Marketing No Comments

Real Estate Update: The Government reacts to Leasehold Issues

In July 2017 the Government published a consultation document in order to obtain the views on the most needed areas for reform within the leasehold market. Over 6,000 replies were received with leasehold houses and ground rents being the most pressing for reform. There were two headline proposals which arose as a result of the consultation document. The Arguments

Pursuant to Section 14(A) of the Limitation Act 1980 (the “Act”) the period in which a claim must be issued before it is statue barred is either, six years from the date on which the cause of action accrued, or three years from the date on which a claimant has the requisite knowledge to bring the claim.

Limiting the sale of new build Leasehold Houses

The Government have previously said that, other than in exceptional circumstances, they cannot see any good reason for new build houses to be sold on a leasehold basis, and their view on this remains the same. The results of the consultation confirm that the Government are planning to bring forward legislation as soon as Parliamentary time allows to prohibit new residential long leases from being granted, be it new build or on existing leasehold houses. However, the Government have indicated that it will still be possible for existing leaseholders to extend their lease or purchase the freehold and the Government intend to consult on proposals to support currently leasehold owners to be able to do this on more favourable terms. The Government have also indicated that they plan to ensure new legislation clearly defines terms such as “new build” and what a “house” is, in order to avoid any unintended consequences and have confirmed that they will work alongside UK Finance more in order to address the misunderstanding of lending criteria which, the results of the consultation flagged, is associated with leasehold properties.

Despite the above, the Government are aware that they will not be in a position to prevent developers building and selling leasehold houses on land that is currently subject to a lease. They will, however, ensure that future legislation contains exemptions in this regard and have confirmed that other exceptions will be considered when the legislation is brought forward, for example if there are particular cases where leasehold houses can be justified, and, if so, to work with sectoral partners to ensure that they are provided on acceptable terms to the consumer.

The Government will, however, ensure that the ban the sale of leasehold houses applies to land that is not subject to an existing lease as at December 2017.

Limiting the reservation and increase of ground rents on all new residential leases over 21 years

Overall, the results of the consultation confirmed that anything that affected the value of the property should be classed as onerous. It was also noted that ground rents can become onerous where leases on houses are extended under the 1967 Leasehold Reform Act. Over 40% of the responses given in the consultation stated that there was no justification for ground rent and no clear reason why these should be any more than a peppercorn, however others cautioned about prohibiting ground rents, indicating that they ensure that the landlords retain an interest in the investment and covered the landlord’s costs.

The Government confirmed their concerns that ground rents have risen from historically small sums, to hundreds of pounds per year in many cases. Although no specific proposals to address onerous ground rents have arisen from the results of the consultation, the Government intend to introduce legislation so that, in the future, ground rents on newly established leases of houses and flats are set at a peppercorn, i.e. have zero financial value. This would result in the costs incurred by the landlord for overseeing and appointing a managing agent being recovered through the service charge or a marginally higher sale price, meaning costs are more transparent and reasonable, with a leaseholder having the right to challenge any unfair service charges through the courts.

Following the results of this consultation, the next steps are for the Government to draft the required legislation and for this to then be brought before Parliament to be considered.

It is worth remembering that the outcome of the consultation document are currently only proposals, however, the high profile of leasehold reforms may result in the Government treating this as a priority.

Source: Lexology

Marketing No Comments

Brighton & Hove’s Biggest New Council Housing Development In Years Completed

The first tenants will soon be moving into brand new homes in Whitehawk, following completion of the biggest new council housing development in the city in recent years.

Fifty-seven new homes have been built at Kite Place consisting of 10 one-bedroom, 33 two-bedroom and 14 three–bedroom flats.

Each of the properties has a balcony or patio, some with sea views, and they are designed to be energy efficient, with communal boilers providing hot water and heating.

Six of the homes are designed for wheelchair users and their families, with a number of mobility-rated units available for people needing accessible shower rooms. All the rest are built to the latest ‘accessible and adaptable’ standards, with lifts to all floors.

