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New research reveals what UK residential tenants want

Nearly half of tenants in the UK would be prepared to travel for between 15 and 30 minutes, or between 30 and 45 minutes door to door to reach their office or place of work each morning, according to a new survey. In Wales, some 44% of tenants would prefer to commute for less than half an hour, while in the North East, the proportion is 37%. But in London the majority of tenants, 43%, are happy to travel for between 45 minutes and an hour to the office each day. The survey by YouGov for real estate firm Knight Frank also shows that the majority of tenants outside London commute by car, while in the capital 52% use the London underground for part or all of their journey. Two fifths of respondents said that the ability to store their bike in their rental property was important to them, although this rises to 46% of those aged 35 to 44 across the country. A third of respondents said they would be willing to pay extra in rent to keep a pet in their property as sometimes landlords charge more to cover the cost of the extra refurbishment needed after a tenant who has had a cat or dog vacates the property. Indeed, 4% of those in the private rented sector already pay extra to have their pet live with them, and this rises to 7% for those aged over 55. The results of the Tenant Survey also show that, for the majority of respondents, their ideal length of tenure is up to one year, and this is particularly true of younger tenants, highlighting a preference for increased flexibility in the sector. breakdown of the figures shows that 69%) of tenants aged between 18 and 24 said they would prefer a tenancy agreement of up to a year, with 61% of 25 to 34 year olds saying the same. Respondents said that their preferred timeframe for a break clause, which would allow tenant or landlord to end the lease early, is six months. Some 38% of tenants have lived in five or more rental properties. While the majority of respondents had moved within a mile of their previous property, 19% had moved more than 60 miles, indicating a relocation for work or study, highlighting the flexibility of the private rented sector a tenure. The survey also found that 24% of Londoners are prepared to pay 50% as a maximum amount of their gross annual income on rent, up from 22% last year. A quarter of tenants do not want to, or don’t know if they want to buy a home in the future. Of those that express a desire to eventually buy a home using a mortgage, less than half are currently saving towards a deposit. The research found that a quarter of those living in the private rented sector live alone, while 34% live as a couple without children. Some 43% of 18… Continue reading

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Home lending in UK up by 8.5%, but some sectors seeing falls in recent months

Lending for home purchases in the UK increased by 8.5% year on year to £43.5 billion in the third quarter of 2015, according to the latest data from the Bank of England. However, the data also shows that the proportion of lending to first time buyers decreased in the quarter by 0.3% to 20.4% while the value of residential loans advanced to first time buyers increased by £0.6 billion from the third quarter of 2014 to £12.7 billion. The buy to let proportion of lending also decreased from 15.8% in the second quarter of 2015 to 15.6% in the third quarter of 2015 but increased by 1.3% from the third quarter of 2014. Advances, which include by to let remortgages, increased over the past year from £8 billion advanced in the third quarter of 2014 to £9.7 billion in the third quarter of 2015. This is the highest level of advances since the first quarter of 2009. Buy to let balances outstanding were £174 billion in the third quarter of 2015, which, at 14.5% of total residential balances is the highest proportion since the series began in 2007. The data also shows that the proportion of remortgages decreased from 26.2% in the second quarter of 2015 to 24.1% in the third quarter while the proportion of other new lending decreased from 3.6% to 3.4%. The proportion of gross advances at a loan to value (LTV) of over 90% decreased by 0.7% to 2.8% in the third quarter of 2015 while the proportion of gross advances to borrowers with a single income multiple of more than four time increased by 0.9% to 10.3%. According to Peter Rollings, chief executive officer of Marsh & Parsons, we can expect to see borrowing advance further after the Chancellor’s stimuli unveiled in the Autumn Statement. ‘With £15 billion of funding for housing measures taking prominence in his agenda, this will have given the green light to a queue of first time buyers, particularly in London, where there will be a designated Help to Buy scheme to reflect the accelerated house price growth in the capital, and the extra booster needed to help buyers onto the ladder,’ he said. ‘First time buyers have already been making tracks in the third quarter and in London we’ve seen this as part of wider demographic shift as domestic players and mortgage buyers become more prevalent in the housing market, while overseas investors take a temporary step back to digest the higher stamp duty payable on top-end purchases,’ he explained. ‘But proportionally, across the country, remortgaging activity has been taking up a larger chunk of the lending pie recently, as existing home owners try to build up their defences ahead of an expected interest rate rise in 2016. But the rankings may change in the run up to April’s stamp duty increase for second homes, and buy to let lending is likely to rev up quickly, as investors… Continue reading

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Property listings fall across the UK, more than usual seasonal drop off

New property listings in the UK fell by 21.5% across the country in November following three months of small rises, the latest research shows, with London particularly affected. The data from the Property Supply Index compiled by online estate agents House Simple recorded the biggest drop in property supply in any one month since the index launched in May 2015. The worst fall was in Bath with a wall of 42.6% in November and the data also shows that five of the 15 towns that saw the biggest drop in supply were in the north west of England. Property supply in London fell by 21% and not a single London borough saw a rise in property listings in November while Salford and Chichester were the only locations to see a rise. Indeed Bath has seen a steady decline in supply each month since June, according to the index which tracks the number of new properties listed on Rightmove every month in more than 100 major towns and cities across the UK and all London boroughs. Only 135 new properties in Bath were listed in November, compared to a high of 284 in June. The West Midland cities of Worcester and Solihull saw new property listings drop 41% and 39% respectively in November. While Chichester and Salford saw rises of 14.8% and 11.6% respectively. According to Rightmove figures, Bootle and Swansea have seen the biggest swing in property supply in the past two months, with October seeing a 47.4% and 36.6% rise respectively in property supply compared to September, followed by a 35.1% and 23.9% fall respectively in supply in November compared to October. In London Richmond upon Thames saw new property listings drop almost a third at 31% in November. While, the boroughs of Bromley and Hillingdon, each experienced a 30% drop off in new property listings last month. The figures reveal that there wasn’t a single London borough that saw an increase in new listings in November. Greenwich and Barking and Dagenham experienced the smallest falls in supply, with new listings down just 5% and 9% last month compared to October. More than half the capital’s boroughs, some18 of the 32, saw new stock levels fall by more than a fifth in November compared to October. ‘Everyone knows by now that we have a property supply issue in this country, but these latest figures reveal just how severe that problem is as we head into the New Year. The total number of new property listings in November across the UK was just over 65,000, that is nearly 20,000 less than in October, and the lowest level since we launched the index in May,’ said House Simple chief executive officer Alex Gosling. ‘Historically, as we get closer to Christmas, the property market does start to slow down, so a fall in property supply levels is not unexpected. However, the drop off is too dramatic to be simply attributed to seasonality factors alone,’ he pointed out. He… Continue reading

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