Investment

International tenants dominate top end of central London prime rental market

International tenants and low stock levels are key features of the current prime central London lettings market, especially at its uppermost levels, according to the latest analysis report. Domestic tenants, including students and middle ranking pied-a-terre seeking business commuters, tend to dominate the rental market price band of £300 to £1,000 per week, according to the review from prime lettings specialist E J Harris. But the £1,000 to £4,000 per week price band is characterised by bankers and corporate tenants and above £4,000 per week the market is dominated by ultra-wealthy visitors from Russia, Africa, the Middle East and Asia. Using research from their own client database, local market intelligence and drawing on wider industry figures, the firm has produced a guide to top addresses, tenant profiles, typical apartment/house sizes for different rental price brands across the prime sector. It found that rental values have increased by 1% in prime central London over the past three months, achieving an average gross yield of 2.92% and the average rent per square foot in is currently £54. Tenants seeking rental properties on the market for £300 to £500 per week in prime central London can expect to find one bedroom apartments, providing 300 square feet of accommodation, typically located in Shepherd’s Bush, Holland Park and Bayswater. Tenants in this price brand are normally individuals or young couples aged 25 to 35 who looking for a pied-a-terre in the capital or young graduates who have landed their first job. Stock in this price brand is currently down 10%. Those searching for homes available to rent for £500 to £1,000 per week can find one or two bedroom apartments, providing 700 to 900 square feet of accommodation. Tenants will typically find a wider choice of properties available at that price range in Notting Hill, Marylebone and East Mayfair where the district borders Oxford Street. Tenants with this price brand are often students from wealthy families, whose parents are willing to pay their entire rent and deposit up front in order to secure the property they want. This price bracket also includes European and American corporate tenants who are relocating to London, and are typically couples with children or young single professionals. Stock within this price band is also currently down 10%. Tenants looking to spend £1,000 to £2,000 per week can expect to find two bedroom apartments offering 1,000 to 1,500 square feet of living space and situated in Mayfair, Belgravia or Marylebone. Typically, tenants searching for properties at this level are socialites seeking luxury pads or corporate tenants relocating to London, usually for a three-year stay. Stock in this price band is currently up 5%. E J Harris reveal that tenants able to spend £2,000 to £4,000 per week will find two and three bedroom luxury apartments situated in Belgravia, Mayfair or Knightsbridge. The typical profile of tenants seeking homes at this price range are CEO’s and… Continue reading

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UK commercial property market set to see record breaking year as confidence rises

Strong investor confidence is set to propel the UK’s commercial property market into a record breaking years with deal volumes at the end of the third quarter already over £50 billion. If, as anticipated, volumes in the fourth quarter of 2015 follow the patterns observed in the final quarters of 2013 and 2014, investment in the UK commercial market this year will break the £70 billion barrier for the first time. According to international real estate advisor Savills it is the strong confidence in the market that is the driving force behind the growth in activity. Its latest report says that despite ongoing uncertainty over Greece’s position in the Eurozone and a slowdown in the Chinese economy, UK property as an asset class continues to outperform investor expectations. Average prime yields have remained at 4.65% for the second successive month, however resurgent retail activity and strong UK institutional interest in south east offices could exert downward pressure on yields in these sectors, the report warns. ‘Last year 59% of investment activity in UK property took place outside London, a trend that is set to continue as investors seek the value afforded by the rental growth prospects in supply constrained regional markets, alongside the opportunity to build scale by acquiring portfolios,’ said Kevin Mofid, research director at Savills . ‘However, regional markets can be more susceptible to Government policy changes than the capital. Investors should therefore consider the potential impact that the extension of commercial to residential permitted development rights could have on rental growth and vacancy rates in regional office and industrial markets,’ he explained. ‘Nonetheless, given that investors currently place UK property head and shoulders above other asset classes, we don’t envisage that these measures will materially affect investment activity going into 2016,’ he added. A separate report from Savills says that non-domestic real estate investment outside of London will reach a record high by the end of 2015 with some £10.5 billion invested in real estate outside the capital by international investors in the first eight months of 2015. Savills predicts that this will rise to £14 billion by the end of 2015, the highest volume since it started collecting data in 2000, and nearly half of all the non-domestic investment in the UK as a whole. In the 12 months to August 2015, portfolio purchases accounted for the majority, 64%, of investments, due to the preference of investors for larger lots which are less common outside of London. Scotland and the South East proved to be the most popular regions, each attracting a 7% share of investment, with the North West and West Midlands in joint second place attracting a 5% share each due to the strong rental growth projections for the Manchester and Birmingham office markets, as well as the comparatively high yields on offer. The most popular sector for investment is retail and leisure, accounting for 57% of investment, driven by several… Continue reading

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Call for more support for equity release in UK housing market

Housing wealth in the UK should be used to better support an ageing population by making equity release more accessible and allowing it to develop further, it is claimed. The Equity Release Council has released key recommendations in a White Paper calling on the Treasury to take a lead on coordinating relevant policy to benefit consumers. It examines how people's housing wealth can provide people with an additional source of finance in later life and help the Government to better support the UK's ageing population. The Council proposes that the Treasury's oversight of other relevant departments, including the Department for Work and Pensions, the Department for Communities and Local Government and the Department of Health, combined with its responsibility for financial services, makes it the natural choice to coordinate policy on equity release. The report also identifies where Government policy could do more to consider equity release as a way of meeting people's retirement needs, and where regulation is providing direct challenges to the development of the sector. It argues that a cohesive approach across departments is necessary to avoid unforeseen consequences and ensure the maximum benefit for consumers and Government. The White Paper includes specific recommendations, including that the Government should consider the role of equity release as part of its strategy for addressing the challenges of an ageing society, ensuring that people are able to utilise housing wealth to improve their income and wellbeing in retirement where appropriate. It also suggest an expansion of the scope of the Pension Wise service to enable users to understand how accessing housing wealth may provide solutions to satisfy their objectives and a consideration of how equity release can be utilised to help people pay for home care, providing financial resources which can help people retain ownership of their home and stay living in it for longer. In conjunction with local authorities and other stakeholders, it says it is possible to develop clear pathways for local authorities to use to help people who are seeking support on financing care services understand when they should access regulated financial advice and how they should go about doing so. It also calls for the development of a range of case studies to illustrate best practice on referral to financial advice on care funding and using the Financial Advice Market Review as an opportunity to ensure that people nearing retirement are able to access independent financial advice, which allows them to consider the full range of relevant issues including retirement funding, paying for care, home adaptations and leaving money to children and grandchildren. It wants the Financial Conduct Authority's (FCA) review of the equity release market is wide ranging and considers the impact of the regulatory framework on the equity release market, as well as other potential barriers to increasing the size of the market. ‘The equity release sector is growing fast, and is likely to become even more popular in the next few years. This growth is driven by a… Continue reading

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