Kite Place is the largest development in the council’s New Homes for Neighbourhoods building programme, which aims to build at least 500 new homes on council land to provide much needed affordable rented housing. Building began in February 2016.

It’s situated off Whitehawk Road, on the site of the former Whitehawk Library which moved to new premises. There are good bus services on the doorstep, plus cycle storage, and a car club vehicle will also be based at the site. The first tenants in each of the flats will receive free car club membership for two years.

The first Kite Place tenants are due to move in over the next few weeks. The homes were let through Homemove, the council’s choice based lettings system.

Another 29 new council flats are nearing completion in Whitehawk at Hobby Place, next to Whitehawk Community Hub. The one, two, and three bedroom homes are due to be finished next month.

Kite Place and Hobby Place will bring the total number of new council homes completed under the New Homes for Neighbourhoods (NHFN) programme since 2015 to 136, with many more in the pipeline.

This is a step in the right direction but much more new and affordable housing is needed if the city is to meet the needs of it’s growing community, and if it is to offset the incessant and incremental price increases that are being stoked by ever increasing demand for housing.

Within the next few months, planning applications are expected to be accepted for the first three sites in the city’s ground- breaking plan to deliver a thousand truly affordable homes across the city, alongside the 500 council homes.

Available for rent or shared ownership, with the homes to rent affordable for those on the National Living Wage, these will meet some of the demand for housing amongst workers in our public sector and key industries currently priced out of living in Brighton and Hove.

Toads Hole Valley north of Hove is the last major site for housing in the city, bounded as we are by the National Park. It offers the potential for over 700 new homes as part of our City Plan. As many of these must be as truly affordable as possible.

Long-standing national policy requires up to 40% of homes to be affordable in new developments. However it uses the 80% of market rates definition of “affordable” which, if it ever was affordable, isn’t now, and especially in high housing cost areas like Brighton & Hove.

Developers push back on providing affordable housing even at this rate, but in truth few in need of housing in Brighton & Hove can afford a home at 80% of market rates.

www.brighton-hove.gov.uk/nhfn

Westridge Construction won a Considerate Constructors award for community involvement at this site and the artwork by local children and young people won runner-up prize in a hoardings competition run by the Considerate Constructors Scheme.

Source: B Journal

Marketing No Comments

Sellers struggling to shift property swiftly

The average price of a property coming on to the market in January is up by nearly £2,000 compared with December, but sales are down by 5.5 per cent on the same period a year ago.

This is according to Rightmove, which tracks 90 per cent of the UK property market.

Rightmove reported there had been a “busy start” to 2018, with more than 4 million visits a day to its site, up nearly a tenth on last year.

The annual rate of price increase in newly-marketed property is 1.1 per cent, although at a more local level prices are running 4 to 6 per cent up in some regions, with only London (minus 3.5 per cent) recording a year-on-year fall.

But sellers may be being over-optimistic in their pricing and may have to reduce the price tag for their property in order to find buyers.

Rightmove reported the average time to sell a property has jumped to 67 days compared to 55 days last summer.

Miles Shipside, Rightmove director and housing market analyst, said: “Considering some of the gales that buffeted the market in the latter part of 2017, these early readings for 2018 show that there is currently a good following wind of search activity.

“To keep this year’s initial buyer momentum with you rather than against, serious sellers should note that all regions are currently selling at a slower rate than a year ago, indicating choosier buyers.

“The total number of sales agreed was 5.5 per cent down in the last quarter of 2017 compared with the same period in 2016.

“Setting tempting asking prices and then quickly reducing them if there is little initial interest will be key to turning this promising level of buyer activity into actual sales, especially in the less active sectors and locations of the UK.”

Jeremy Duncombe, director of Legal & General Mortgage Club, said: “Despite continued year-on-year house price growth, 2018 is off to a realistic start.

“House price growth is now far more in line with inflation than in previous years, and couple this with competitive mortgage rates and a stamp duty exemption, first-time buyers should find it that little bit easier to get on the property ladder.

