Tag Archives: housing

Fewer arrears for tenants in UK as jobs market improves

Fewer tenants in the UK are falling into serious rent arrears thanks to the improving employment market and landlords are benefitting from healthier tenant finances, according to the latest lettings agents report. In absolute terms, just 86,200 tenants across the UK are more than two months behind in their rent in the first quarter of 2016 compared to 89,300 in the previous quarter, a fall of 4%. The data from the report from Your Move and Reeds Rains also shows that just 1% face serious arrears and for landlords there are the fewest buy to let mortgage arrears since 2007. Since 2008, there have been on average 92,600 tenants in serious arrears in the first quarter of each year meaning that the first quarter of 2016 is also substantially lower than the long term average. ‘Fewer tenants in serious arrears reflect the health of the jobs market. With an extra 44,000 jobs created in the first quarter of this year, thousands of tenants have been able to get their finances back on track and pay down late rent,’ said Adrian Gill, director of estate agents Your Move and Reeds Rains. He explained that serious rent arrears peaked in the third quarter of 2012 when 124,800 households owed more than two months’ rent and when unemployment in the UK stood at 7.9%. Since then a boom in employment has been responsible for lifting many of the most precarious tenant households out of serious rent arrears and onto a more sustainable course. The direction of travel looks very positive. ‘A reduced risk of serious rent arrears will be welcome news for existing landlords, facing so many artificial challenges posed by government meddling. But no one should be complacent as managing a property is never simple. Some landlords are being held back from buying property by the Stamp Duty Surcharge. If this stems the flow of new homes into the rental market, then shortages in some areas could push up rents and hitting affordability,’ Gill pointed out. The number of tenants more than two months behind with rent has fallen by 16% since the eve of the financial crisis and recession in the second quarter of 2008 from 102,900 to today’s total of 86,200. This is despite the expansion, over exactly the same period. At the start of this period, there were 3.6 million households living in the UK private rented sector. Now, after just eight years, this has grown by 62% to reach a total of 5.8 million households as of the first quarter of 2016. ‘The massive growth in the number of homes available to rent, driven by both deliberate landlords and accidental landlords coming into the market, has ensured that rents have not outpaced the ability of tenants to pay. The affordability of renting and the number of tenants falling behind on rent also needs to be seen within the context of… Continue reading

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Research reveals the housing market winners to mark first games of Euro football cup

With the European Championship football tournament underway new research shows which countries have done best in terms of house prices since the last cup four years ago. The price of mainstream homes have increases in more than 74% of the countries competing in the tournament, according to the study from international real estate agent Knight Frank. Turkey topped the rankings with an increase of 65.6%, followed by the Republic of Ireland with price growth of 34.3% and Sweden up 32%. In fourth place is Iceland with house prices up by 30.6%, followed closely by England where prices are up 29.7%, Germany up 19.7%, Austria up 16.5%, Northern Ireland up by 15.6% and Russia up 15.2%. Next is Wales with price growth of 14.1% in the last four years, Switzerland up 10.3%, the Czech Republic up 8.2%, Hungary up 8.1%, Belgium up 4%, Poland up by 1.8%, Portugal up by 1.4% and Slovakia up by 0.9%. The country with the worst ranking is Ukraine where house prices have fallen by 22.6% but this is not surprising considering the unrest in recent years. Second from bottom is Italy where prices are down 13.1% and then Croatia where prices have fallen by 9% since the last tournament in 2012. In Romania prices are down 0.5%, France down 5.7%, Spain down 7.2%. Kate Everett-Allen, head of international residential research at Knight Frank, pointed out that the divergent performance of northern and southern Europe is evident. ‘The Nordic countries along with Ireland, England and Germany have seen prices accelerate while prices in most of the southern European economies still sit below their level in 2012,’ she said. Continue reading

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House price growth slowing in Spain, but headline figures mask regional differences

Although generally the housing market in Spain is perceived as recovering well there are signs of growth slowing, according to some of the latest figures to be published. Residential prices grew by 1.3% in May and by 1.5% in the first five months of the year, but this is lower than the 1.9% registered up until the end of April. The data from the latest index property appraisers, Tinsa, also shows that the average price of a property in Spain is still down 41.4% since 2007. However, the national figures hide signs of real growth in some sectors and locations. For example, prices in capitals and large cities as well as in the Balearic and Canary Islands were up 3.5% year on year in May. On the Mediterranean Coast prices increased by 1.6% and metropolitan areas saw smaller annual growth at 0.7%. But in the rest of the municipalities category prices have been falling, down 2.5%. But even the breakdown of the figures shows there are signs of slowing growth. Since the beginning of 2016 average prices on the Mediterranean Coast remained at the same level as the beginning of the year but were up 1.3% in the capitals and large cities and the metropolitan areas. In the first five months of the year the rest of the municipalities category saw growth of 1.5%, and the Balearic and Canary Islands have seen the strongest price growth at 4.2%. Meanwhile, the latest asking price index from property portal Fotocasa shows that sellers reduced their price expectations by an average of 0.7% in April compared to a year ago. The average asking price in April was €1,624 per square meter, down by 0.2% month on month but overall the index has been stable for 12 months now with prices never varying more than 1% either up or down. Beatriz Toribio, head of research at Fotocasa, believes that house prices will continue to go in different directions during 2016. ‘Whilst in some areas of the country prices are stabilising or even rising, in others they continue to fall hard. This is a consequence of the crisis the sector has lived through, which has left a market of two or more speeds,’ she explained. Official figures released by the Government also suggest a slowing in recent months. It says that year on year prices have increased by 2.4% but by only 0.2% in the first quarter of 2016. A breakdown of the figures show that house prices rose the most in the Balearics with growth of 9.6%, followed by Catalonia up 4.9%, Madrid up 4.2%, Extremadura up 3.7%, Galicia up 2.6%, the Valencian region up 2.4%, and the Canaries also up 2.4%. Continue reading

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