London
Research reveals how much home prices change in London commuter areas
Home owners who work in London can save £3,000 on a property for every minute of commuting outside of the UK’s capital city. New research from real estate firm Savills that looked at 100,000 house sales recorded around 314 stations on the outskirts of the capital found how prices rise as addresses edge closer to the city. It found that for each minute less spent on the train into central London, buyers should expect to pay a further £3,048 to secure the property. The average house price in inner London is £606,000, but by comparison, commuter locations within half an hour’s train ride from London have an average property price of £458,000. Further out the average price is just £337,000 for those with a journey time between 60 and 69 minutes. The most expensive place to buy at the furthest reasonable distance from the city, said to be 60 to 69 minutes commute, was close to Shelford station in Cambridge where the average house price is £622,451. In contrast, homes near Southend Central in Essex which is also just over an hour from London tended to sell for around £188,000, suggesting buyers pay not just for journey time but location too. Moving just 10 minutes closer to London results in a huge difference in price. In Sunningdale in Berkshire, for example, where the train takes 50 to 59 minutes, the average family home costs £930,000. Cutting another 10 minutes off the commute to work brings in Shiplake station in Oxfordshire where houses last year changed hands for around £1 million. The research report points out that house prices in London are currently 2.3 times the UK average, the largest differential since records began in 1973, according to data from the Nationwide. This has led many households currently living in the capital to face a choice of accepting a twice daily train journey, commuting costs and hassle in return for more affordable house prices and lifestyle benefits. Of course, any house price savings must be set against the cost of commuting. An annual rail and underground season ticket now costs from £2,400 to nearly £10,000, depending on length of journey and rail provider. Despite this, savings on house prices will more often than not outweigh the travel costs. An analysis of Savills buyers in the London commuter belt shows 30% of sales over the first quarter of 2016 were to those relocating from London compared to just 23% during the same period in 2015. The firm expects this trend to continue as the ripple effect continues to take hold. Continue reading
Larger number of UK landlords now considering setting up limited companies
With buy to let landlords in the UK now facing paying more property tax and facing cuts to mortgage tax relief, increasing numbers are considering moving their property investments into limited company vehicles. Some 41% of 1,400 landlords taking part in a survey commissioned by Paragon Mortgages indicated that they are considering moving their portfolio into a limited company following the Chancellor’s decision to limit tax relief available to landlords last year. A further 5% have already established limited companies. For larger landlords with 20 or more properties, 14% are already operating as limited companies, while 63% are considering it. In terms of portfolio growth, 43% of landlords surveyed agreed that the stamp duty increase will affect their buy to let purchasing plans over the next couple of years. This figure rises to 63% for larger landlords with 20 or more properties. Despite uncertainty about what impact the changes to tax relief and stamp duty might have however, tenant demand amongst landlords is still perceived as being high. Demand for rented property in the fourth quarter of 2015 was strongest in the South West where 40% of landlords reported demand to be rising. Landlords in the North East experienced the weakest demand, with just 24% of landlords reporting increased demand. Reflecting this demand, average yields have also remained stable and averaged 5.6% across the country, unchanged on the previous quarter. The North West saw the highest yields, at 6.2%, while outer London had the lowest, at 5.1%. ‘Recent government interventions into the buy to let market are now beginning to impact landlord sentiment and plans. The fundamental drivers of the market however, tenant demand and yields, remain strong so there are competing dynamics at play,’ said John Heron, director of mortgages at Paragon. ‘It is interesting to see that concern about the impact of changes to stamp-duty and tax relief is greatest among larger landlords. This concern is likely to grow now that the government have confirmed that landlords with larger portfolios will have to pay the increased rate of stamp-duty on buy to let purchases,’ he added. Continue reading
Housing market cooling in Sydney and Melbourne, latest index data shows
House price growth in Australian capital cities moderated in March with market conditions slowing in Sydney and Melbourne, according to the latest index. The remaining capital cities recorded a range of outcomes from small value increases to moderate declines, the data from the CoreLogic RP index shows. Overall prices increased by 0.2% to take capital city home values 1.6% higher over the first quarter of 2016. The quarterly increase in home values was broad based across the nation’s capitals, with Perth seeing a fall of 0.9% and Brisbane a fall of 0.1%. They were the only two cities to record negative movements in dwelling values over the past three months. ‘The March quarter rise in capital city dwelling values is in stark contrast to the first quarter of 2015, when values increased by 3% which is almost double the current pace of quarterly growth,’ said CoreLogic RP Data head of research Tim Lawless. ‘However, compared with the final quarter of 2015 when capital city dwelling values were down 1.4% the housing market has shown a modest rebound in growth which is well below the strong capital gains recorded over the first half of 2015,’ he explained. But he added that the annual pace of home value appreciation across Australia’s capital cities highlights the slowing growth trend and year on year growth across the capital cities has now reached its lowest point in 31 months, with values up by 6.4% over the past 12 months. Furthermore, no Australian capital city has recorded an annual growth rate in the double digits over the past year. Melbourne has seen the strongest annual growth, with values up by 9.8% over the past 12 months. ‘The housing market has been losing momentum since July last year, when capital city dwelling values were increasing at the annual rate of 11.1%,’ Lawless pointed out. Overall the median price across the capital cities is now $550,000, a rise of 0.2% month on month, up 1.6% quarter on quarter and 6.4% year on year. A breakdown of the data shows that the median price in Sydney is $730,000, up 1% month on month, 2% quarter on quarter and 7.4% year on year while in Melbourne it is $560,000, down 0.6% month on month, up 2.2% quarter on quarter and 9.8% year on year. In Brisbane the median price is $470,000, down 1.2% on a monthly basis, down 0.1% quarter on quarter but up 4.5% year on year while in Adelaide the median is $415,000 with a 0.5% monthly rise, 2.4% growth quarter on quarter and up 3.2% year on year. In Perth the market is actually recovering with a median price of $495,000 which is up 1.2% month on month but down 0.9% quarter on quarter and own 2% year on year with Darwin seeing a similar picture with a median price of $505,000 which is up 2.1% month on month and 2.4% quarter on quarter but down 1.8% year on year. In Hobart the… Continue reading