“Whilst we expect to see house price inflation remain at their current steady levels, we encourage would-be buyers to speak with a mortgage broker, who will be able to provide them with a better understanding of the thousands of products on the market and help them find the best product to suit their needs.”

Source: FT Adviser

Marketing No Comments

Proptech platform to offer direct investment in commercial property

Property Partner, the world’s first property stock exchange, today announces that investors will be given the opportunity to buy shares directly in commercial properties on its platform.

The move will enable non-institutional investors to buy and sell shares in a range of handpicked commercial properties, at the click of a button. Unlike traditional funds, which are opaque, and have been known to close their doors to withdrawals, Property Partner offers investors the chance to target individual assets and sub-sectors, as well as list shares for sale whenever they like.

According to Property Partner, UK commercial property investments have a market value of £486bn, yet UK based private investors account for just a 7 per cent share of the market. Commercial has delivered an average annual total return of 8.9 per cent to investors over the past 20 years.

Through the online platform, investors will have the opportunity to secure monthly returns from the rental income as well as the capital growth of these properties.

Property Partner will begin by listing high quality commercial properties let to household name tenants on a long lease, in strategically strong locations.

Daniel Gandesha, CEO and Founder of Property Partner said:

“We started by revolutionising access to the residential property market. Now, it’s also clear to us that not enough people can access investments in commercial property in the way they’d like. We’re making it much easier for investors to access the attractive returns on offer in commercial property.

“So far we’ve made investing in residential properties and Purpose Built Student Accommodation easier, safer and more professional for private investors than ever before.

“By launching commercial we’re going one step further. We’re helping investors to diversify not only by location but also by property class. Commercial can offer a stable, long-term yield, with an income stream that grows as the economy expands and protects against inflation.

“For most investors, the commercial property market has traditionally only been accessible through opaque, often illiquid open ended property funds, or listed property companies subject to stock market volatility. We’re doing away with this lack of transparency and access.”

Xavier Pullen, Director of Commercial Property at Property Partner said:

“Commercial property offers a strong and reliable yield over the long-term, which will remain particularly attractive in the current low interest rate environment.

“We will target higher average yields than the major funds, along with the freedom to handpick your investments and list for sale whenever you like.”

“Commercial property is primarily valued on the income it can generate for an investor, with the strength of the lease and covenant of the tenant being key determinants of value. Our strategy will be to find varied investments across sectors that all have the strong tenant factor in common.”

Source: London Loves Business

Marketing No Comments

Rogue landlords making millions out of housing benefits

Highly organised gangs of rogue landlords are making millions every year out of the housing benefit system by enticing desperate local authorities to place single homeless people in micro-flats in shoddily converted and dangerous former family homes.

Three-bed houses, where the maximum weekly housing benefit for flat-sharers is under £100 a person, are being converted into as many as six tiny self-contained studios – as little as 10 sq m in size. Each then qualifies for housing benefit of £181 a week, enabling a landlord to squeeze £56,000 a year in rent from a property on London’s fringes, all paid from public funds. The £56,000 compares with the typical £6,200 annual rent on a three-bed council house.

A previously unpublished government report into a £700,000 project to tackle the scam, released this week under freedom of information laws, shows that councils are struggling to contain the spread of the “lockdown” model, which has taken hold in at least 12 London boroughs since 2015.

It warns of “well organised but unscrupulous landlords” profiting despite some councils – including Hackney, Bexley and Greenwich – launching prosecutions, raids and prohibition orders.

“Given available resources and the potential number of ‘rogue landlord’ properties, regulatory activity on its own would not solve the problem as long as the market was so heavily weighted to favour the supplier and the housing benefit rules allowed for high payments on such small conversions,” says the report. “Investors typically buy a three-bedroom house and convert it into six rooms, each with basic cooking facilities, in order to claim the maximum housing benefit rate.

“The lettings model was also being actively promoted as an investment opportunity amongst both existing landlords and, possibly, more widely. This has contributed to the strong growth of conversions using the model,” it says.

