit offers no reason why that
should not continue.�
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