Investment

UK rental price growth slows but still over 10% higher than a year ago

Rent price rises slowed in every region of the UK over the three months to August 2015 compared to the previous three months, the latest lettings index shows. But they are still rising at double figures rates on an annual basis and are now 10.5% higher than a year ago, according to the finding from the HomeLet rental index. The data shows that across the country the average tenancy signed during the three month period was £992 per month but in Greater London it was £1,558 per month. The index report also points out that the trend is particularly marked in areas where rents have been rising exceptionally quickly this year, notably the South East of England and East Anglia. Nevertheless, on an annual basis, rent prices remain significantly higher than a year ago, with the average UK rent 10.5% higher than in the three months to August 2014. Overall, the average UK rent on new tenancies has increased 1.6% in the three months to August 2015, compared to an increase of 2.2% for the three months to July and June 2015. In the three months to August 2015, with the exception of Wales, where rents rose by 2.5%, no region saw rents increase by more than 2%. Three regions, the South East, North West and North East of England, saw rents fall during this period. The biggest fall was in the North East, where rents paid for new tenancies in the three months to August 2015 were, on average, 2.1% lower than in the three months to July. 'Rents continue to run slightly ahead of house prices, with the majority of the UK still experiencing rising rents, albeit at a much slower pace than we saw in the early part of 2015,' said Martin Totty, chief executive officer of the Barbon Insurance Group, HomeLet’s parent company. 'On an annualised basis, however, rents in most regions are still significantly higher than the same period a year ago, with only the North West reporting lower rents for new tenancies in the three months to August 2015 than for the same period last year,' he added. He explained that there is a robust rental market which is consistent right across the UK with only one or two exceptions, such as East Anglia, where prices rose sharply in 2014 and early 2015 but have now slowed notably, and the South West, which continues to see annual price rises in double figures. Continue reading

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Not enough new homes are being built in many metro areas in the US

Despite positive improvements in the labour market in recent years, new home construction is currently insufficient in a majority of metro areas in the United States, new research has found. The situation is contributing to persistent housing shortages and unhealthy price growth in many markets, according to the report from the National Association of Realtors. NAR measured the volume of new home construction relative to the number of newly employed workers in 146 metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) throughout the US to determine whether home building has kept up with the steadily improving pace of job growth in the past three years. The findings reveal that home building activity for all housing types is underperforming in roughly two thirds of measured metro areas and NAR chief economist Lawrence Yun said that low inventory has been a prevailing headwind to the housing market in recent years. 'In addition to slow housing turnover and the diminishing supply of distressed properties, lagging new home construction, especially single family, has kept available inventory far below balanced levels,' Yun explained. 'Our research shows that even as the labour market began to strengthen, home building failed to keep up and is now contributing to the stronger price appreciation and eroding affordability currently seen throughout the US,' he added. The study examined job creation in 146 metro areas from 2012 to 2014 relative to single family and multi-family housing starts over the same period. Historically, the average ratio for the annual change in total workers to total permits is 1.2 for all housing types and 1.6 for single family homes. The research found that through 2014 some 63% of measured markets had a ratio above 1.2 and 72 percent had a ratio above 1.6, which indicates inadequate new construction. According to Yun, with jobs now being added at a more robust pace in several metro areas, the disparity between housing starts and employment is widening. In 2014 alone, the average ratio of single family permits to employment jumped to 3.7, while the ratio for total permits increased 50 percent to 2.4. 'Affordability issues for buying and renting because of low supply are already well known in many of the country’s largest metro areas, including San Francisco, San Diego and New York. Additionally, our study found that limited construction is a widespread issue in metro areas of all sizes,' Yun pointed out. The markets with the largest disparity of jobs versus home construction, single family, and currently facing supply shortages are San Jose, California, at 22.6, San Francisco at 22.4, San Diego and New York, both at 13.9 and Miami at 11.1. Yun explained that while construction is limited in some markets such as Trenton–Ewing in New Jersey and Rockford, Illinois, they aren’t facing inventory shortages despite having high ratios because their job gains are more moderate. Single family housing starts are seen as nearly adequate to local job growth at a ratio of 1.6 in Jackson, Mississippi, Colorado Springs, Chattanooga in Tennessee, Amarillo, Texas, and St. Louis. Looking ahead, Yun said that there’s… Continue reading

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Three year study says self builders in UK struggle to fulfil their dream home

Even people with the means to build their own home are struggling to do so in the UK in a housing sector dominated by traditional models of construction and ownership. According to a new report from Goldsmiths, University of London, despite the government wanting to encourage more people to build their own home and the huge popularity of the television programme Grand Designs, it is only those with access to certain things that ever end up fulfilling their dream. Dr Michaela Benson of the university's Department of Sociology at Goldsmiths, spent three years studying self building as a form of housing provision in the UK and examining the changing context of housing in Britain, from supply through to regulation, and the role this plays in contemporary self build. She conducted numerous interviews with those who have created their own homes, offering a personal, sociological, focus in contrast to most policy or industry led research and found that self build is a housing option only really open to those with social, cultural and economic capital as well as existing skills and knowledge. This is in contrast to the vision of Walter Segal and his self build projects in 1970s Lewisham, which saw men and women from a range of backgrounds come together to learn skills and create new communities, with dwellings that were quickly and cheaply built as well as environmentally friendly. Dr Benson has explored a diverse range of paths into self building, from community focused projects to self builds that weren’t planned but became necessary to families whose former houses had deteriorated to the extent to which the only solution was to knock them down and start again. She also found that while access to financial resources are a necessity in order to become a self-builder, even those with capital find that the housing sector and related industries just aren’t geared towards their needs. Many self builders seek new specialist materials, particularly those that reduce energy consumption for their homes, but have difficulty finding people with the expertise to install them. Self build mortgages are just as hard to procure. It’s apparent that more extensive adaptation of services and products to the needs of self-builders would be valuable if the industry is to be scaled up, Dr Benson argues. She says that the population of self builders can and should be more diverse. 'Although the majority of self build projects result in home ownership, the community self build sector also promotes self build for social or private rent, while some innovative schemes such as LILAC centre on mutual home ownership,' she said. 'These are an important part of the housing landscape that present real opportunities to challenge the system of house buying and tenure as it currently stands. Self building could challenge the dominant modes of housing procurement and a market oriented towards home ownership and profit making,' she added. The report includes a number of recommendations aimed at shaking up the traditional housing sector and making self building a more… Continue reading

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