The report – obtained by local housing campaigner, Jon Knowles, after he appealed to the Information Commissioner – reveals “lockdown landlords” are exploiting planning loopholes created by the Conservative-led government in 2010.

“The basic premise […] was to convert houses into a large number of very small ‘self-contained’ units, each containing basic cooking facilities, but to also have a shared kitchen so as to be able to claim, for planning permission purposes, that the house was a house in multiple occupation and fell within permitted development rules,” it says.

Councils can apply to place restrictions on these rights but the report says only one councils in the project has managed to do so.

The converted flats, frequently approved by the landlord’s own private building control firms and electricians, are offered to homelessness services across the capital in need of rentals.

“The landlords often target local authority services which are looking for units when they accept either a full, or interim, homelessness duty for an individual. The landlords are aware that such individuals will be entitled to housing benefit, and are also aware how difficult it is for such services to locate suitable units,” it states.

Services from different areas regularly compete for the same properties, which can lead to “uncoordinated placements and clashes between the residents”. One incident resulted in a stabbing, and a woman living in one of these flats has been assaulted by other tenants. Checks by planning and environmental health officers are rarely carried out because homeless services are under such pressure to find rooms immediately.

“It was recognised that, with the shortage of units and the frequent emergency need for placements, the priority would often be to just get a person into some accommodation for the night.”

Housing inspectors found the micro-flats were often in very poor condition with inadequate fire safety provision and dangerously overloaded electrics and plumbing systems.

Neighbours complained of anti-social behaviour and feeling unsafe when there were influxes of often single men, with substance abuse and mental health problems .

Councils are reluctant to take a hard line because they fear it could make people homeless: “There were clear concerns about the model becoming too widespread and it was felt that changes did need to be made in order to contain its growth. However, it was accepted that these could not be wholly retrospective otherwise it would create a spike in homelessness.”

Lambeth council, whose officers coordinated the research project, says landlords using the model were still operating in the capital and that family houses were being divided up into micro-flats all the time.

“They are always being created to meet the demand for the lack of social and affordable housing,” it says.

Knowles fought to get the report released after he discovered a string of “lockdown properties” in his neighbourhood of Hanworth, west London. “I simply could not believe that you would be allowed to cram six bedsits into a former two-bed home,” he says.

Retired builder Gary Warren found himself sofa-surfing because he could not afford a deposit on a flat in west London. He thought his luck had changed when he found a letting company that accepted people over 35 and claiming benefits.

“I stayed with a few friends and then I found out about this company that rents flats out without a deposit if you are on benefits,” he says.

A letting agent showed him what they called a flat in Hanworth but it was actually a tiny room measuring just 10 sq m, including the toilet. He took it because he “had no deposit to put down on a private flat”.

Gary, who is 63, pays £980 for his room, which is mostly covered by his housing benefit.

The people in the four other flats are charged the same, which potentially earns the company £3,920 a month in rent.

“The length of my bed is the width of the room. I’ve got a wardrobe and fridge. So I have about 10ft by 3ft of space – it’s a corridor,” he says. “There’s no room for a chair, so I lay down all day. I don’t see anyone, so I don’t get any stimulation – I’m just stuck in this room.”

Water pours down the walls when it rains because the flat roof above him leaks. It got so bad over Christmas that the council moved him to a B&B as the room was uninhabitable. But Gary – who has had a stroke and is in the early stages of dementia – has carried on paying the rent because he needs somewhere to live. “It is robbery,” he says. “They are ripping off the council. Why are they letting it go on?”

Source: The Guardian

Marketing No Comments

Property prices and demand up

The average price of properties coming to market has risen by £2,067 (0.7%) this month on Rightmove, which tracks over 90% of the UK property market.

This is similar to the 0.6% rise at this time a year ago with virtually identical number of properties coming to market.

Demand evidenced by visits to Rightmove shows the market remains robust. The average number of visit so far in January is currently running over 9% higher than the same period a year ago, with an average of over four million visits each day.

