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UK parents lending to offspring to help buy a home set to reach £5 billion in 2016

Parents are set to lend over £5 billion to their offspring to buy a home by providing deposits for over 300,000 mortgages, purchasing homes worth £77 billion in 2016, according to new research. It means that the so called Bank of Mum and Dad is the equivalent of a top 10 mortgage lender in the UK and will be involved in 25% of all property transactions that take place in the country this year. Research from financial services group Legal & General and economics consultants says that this is likely to continue as long as the supply problem persists in the UK housing market. ‘The Bank of Mum and Dad plays an increasingly vital role in helping young people take their early steps on the housing ladder,’ said Nigel Wilson, chief executive officer of Legal & General. He pointed out that younger people today don’t have the advantages the baby-boomers had, including cheap housing that delivered windfall gains. ‘People will always want to help family members as it is a natural thing to do. Relying so heavily on the Bank of Mum and Dad however risks increasing inequality as many young people today are not lucky enough to be able to access parental support when buying a home, or can’t afford to buy even with parental help,’ Wilson explained. ‘We have a supply problem in housing as we are simply not building enough houses. We need to build more, especially as the Bank of Mum and Dad could soon start to experience a funding crisis of its own,’ he added. The research also found that the Bank of Mum and Dad’s average financial contribution is £17,500 or 7% of the average purchase price. Some 256,400 purchases are likely to be assisted by parent with a further 22,500 and 27,000 supported by grandparents and other family members or friends respectively. Some 57% of Bank of Mum and Dad contributions are gifts, 18% are loans with no interest and 5% are loans with interest. The report suggests that the Bank of Mum and Dad will not run into a nationwide ‘funding crisis’ for another generation, around 2035, but the regions with the highest and fastest growing house prices will face this problem much sooner. London is already at the tipping point when it comes to such funding. In 2016 London home owners that received some financial assistance from family and friends, got an average of 6.2% of their home’s total purchase price from the Bank of Mum and Dad. This represents 51% of the average Bank of Mum and Dad household net wealth in London, excluding property assets. In the South East, the average family contribution towards a loved one’s home purchase will cross the 50% mark in 2025 while for the East of England this will happen in 2028. Families clearly cannot continue to use all of their net wealth to help their offspring onto the housing ladder without putting their own financial stability at risk. This… Continue reading

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House prices and rents rise in Auckland in March

House prices in Auckland, New Zealand, look set to continue rising throughout this year after a buys month of March, and rents are also up, the latest index figures show. The average sale price for the month was $866,782, and the median price was $798,000, according to the latest data monthly report from real estate agents Barfoot & Thompson. The March average sales price was the third highest on record, within $10,000 of the all-time high in November last year, and 5.4% higher than last month while the median price at $798,000 is the second highest on record, within $2000 of the all-time high in December last year, and up 8.1% on February’s median price. ‘March is always one of the busiest sales months of the year, and a good indicator of where prices are tracking for the remainder of the year,’ said Peter Thompson, managing director of Barfoot & Thompson. ‘When prices are this strong in March the trend is for prices to hold steady through the year. As it has been for the past two years, lack of supply remains the main price driver. New listings in the month at 1,874 were solid, but by month end, the number of available listings at 3,093 was a decline of 6.8% on the number the month previously,’ he pointed out. ‘There has been a definite increase in the number of properties being sold under the hammer at auction, indicating keen buyer competition for available properties. Although a record number of building permits are being issued, and new homes are springing up everywhere, Auckland is simply not building homes fast enough to keep up with the growing population,’ he added. He also pointed out that Statistics New Zealand reported that in February alone the population of Auckland increased by about 3,000 people. Based on the Auckland average occupancy for houses, of three people to a property, theoretically 1,000 additional properties would have had to become available in the month to house such growth. The data also shows that in March the firm sold 474 properties for in excess of $1 million, the highest number ever in one month and it represented more than a third of all properties sold. At the other end of the scale, 146 properties, or 10.9%, sold for under $500,000. Data from the firm also shows that the average weekly rent for one bedroom properties has risen by 4.8% from $316 to $331 year on year, while for two bedrooms rents are up 6.3% from $398 to $423. Rents for three bedrooms are up by 5.6% from $486 to $510 compared with March 2015, four bedroom rents increased by 5.1% from $614 to $644 and for five or more bedroom rents were up by 5.8% from $755 to $791. Thompson explained that Auckland's usual rise in rent didn't occur in March and over the last 12 months, Auckland saw an increase of $28 or 5.8% for all property types. However in the… Continue reading

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UK private sector rents up 2.6% year on year

Private rental prices paid by tenants in Great Britain rose by 2.6% in the 12 months to March 2016, unchanged when compared with the year to February 2016. The figures from the private housing rental index from the Office of National Statistics also show that rental prices grew by 2.8% in England, 0.2% in Wales and 0.6% in Scotland. Rental prices increased in all the English regions over the year to March 2016, with rental prices increasing the most in London at 3.7%. Since January 2011 England rental prices have increased more than those of Wales and Scotland. The annual rate of change for Wales at 0.2% continues to be below that of England and the Great Britain average while rental growth in Scotland has gradually slowed to 0.6% in the year to March 2016, from a high of 2.1% in the year to June 2015. Private rental prices in England show three distinct periods with rental price increases from January 2005 until February 2009, rental price decreases from July 2009 to February 2010, and increasing rental prices from May 2010 onwards. When London is excluded, England shows a similar pattern but with slower rental price increases from around the end of 2010. Since the beginning of 2012, English rental prices have shown annual increases ranging between 1.4% and 3% year on year, with March 2016 rental prices being 2.8% higher than March 2015 rental prices. Excluding London, England showed an increase of 2.1% for the same period. In the 12 months to March 2016, private rental prices increased in each of the nine English regions. The largest annual rental price increases were in London at 3.7%, down from 3.8% in February 2016, followed by the East at 3% and the South East at 2.9%, both unchanged over the same period. Annual price increases have been stronger in London than the rest of England since November 2010. The lowest annual rental price increases were in the North East at 0.8% down from 0.9% in February 2016, followed by the North West at 1.1%, up from 1% and Yorkshire and the Humber at 1.2%, down from 1.3% over the same period. According to Adrian Gill, director of lettings agents Your Move and Reeds Rains, rents will start to build a gradual but inevitable path, ultimately reaching the very peak of the market in the autumn. ‘Early spring is just the calm before the storm. Demand for homes in the private rented sector is driven by the flow of jobs and the flux of a generally more mobile workforce looking for a place to live,’ he said. ‘This reflects the strengths of private renting, the opportunity for young independent adults to strike out on their own, or for families to move across the country and earn the best possible livelihood. In the towns and cities with the biggest renting populations it is a constant struggle for supply from landlords to match demand from tenants. With a… Continue reading

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