Buy-to-let property investors are spending too much time worrying about the effect of the EU referendum on the UK lettings market because there are far more dangerous factors threatening UK housing.
There
are just not enough properties for rent in the UK to satisfy tenant demand -
and that fundamental priority will remain unchanged by the referendum. The
number of rental properties throughout the UK has been falling year on year and,
nationally, stock figures are currently five per cent down over the same period
in 2015.
The
referendum is causing uncertainty both for home buyers looking to buy
properties and landlords looking to invest in properties but this is making no
difference to tenant demand which remains extremely strong.
The
real problem lies in a poor government strategy that has been worsened by two
blunders hitting the number of people buying new properties to rent and the
number of landlords investing in more properties.
·
The FIRST - was hiking up the rate of stamp duty for buy-to-let
investors.
This
“government interference in a free market” caused a rush on mortgages, earlier
this year, as investors pushed 45,000 purchase
deals through before the new rates kicked in and caused a rocketing 163%
distortion in buy-to-let mortgage lending.
·
And SECOND was the change in mortgage interest tax relief - which
delivered a second body blow to landlords.
The
result of introducing these added expenses for landlords looks like slowing
down the market in the second half of the year and putting a further brake on
the number of rented properties available.
The
Government should be incentivising landlords to increase the national housing stock,
but if you choke off the supply of rented homes then property prices will rise
and rents are likely to be forced up by a more aggressive three per cent before
the end of the year. For
the last 20 years’ landlords have been plugging the gap in the housing market
caused by the disappearance of council houses, from 3.5 million to 1.6 million,
and the slow growth of new replacement social housing. And, while the
government still fails to address the imbalance, the declining availability of
homes for rent is becoming a crisis issue.
The
housing crisis is a real problem – and one that the EU referendum will not
change, I hope that an aggressive Government plan to build more housing,
especially social housing, and serious consideration given to reversing
landlord tax changes will undo some of the recent damage to the private rented
sector and increase the future supply of rented homes which are desperately
needed by 10 million tenants across the UK and more directly here in
Southampton
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