Miles Shipside, Rightmove director and housing market analyst, said: “Considering some of the gales that buffeted the market in the latter part of 2017, these early readings for 2018 show that there is currently a good following wind of search activity.

“To keep this year’s initial buyer momentum with you rather than against, serious sellers should note that all regions are currently selling at a slower rate than a year ago, indicating choosier buyers.

However the number of sales agreed in the last quarter of 2017 is lower than a year ago in all regions, showing buyers are being choosy.

Shipside added: “The total number of sales agreed was 5.5% down in the last quarter of 2017 compared with the same period in 2016.

“Setting tempting asking prices and then quickly reducing them, if there is little initial interest, will be key to turning this promising level of buyer activity into actual sales, especially in the less active sectors and locations of the UK.”

The annual rate of price increase in newly-marketed property is 1.1%, but at more local level prices are running 4-6% up in some regions, with only London recording a year-on-year fall at -3.5%.

Stretched buyer affordability and an uncertain political outlook are counter-balanced to a degree by tight supply of suitable properties for sale and the recent near-abolition of stamp duty for first-time buyers.

There is no increase in choice for buyers, with average overall stock per estate agency branch holding steady at 42 properties, the same as a year ago.

The boost given to first-time buyers by the abolition of stamp duty for most of their purchases means that properties in that sector are facing higher demand. This consequently leads to more upwards price pressure, especially if supply is limited.

Talking about the impact of the stamp duty changes, Chris Chapman, divisional managing director of Estate Agency at Andrews, said: “Whilst it hasn’t, in our experience, resulted in a huge spike of first-time buyers entering the market, it has certainly created increased interest from purchasers who had previously felt unable to take the first step on to the property ladder.”

Source: Mortgage Introducer

Marketing No Comments

London home-sellers cut prices by most since 2009

The prices that London home-sellers are seeking for their properties fell by the most since the financial crisis this month, at a time when prices in most of the rest of Britain are rising, industry figures showed on Monday.

London’s once red-hot housing market has slowed for the past year due to a double hit from higher purchase taxes on expensive homes and the June 2016 Brexit vote, which hurt demand from foreign buyers and raised fears of big job losses in the capital’s financial industry.

Rightmove, Britain’s biggest property website, said the average asking price for a home in London this month was 600,926 pounds ($822,728), 3.5 percent lower than a year before and the biggest drop since June 2009.

Most of the rest of Britain saw year-on-year increases in asking prices of 4 percent or more, and the average asking price in Britain was just under 300,000 pounds.

“Early indicators of activity in this year’s housing market show that demand remains robust,” Rightmove said.

There have been other signs of a slowing in London’s housing market. Mortgage lender Nationwide said earlier this month that prices in the capital fell by 0.5 percent in 2017, their first full-year fall since 2009.

However, home ownership remains out of reach for many would-be buyers in London. Initial mortgage repayments for a typical first home in the city represent more than 60 percent of average take-home pay, double the proportion elsewhere in Britain. And a 10 percent deposit can easily require more than a year’s salary in savings – or help from richer family members.

Rightmove said finance minister Philip Hammond’s decision in November to scrap purchase taxes for most first-time buyers, along with a shortage of homes to buy, helped to offset the drag from slow wage growth and an uncertain political outlook.

Unlike some other indicators, Rightmove’s data showed prices fell most in inner London suburbs – where they were 7 percent lower than a year ago – rather than the prime central London areas favoured by many super-rich international buyers.

Prices were flat in central London and outer suburbs.

Separate data from property group LSL Property Services gave a fairly similar picture for December, though national price growth was more subdued than in Rightmove’s figures. LSL showed price falls in London were steepest in central boroughs.

LSL said the gap between price trends in London and the rest of Britain was the widest in three years.

“London is largely out of step with the rest of England and Wales, where the market remains broadly positive,” LSL said.

Rents showed the opposite pattern. Estate agents Countrywide said London recorded the biggest rise in rents for new tenants in England, up 3.2 percent on the year in December and only just pipped by increases in Scotland. Outside London, rents increased by an average of 2.0 percent.

