I don’t know
about you, but if you watch Sky News every waking hour or read the newspapers,
it always seems we as a Country, Europe or the World seem to lurch from one
crisis to another. Another week, another crisis averted. It was only last summer
the soothsayers were predicting the end of the world over the supposed house
price bubble that many believed was developing in the South. Property prices
were rising at 20%+ per annum in London, only for things to ease as the
property market in the Capital showed a controlled slowdown and cooling in
activity with price growth easing to a more realistic 8% to 9% per annum.
Interestingly, there was no panic when some modest price drops were seen in
some of London’s highest priced suburbs.
However,
this month’s crisis is the buy to let boom and as George Osborne always likes
to be topical, in the July emergency budget, he declared that he will start to
scale back, from 2017, the tax relief that those high income tax rate landlords
with a mortgage have benefited from. The Daily Mail ran headlines stating it
was the end of the private landlord; predicting many landlords will give up on
buy to let altogether and we will be inundated with rental properties up for
sale as landlords feel squeezed from the market.
Even Mr
Carney, the Governor of the Bank of England, recently cautioned that the buy to
let property market could destabilise the whole UK property market. He was
concerned landlords who bought with high loan to value mortgages could be
spooked if there is a property crash, they would panic because of negative
equity, sell cheaply, which would worsen house price falls.
End of the
world then? - This week, yes probably,
but next week, that’s another story! Before
we all go and live like a hermit in the Scottish highlands, let me explain to
you my perspective on the whole subject. As I mentioned a few weeks ago, two
thirds of buy to let properties bought in the last eight years have been bought
mortgage free – so they won’t be affected by the Chancellors’ tax changes. Also, something I feel is often overlooked but
very important, is the fact that landlords historically have only been able to
normally borrow up to 75% of the value of the rental property. In the last property crash of 2008, property
values dropped by the not so insignificant figure of 17.29% in Southampton, but
even then, when we had the credit crunch and the world’s banking sector was on
the brink, no landlord would have been in negative equity in Southampton.
I believe we
have a case of ‘bad news selling newspapers’ and I believe that buy to let, and
the property market as a whole, will carry on relatively intact. Its true
reducing tax relief will hit landlords who pay the higher rate of income tax
and this may slightly diminish buy to let as an investment vehicle, but I doubt
people will sell. Many landlords have been lazy with their investments, buying
with their heart, not their head. You would never dream of investing in the
stock market without doing your homework and talking to people in the know. If
you want to make money in the Southampton property market as a buy to let
landlord, it’s all about having the right property and as you grow, the right
portfolio mix to offer a balanced investment that will give you both yield and
capital growth.
The Southampton
buy to let market still offers good investment opportunities to new and old
alike. Those who have bought in the last twelve to eighteen months have reaped
the benefit from buying in Southampton, because the city offered a combination
of reasonable house prices with subsequently increasing rents. Property values have risen by 7.71% in the
last eighteen months in Southampton, whilst looking at rents, in Q2 2015,
average rental values for new tenancies were 11% higher than Q2 2014, which is
particularly interesting as they only rose by 4.5% between Q2 2013 and Q2 2014.
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