Roll the clock back 35 years to 1981, and Mrs. T was in power, we had a Royal Wedding, Britain won the Ashes and Bucks Fizz won Eurovision with ‘Making your Mind up’. Haven’t things changed? The number of homeowners and property investors who said they wish they had hindsight and bought up every house in Northampton all those years ago, especially when you consider what has happened to Northampton property values, as…
Northampton Property Values since 1981 have risen by 716%.
Not bad when you consider
inflation over the same time period has been 271.9%, meaning in real terms (i.e.
after inflation), property values in Northampton are 444.1% higher. It’s no wonder people can’t afford to buy
property anymore and landlords are attracted by bricks and mortar. Yet the
changes to the Northampton Property market run much deeper than property value
changes as no one could have predicted how the
property market has changed in Northampton over the last 30 years.
Looking at the Local
Authority data for Northampton Borough Council in 1981, 32.9% of Northampton
people lived in a Council House, whilst today its 17%... a massive drop which
can mostly be attributed to Margaret Thatcher allowing Council tenants the
right to buy their Council House. The
private rental sector since 1981 has, as one would have expected, also
changed. The proportion of properties
privately rented in the Northampton area (i.e. through a private landlord or a
letting agency) has almost trebled, rising from 6.1% to 17.8% of property.
So, let us consider those
people who own their own home, surely that has had a massive drop? In 1981, the proportion of people who lived
in the Northampton Borough Council area who owned their own home was 60.8%… and
today its… 62.7%. Not the seismic change most of you were expecting (including
myself!).
Homeownership in the
1980’s and 1990’s in Northampton did in fact rise, but as I have discussed in
previous articles in the ‘Northampton Property Market Blog’, that was because nearly
every Council tenant was buying their council house. Now there are hardly any
Council houses for the younger generation to move into (because of the right to
buy scheme) so they have no choice but to privately rent.
... and this is why the
buy to let market in Northampton is an investment sector that will continue to
grow as councils aren’t building council houses in their thousands each year
(like they were in the 1950’s/60’s and 70’s).
The Northampton
property market is constantly changing and buy to let for too long has been
heavily dependent on house price growth, where yield has been almost forgotten. I see the changes in tax and landlord and
tenant law in a different perspective to the sooth-sayers and see it as
bringing many opportunities where yield will become more important.
Like Bucks Fizz said in their song, it’s
time to make your mind up. The advice I give to my landlords, and also to you
my blog reading friends is this; these changes will make some landlords panic,
meaning competition for decent Northampton buy to let bargains will reduce as
fear of change kicks in and amateur investors flee the market. These opportunities will provide a more
stable platform for knowledgeable and wise Northampton buy to let landlords to
thrive in. If you want to learn more
about the Northampton Property Market, feel free to pop in for a coffee with me at our
office on the Wellingborough Road and have a chat with me.
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