Source: UK Reuters

Marketing No Comments

Worst case no-deal Brexit could see 43,000 fewer UK construction jobs, report says

A no-deal Brexit could see up to 43,000 fewer construction jobs in the UK, according to an economic forecast commissioned by the mayor of London.

The research undertaken by analysts Cambridge Econmetrics has produced a damning report on the adverse effects a hard Brexit could have on the UK economy and various sectors. Sadiq Khan claims the study shows that a no-deal outcome could cost the country half a million jobs and £50bn in lost investment by 2030.

The findings also looked at London alone where increased housing numbers are desperately needed. Experts believe there could be 5,000 fewer jobs and a drop in output of up to £1.2bn by 2030 in the construction sector should the UK decide to walk away from a deal and leave both the EU customs union and single market.

Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, said: “If the government continue to mishandle the negotiations we could be heading for a lost decade of lower growth and lower employment. The analysis concludes that the harder the Brexit we end up with, the bigger the potential impact on jobs, growth and living standards.”

The analysis looks at the potential impact five different Brexit scenarios could have on nine key sectors of the economy. It shows that every Brexit outcome analysed would be bad for the British economy, but that the harder the Brexit, the more severe the consequences. The worst of the five scenarios postulates a departure in March 2019 with no deal or transition arrangements and researches have estimated this would lead to 482,000 fewer jobs across the entire UK and a loss of £46.8bn in investment by 2030.

“If the government continue to mishandle the negotiations we could be heading for a lost decade of lower growth and lower employment.”
Sadiq Khan, mayor of London.

James Murray, deputy mayor for housing and residential development, said: “This report lays bare the huge risks we would face as a result of Government’s failure to secure a Brexit deal that works for London and the rest of the UK. The fact the Mayor has had do the prime minister’s job in publishing the full impact of Brexit is truly damning. It shows the scale of the blow that a no-deal hard Brexit could have on our homebuilding efforts. London needs 13,000 additional construction workers to build the homes the capital needs – we simply cannot afford to lose skilled European labour.”

The research was commissioned after the Brexit secretary David Davis told MPs in December the government had failed to produce any economic forecasts on the likely impacts Brexit could have. Answering questions from the Brexit select committee, Davis also said no economic impact study had been undertaken before the cabinet decision to leave the customs union.

The Labour mayor was also a strong supporter of the remain campaign and has since argued for the UK to stay in the EU’s single market and customs union. Davis’s admissions in December have said to ignite a drive to produce some research-based evidence of future impacts. While the report’s authors have stressed the figures are reliant on a range of factors, it is the first time analysis like this had been undertaken to delve into the wider impacts of a no-deal Brexit.

Analysis by Melanie Leech, chief executive of the British Property Federation

Not knowing if we’ll have enough skilled workers to resource the construction industry over the coming years is deeply concerning.

We urge government to provide clarity on the status of EU workers as soon as possible – we are already seeing this uncertainty undermine regeneration up and down the country.

Government must get migration policy right if we wish to build much-needed homes and the physical environments capable of driving innovation, which underpin a successful post-Brexit UK.

Source: Infrastructure Intelligence

Marketing No Comments

Landlords’ pricing power is on the up again

Average asking rents in the North East soared by 3.3 per cent, year on year in the fourth quarter of 2017, new data from Rightmove’s rental trend tracker shows.

Farnham in Surrey recorded the highest rental growth outside London at 9 per cent in 2017, followed by Corby in Northamptonshire, up 8.2 per cent.

And in London, asking rents ended the year 1.2 per cent higher than at the end of 2016, the first time the annual rate in the capital has been in positive territory in nearly two years.

Rightmove director and housing market analyst Miles Shipside said: “Increasingly stretched tenant affordability, and the surge of buy-to-let property supply beating the stamp duty tax hike deadline, have acted together to mute landlord pricing power.

“In contrast, after a few years of falling rents in London they’re back on the up again, due to a combination of tightening stock available to rent and strong demand.”

