Tag Archives: investment

Income producing potential of UK property set to top the agenda for investors in 2016

The income producing potential of various property asset classes is expected to be top of investors’ agendas in 2016, according to a new outlook analysis report. Average UK house prices are set to rise 5% in 2016, but the speed and timing of interest rate rises will dictate the pace and sustainability of price growth, according to the predictions from real estate advisors Savills. In the commercial market, average total returns on UK property investments are likely to slow to approximately 7.5% while in the agricultural market Savills has downgraded its forecasts for the next five years given recent market evidence and the short to medium term expectations for commodity prices and therefore farm profitability. The firm says that income and the ability to unlock the latent value of individual assets through active management are likely to be priorities, due to the current stage of the property cycle and the medium term prospect of interest rate rises, regulation and tax policy in the residential sector, and the outlook for commodity prices in the agricultural sector. In the commercial and residential markets Savills expects a shift towards investment in regional markets, given where recent capital growth has left yields. The referendum on membership of the European Union (EU) presents the greatest uncertainty for UK real estate in 2016/2017, according to Savills, as the outcome has potential implications for all three sectors. The prospects for a pre-referendum investment slowdown may well depend on how close polling companies believe the outcome will be, the report suggests. The report explains that annual house price growth stood at just 3.9% at the end of October, with annual housing transactions appearing to have peaked at 1.2 million per year so the forecast for 2016 is 5% for average UK house prices. It points out that stamp duty changes have left the top end of the London market looking both fully priced and fully taxed suggesting a further delay in the return to trend rates of house price growth. Meanwhile, the mainstream market is more dependent on what happens to the cost of borrowing. ‘Capacity exists for short term price growth if rate rises are delayed further, but rising interest rates will squeeze affordability, making house price growth dependent on earnings and the pace of economic growth,’ the report says. It adds that in some areas in London, for example Ealing, Acton, Greenwich, Lewisham and Waltham Forest, may buck this trend as they attract more affluent buyer groups. Attractive commuter towns will also continue to offer good medium term price growth, particularly where travel times are shortened by rail improvements. Also demand for private rented accommodation will continue to rise. The restriction in tax relief and additional 3% stamp duty charge for buy to let landlords may result in rising private rents and shift investor focus towards higher yielding sectors of the market, particularly key regional cities, it suggests. While Government policy… Continue reading

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UK govt launches pilot scheme to directly commission new homes

Thousands of new affordable homes are to be built by the UK government on public owned land in a bit to speed up its home building programme. In a pilot scheme on five sites in England, the government will ‘directly commission’ the building of up to 13,000 new homes, assuming responsibility for developing land instead of large building firms. Up to 40% of the homes are described as affordable starter homes on the sites at Old Oak Common, in north west London, former barracks in Dover, former Ministry of Defence land in Northstowe, Cambridgeshire, a former hospital site at Lower Graylingwell, in Chichester, and a MoD site at Daedelus Waterfront in Gosport. Prime Minister David Cameron said the move is a huge shift in government policy. ‘Nothing like this has been done on this scale in three decades, the government rolling its sleeves up and directly getting homes built,’ he added. The government will also announce a £1.2 billion fund to build 30,000 affordable starter homes on underused brownfield land in the next five years and the move will fast track the creation of at least 30,000 new starter homes by 2020. ‘Today's radical new approach will mean the government will directly commission small and up and coming companies to build thousands of new homes on sites right across the country,’ said Communities Secretary Greg Clark. ‘This, and the £1.2 billion new Starter Homes Fund, will help thousands of people to realise their dream of owning their own home,’ he added. Continue reading

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Bureaucracy preventing small UK building firms from taking on apprentices

A third of small construction firms in the UK are being put off from taking on apprentices because of the bureaucracy involved, according to a new research report. The construction industry is in the midst of a skills crisis which can only be solved if more employers take on apprentices, says the report from the Federation of Master Builders (FMB). The research shows that 94% of small construction firms want to train apprentices but a third are being turned off by a number of serious ‘fear factors’. These include the cost of employing and training an apprentice and major concerns regarding the complexity of the process. ‘There is strong evidence to show that small construction firms need better information and that if they were more aware of the support that’s available, a great number would train apprentices,’ said Brian Berry, FMB chief executive. The research also found that just under 80% of non-recruiters are not aware of one of the most important apprenticeship grants available to them and just over 75% say knowledge of financial support would make them more likely to take on apprentices. ‘Given that two thirds of all construction apprentices are trained by SMEs it is critical that the Government does everything in its power to remove any barriers that might be stopping these companies from training,’ Berry explained. ‘Looking ahead, the Government’s new apprenticeship voucher could be a disaster for small firms unless it is properly road tested and made as simple and easy to use as possible. We’re also calling on the Government to protect our industry training board which is at risk from the new Apprenticeship Levy,’ he pointed out. ‘The Construction Industry Training Board (CITB) needs reform admittedly but without it the very smallest firms would be left with less financial and practical support for apprenticeship training. Remove this lifeline and you risk worsening the skills crisis,’ he added. The report is published at the same time as another piece of research which shows that construction and trade positions make up just 7% of all apprenticeships, down from a high of 12% in 2006. The research from small business insurer Direct Line for Business also shows that while the number of total apprenticeships has increased by 57% in the last five years to 434,630 during 2013/2014, only two construction and trade focused apprenticeships rank in the top 10, construction skills at nine and industrial applications at 10. This is vastly different to 2006/2007 when construction skills apprenticeships topped the table, with more than 20,000 apprenticeships undertaken in this field. ‘Construction and trade based skills are vital to the UK economy. It’s tradespeople who come to the rescue when our boiler fails, and are the ones who are working every day to build homes, offices and help improve our roads,’ said Nick Breton, head of Direct Line for Business. ‘Apprenticeships are important for budding builders, plumbers and electricians to get into the workplace. With fewer people in apprenticeships there is a… Continue reading

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