Tag Archives: europe
UK asking prices slowed in August but no more than usual for the summer
The price of property coming onto the market in the UK in August fell by 1.2% but as the summer is often a quieter time it is not necessarily all due to Brexit, according to the latest asking price report. Indeed, the monthly decline is in line with the 1.2% average drop over the last six years at this seasonally subdued time of year and the Rightmove report points out that it is usual for sellers in the summer holiday season to price more cheaply. The monthly fall took the average asking price to £304,222 and prices are still up by 4.1% year in year, the data also shows. A breakdown of the figures shows that while first time buyers are paying 0.5% less month on month at an average of £188,237, it is the top end of the market that has seen asking prices fall the most, down 2.9% month on month to £538,755. The report also points out that larger homes are taking longest time to sell while the number of days to sell increased the most in London and South East in the last two months. It suggests that 2016 on course to be a year of two halves with activity skewed in the first half of year with the buy to let surge boosting property transactions to 12% higher than 2015 but the outcome of the second half of 2016 hangs on the strength of the traditional autumn market rebound How different the two halves will be depends on the strength of the traditional market rebound this autumn, especially at the upper end of the market and within the London commuter belt, which currently appear to be the most subdued, according to Miles Shipside, Rightmove director and housing market analyst. ‘Many prospective buyers take a summer break from home hunting, and those who come to market at this quieter time of year tend to price more aggressively. This summer is also affected by both Brexit uncertainty and the aftermath of the buy to let rush in March to beat the stamp duty deadline,’ he said. ‘The average fall in new seller asking prices at this time of year has been 1.2% over the last six years, so this month’s fall is exactly in line with the long term average. The largest price falls at this time of year were 2% and 1.3% in 2014 and 2010, with the smallest fall being 0.8% after the general election in 2015,’ he pointed out. Shipside explained that the sector that would benefit most from an autumn pick-up is made up of larger homes with four bedrooms or more. They are taking the longest time to sell, with an average of 74 days from being advertised on Rightmove to being marked as sold subject to contract by estate agents. This ‘top of the ladder’ sector is also suffering the largest drop in new seller asking prices this month, with a fall of 2.9%…. Continue reading
Most UK landlords are part time with just one property
Most landlords in the UK still consider renting out a property to be a part time activity and the majority own just one property and manage their portfolio as private individuals, new research show. However, there is an apparent trend towards larger portfolios even although rents make up less than half of a landlord’s total income, according to the report from the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML). But the research, carried out with BDRC and the London School of Economics, does show there is evidence that rent is increasingly becoming a significant income stream for part time landlords. In 2016 some 87% of landlords sampled manage their portfolio as an individual or as a couple, roughly unchanged from the 89% reported in 2010. The proportion operating as a company or other group comprises 14%, roughly on par with the 11% reported in 2010. Likewise, the vast majority of respondents in 2010 and 2016, 92% and 95% respectively, do not consider letting to be their main business or occupation. While most landlords still own just one property, there is an apparent trend towards larger portfolios. Between 2010 and 2016, the proportion of respondents who manage only one property fell from 78% to 63%. At the same time, the share managing two to four properties rose from 17% to 30%. The report suggests that this could be due to the difference in the samples of the two surveys. However, the sharp contrast between the 2010 and 2016 data is likely to reflect to some degree an underlying increase in average portfolio size. Such a finding would be consistent with CML data on the number of loans for buy to let house purchases, which has increased by about 19% a year since 2010. Generally, rental receipts make up less than half of a landlord’s total income. However, evidence suggests that rent is increasingly becoming a significant income stream. For about 90% of landlords, rental income is less than half of their total income, virtually unchanged since the 2010 survey. However, the share receiving no rent, typically due to a property being unoccupied, has dropped substantially from 21% to 5% over the past six years. At the same time, the share receiving up to one quarter of their income from rent has risen by about seven percentage points, and the share claiming between one quarter to one half of the income from rent has grown by 10 percentage points. The report suggests that this apparent shift may be attributable to differences in sample sizes. However, if it reflects an underlying trend, this would be consistent with the apparent increase in portfolio sizes, as it is easy to see how owning a larger portfolio would allow a landlord to draw a bigger chunk of their income from rent. Overall the report says that while it looks like the typical landlord is still an individual running a rental business on the side, there appears to have been a gradual expansion of… Continue reading
House prices in Slough and Reading set to benefit most from London’s Crossrail project
House prices in the commuter towns of Slough and Reading have so far benefitted the most from the new Crossrail project that will join central London to routes west and east of the city when it opens in 2019, new research shows. House prices in these two locations have increased by 39% and 33% respectively since April 2014, compared with the regional average of 22%, according to the research from UK home lender the Nationwide. The railway line, to be known as the Elizabeth Line, will stretch from Reading and Heathrow in the west to Shenfield and Abbey Wood in the east, meaning that 40 stations will connect town in Berkshire and Essex to major hubs in London including the City and Canary Wharf as well as Heathrow airport. According to the research commuter towns' property markets are likely to benefit most from the introduction of Crossrail as Greater London stations are already well integrated, with good transport links around the capital, and thus house prices in these areas are unlikely to benefit substantially from marginal improvements in transport links. The strong rate of house price growth in Slough and Reading has been driven by robust demand for properties and a rise in transactions. Following the announcement that the project would go ahead, the number of homes sold in the three months to August 2014 was up 24% year on year in Wokingham, versus an average increase of 16% in the region as a whole in the same period. The research explains that eastern branches of the line do not extend as far out of Greater London as the western section, only reaching Brentwood and Shenfield outside of the capital and this may help to explain why the positive Crossrail effect apparent in the west is slightly more muted in the eastern section. House prices in the borough of Brentwood, which also includes Shenfield, have increased by 43% since the May 2010 government pledge of completion, compared with a regional average in the East of England of 36%. Over the last two years Brentwood house prices have risen broadly in line with the regional average at 24% versus 23%. The report suggests that lower rate of price growth, compared with western areas, may be due to the area already having good transport links to both The City and the Docklands, via Stratford, through Greater Anglia services and also the Shenfield metro now operated by TfL Rail. ‘Slough has been much maligned for many years. However, our research into the effect of the new Elizabeth Line on house prices in the town suggests that this may be unfair and that Slough, in fact, may be a more desirable place to live than people might imagine,’ said Andrew Harvey, senior economic analyst at Nationwide. He pointed out that the analysis suggests that the Crossrail project has provided a significant uplift to prices on the western section of the line to Berkshire. Slough, in particular, has… Continue reading




