The tightrope
of being a Aylesbury buy-to-let landlord is a balancing act many do well at.
Talking to several Aylesbury landlords, they are very conscious of their
tenants’ capacity and ability to pay the rent and their own need to raise rents
on their rental properties (as Government figure shows ‘real pay’ has dropped
1% in the last six months). Evidence does however suggest many landlords feel
more assured than they were in the spring about pursuing higher rents on their Aylesbury
buy-to-let properties.
During the summer
months, historic evidence suggests that the rents new tenants have had to pay on
move in have increased. June/July/August is a time when renters like to move,
demand surges and the normal supply and demand seesaw mean tenants are normally
prepared to pay more to secure the property they want to live in, in the place
they want to be. This is particularly good news for Aylesbury landlords as
average Aylesbury rents have been on a downward trend recently. So look at the
figures here...
Rents in Aylesbury on average for new tenants moving in
have risen 0.9% for the month, making overall annual Aylesbury rents 0.9% lower
for the year
However,
several Aylesbury landlords have expressed their apprehensions about a slowing
of the housing market in Aylesbury and I believe, based on this new evidence,
they may be exaggerated.
Before we get
the Champagne out, the other side of the coin to property investing is capital
values (which will also be of interest to
all the homeowners in Aylesbury as well as the Aylesbury buy-to-let landlords). I believe the Aylesbury property market has
been trying to find some form of balance (one might even say equilibrium) since
the New Year. According to the Land
Registry…
Property Values in Aylesbury are 7.13% higher than they
were 12 months ago, rising by 1.46% last month alone!
Yet, I would
take those figures with a pinch of salt as they reflect the sales of Aylesbury properties
that took place in early Spring 2017 and now are only exchanging and completing
during the summer months.
The reality
is the number of properties that are on the market in Aylesbury today has risen
by 48.6% since the New Year and that will have a dampening effect on property
value increases. As tenants have had less choice, buyers now have more choice ...
and that will temper Aylesbury property prices as we head towards 2018.
Be you a
homeowner or landlord, if you are thinking of selling your Aylesbury property
in the short term, it’s important, especially with the rise in the number of properties
on the market, that you realistically
price your property when you bring it to the market. It is so crucial as the short-term balance of
the local property market see-saw slips more towards the buyer with the
increase in the number of properties for sale. Everyone has access to every property on the market now
through the likes of Rightmove and Zoopla and they will compare your home with other
property like yours.
However, even with this
uplift in the number of properties for sale in Aylesbury, property prices will remain
stable and strong in the medium to long term. This is because the number of
properties on the market today is still way below the peak of summer of 2008,
when there were 1,305 properties for sale compared to the current level of 602
(if you recall, prices dropped by nearly
20% in Credit Crunch years of ‘08 and ‘09).
Compared to 2008, today’s lower supply of Aylesbury properties for sale
will keep prices relatively high...and they will continue to stay at these
levels for the medium to long term.
Less people are moving than
a few years ago, meaning less property is for sale. Fewer properties for sale
mean property prices remain relatively high and this is because of a number of underlying
reasons. Firstly, buy-to-let landlords tend not sell their properties as often
as owner-occupiers, consequently removing the property out of the housing
market selling cycle. Secondly, Stamp Duty is much higher compared to 10 years
ago (meaning it costs more to move). Next, there is a dearth of local authority
rental housing so demand for private rented housing will remain high. Then we
have the UK’s maturing owner occupier population, meaning these older people
are less likely to move (compared to when they were younger). Another reason is
the lack of new homes being built in the country (we need 240k houses a year to be built in the UK and we are currently only
building 145k a year!) and finally, the mortgage rules introduced in 2014
about how much a person can borrow on a mortgage has curtailed demand.
Some final thought’s before I go – to all the Aylesbury homeowners that aren’t planning
to sell – this talk of price changes is only on paper profit or loss. To those
that are moving ... most people that sell, are buyers as well, so as you might
not get as much for yours, the one you will want to buy won’t be as much.
Whatever your plans, if you want some impartial guidance or have another topic you would like to discuss, please do contact me at declen@mortimersaylesbury.co.uk or pop in to our Temple Street office.
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