Well, as the sands of 2016 start to trickle through the hour glass of life and Christmas a distant memory, a few days before Christmas, I got chatting with one of my out of town landlords who was back in Northampton visiting his family. Brought up in Northampton, he went to the Northampton School for Boys back in the 1970’s and is now a University Lecturer in central London. For his retirement, he has a small portfolio of four properties in the town and wanted my advice on where to buy the next property in Northampton (as he lives in a college owned flat and anyway, would never dream of buying where he lives in Kensington where the average value of a flat is £1.62m and a town house £4.1m. Eye-watering!)
Before I could advise him, I
reminded him that the most important thing when considering investing in
property is finding a Northampton property with decent rental yields for income
returns, yet at the same time, it must have the potential for capital growth
from rising house prices over time. Going into 2016, Northampton landlords will
be under more pressure to find the best permutation of yields and capital
growth, as extra stamp duty charges for buying properties and a squeeze on
mortgage interest relief will raise their costs.
However, (you knew there would be
a however) before we look at yield and capital growth, one important
consideration that often many landlords tend to overlook, is the propensity of
how likely the rent will increase. Interestingly, the average rent of a
Northampton property currently stands at £782 per month, which is a rise of
6.2% compared to twelve months ago (although it must be noted this rise in
rents is for new tenancies and not existing tenants)
Anyway, back to yield and capital
growth, the average value of a Northampton property currently stands at
£233,400, meaning the average yield stands at 4.02% per annum, which on the
face of it, many landlords would find disappointing.
That is the problem with
averages, so if I were to look at say 2 bed houses in Northampton which are the
sort of properties a lot of landlords buy, in Northampton, the average value
of a 2 bed house is £166,400, whilst the average rent for a 2
bed house is £709 per month, giving a yield of 5.11%. However, if that wasn’t high enough, there are
landlords in Northampton who own some specialist properties with specialist
tenancies, that are achieving nearly double that yield – again it comes down to
your attitude to risk and reward (give me a tinkle if you wanted a chat about
those sorts of properties – although they can be fun and games!)
Ultimately investors want to be
making gains from both rent and house price growth. When combined, the rental
yield and capital growth gives you the return on investment, and that is that
is what I told our University friend from Kensington. Return on investment is
everything. So, looking at property
values in Northampton have risen in the last year by 5.8% .. which means the
current annual return on investment in Northampton for a typical 2 bed
house is 10.91% a year .... not bad!
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