“The growth
of the private rented sector, and the arrival of an investor class of buy to
let landlords within it, is an issue that won’t be going away anytime soon, no
matter what you read in the Daily Mail”, I said, as I chatted over a coffee
with a landlord client of mine at
Bartella's Coffee House just down the road here. Whether you are a landlord of
mine (or not as the case maybe), I am always happy to look over any properties
you are thinking of buying for buy to let purposes and more so over a coffee!
Some commentators are saying buy to let is about to die, with the new
stamp duty changes and how mortgage tax relief will be calculated. Some say
500,000 rental properties will flood the market nationally in the next 12
months as landlords leave the rental market. Have you heard the phrase ‘Bad
news sells newspapers’? Let me explain why Buy to let in Northampton is only
going in one direction – and not the direction the papers say they are going.
According to Sheffield University, buy to let landlords will continue
fuelling the growth of the private rented sector in the coming decades. By their
estimates (and they are considered a centre of excellence on the topic), the
rate of homeownership nationally will fall to 50% (today it is 64.2% in
Northampton) by 2032, while the rate of private sector renting will increase to
35% (Interestingly, in Northampton it stands at 17.7% today).
Therefore, the demand for
rental accommodation in Northampton will grow by 3,264 households in the next
five years and these are the reasons why, irrespective of the distractions set
out in the newspapers…
Northampton property
values over the last six years have risen a lot more than average
wages/salaries, meaning as homeownership and mortgage availability is dependent
on your ability to pay has served to push home ownership further out of reach
for many, at a time when the stock of council houses has actually withered. (Nationally, the number of council houses in
the last ten years has dropped from 3.16m to 2.18m households - a drop of 31.1%).
Now it’s true the
Tory’s efforts to fix the deficiency of affordable housing have focused on
those who want to buy a home, ranging from Help to Buy and their much vaunted
Help to Buy Isa, and Starter Homes Scheme, an initiative offering a 20%
discount for first time buyers… but if you are unable to save for the deposit,
none of this means anything to the ‘20
somethings’ of Northampton and as I keep saying they will still need a roofover their heads!
Currently, 38,901 people live in private rented accommodation in
Northampton
You see, with the new rules on tax, more and more landlords
will be looking to move away from the previous honeypot of central London,
because its higher prices meant lower rental yields. With the new tax rules and
central London’s cooling of house price inflation, more and more landlords will
look further afield, including Northampton (interestingly, I have already been
chatting to a few central London landlords after they read the Northampton
Property Blog).
So, by 2021, the number of rental properties in Northampton will rise to
22,249
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