It is thought the figures have been affected by a surge in rental supply in 2016 from landlords who rushed to buy up properties to rent out before the additional stamp duty on second homes was introduced.

Now, as supply is tightening again, rents have started to increase.

Rightmove’s report also shows that the South East and Yorkshire and the Humber are the only two regions to end 2017 with asking rents down.

The national average rise of 0.7 per cent was well below previous years with rises of 3.7 per cent recorded in 2015 and 3 per cent in 2016.

Although the 2017/2018 tax year will see the start of the Government’s changes to tax relief on buy to let mortgages, Mr Shipside doubts the first phase will impact on many landlords’ portfolio decisions.

He said: “From speaking to some landlords they’re unlikely to make any decisions to sell up until they see in real time how much of an impact it has on their finances, with many choosing to take a wait and see view rather than looking at short-term gains or losses.”

Source: Simple Landlords Insurance

Marketing No Comments

More landlords ‘to quit sector as mortgage relief changes start to bite and profit becomes elusive’

The number of landlords planning to sell some of their buy-to-let properties has hit its highest level for a decade, it has been claimed.

A fifth of landlords said they would offload properties this year as the mortgage interest relief changes start to hit, research by a landlord body suggests.

Restrictions to mortgage interest relief started in April 2017 and analysis of its membership by the National Landlords Association (NLA) claims 20% now plan to reduce the size of their portfolio.

It comes as the membership body commissioned research by Capital Economics to look at the impact of the scaling back of mortgage interest relief, warning that landlords will face paying £850 more in tax on average once the policy is fully implemented in 2020.

This is based on a typical £122,000 buy-to-let mortgage with a 3.5% interest rate, so the losses could be higher if pricing rises.

The report suggests landlords could exit or de-leverage their portfolio but will raise rents first, which it says will be bad for the economy as it will reduce tenant spending power. A flood of new homes on the sales market will also dampen house prices.

Instead, the report recommends the Government reviews the withdrawal of mortgage interest relief and also considers capital gains tax exemptions such as where landlords sell a property to a tenant.

Other suggestions include support for landlords to move properties into a corporate structure where they would retain the right to the relief, and the creation of a government-backed investment vehicle to allow the sale of properties into a managed fund to ensure quality stock is left on the market.

Richard Lambert, NLA chief executive, said: “More and more people are relying on this sector for a home, so it is vital that landlords not only provide a high standard of accommodation, but are incentivised to do so by the prospects of a reasonable return on investment.

“It is our view that these policies are undermining the viability of many landlords’ businesses and removing the incentives to invest in residential property for business purposes.”

Meanwhile, Rightmove also says that landlords may start reviewing their portfolios as the withdrawal of mortgage interest relief begins to take effect, making it harder for landlords to profit from their investments.

It also reports that asking rents outside London increased at their slowest rate – by 0.7% – in three years during 2017.

In London, asking rents ended the year up 1.2% annually to £1,930.

Miles Shipside, director and housing market analyst, said: “Nationally rents have been holding pretty steady over 2017, retaining the 3% plus rises seen in both 2015 and 2016, and adding a more modest 0.7% in the past 12 months.

“Increasingly stretched tenant affordability, and the surge of buy-to-let property supply beating the Stamp Duty tax hike deadline, have acted together to mute landlord pricing power. In contrast, after a few years of falling rents in London they’re back on the up again, due to a combination of tightening stock available to rent and strong demand.

“While the 2017/2018 tax year will see the start of the Government’s changes to tax relief on buy-to-let mortgages, we don’t think this first phase will have that much of an effect on many landlords’ portfolio decisions until another year down the line.

“From speaking to some landlords they’re unlikely to make any decisions to sell up until they see in real-time how much of an impact it has on their finances, with many choosing to take a wait and see view rather than looking at short-term gains or losses.

“However, agents report that there are some highly-geared landlords with large loans looking to reduce their exposure to loss of tax relief by cashing in and selling some properties.”

Source: Property Industry Eye