Tuesday 25 August 2015

The ‘Liquorice Allsorts’ Canterbury Property market


Despite the UK economy heading in the right direction with record low mortgage rates and unemployment  figures dropping,  the rate of property prices rising in Canterbury have tempered since the start of the year. This slow, but sure downward trend in the rate of growth has been in evidence since mid-2014.  Property value increases continue to outpace the growth in salaries, however the gap is closing, helped by a lift in salaries over the last 6 months.  Property values in the South East region as a whole are 9.1% higher than a year ago.  Compare this to the neighbouring regions of the East 8.8% higher and the South West at 3.6%, the majority of the country continue to see annual house price gains - the exception being Wales which recorded a slight decline of -0.6%.
Even with the tempering in house price inflation, it does not necessarily change my outlook that property prices are likely to be firmer over the second half of 2015 amid heightening activity in the Canterbury property market.  As stated in a previous article, there is a current shortage of properties on the market, restricting supply, which in turn will provide stability and support to Canterbury property prices. Therefore, my overall opinion is that Canterbury property prices will rise by 6% over 2015 and roughly the same in 2016.
Property investment is a long term business.  Buying the right sort of property is vital. I have recently been speaking with a number of Canterbury landlords about the importance of a balanced portfolio, when buying and renting out property. The balance between buying properties that offer good monthly returns (high yields) but quite often offer poor capital growth (i.e. they don't increase in value that much over the years compared with the average) verses properties that do go up in value quicker but often offer a lower yield.  So, what type of properties have performed best over the last few years in Canterbury, especially in terms of their capital growth?
When comparing what the average price of detached, semi-detached, terraced and flats were selling for back at the start of the Millennium to the present.  The results are quite remarkably different, almost like a bag of ‘Liquorice Allsorts’, as the different types of property have performed poles apart over the last 15 years:
Detached Houses in 2000 were selling on average for £183,550 and so far in 2015, they have been selling on average in Canterbury for £499,313 a rise of 172%
Semi -Detached Houses in 2000 were selling on average for £94,800 and so far in 2015, they have been selling on average in Canterbury for £280,833 a rise of 196%
Terraced Houses in 2000 were selling on average for £83,523 and so far in 2015, they have been selling on average in Canterbury for £236,264 a rise of 183%

Flats and Apartments in 2000 were selling on average for £78,917 and so far in 2015, they have been selling on average in Canterbury for £185,024 a rise of 134%Moving forward, what should new and existing buy to let landlords do with this information?  Well, the questions I seem to be asked on an almost daily basis by landlords are:

 “Should I sell my property in Canterbury?”

“Is the time right to buy another buy to let property in Canterbury and if not Canterbury, where?”

“Are there any property bargains out there in Canterbury to be had?”

 Many other Canterbury landlords, who are with us and other  Canterbury letting agents, like to pop in for a coffee or pick  up the phone or email us to  discuss the Canterbury property market, how Canterbury compares with its closest rivals (Maidstone, Ashford, and Royal Tunbridge Wells), and hopefully answer the three questions above.  I don’t bite, I don’t do hard sell, I will just give you my honest and straight talking opinion and look forward to hearing from you.

Tuesday 18 August 2015

Canterbury Property Market – Bricks and Mortar!

 
The Land Registry have just released their latest set of figures for the Canterbury Property market. It makes interesting reading, as average property values in Canterbury rose by 0.4% in June. This leaves average property values 8.3% higher than 12 months ago, meaning the annual rate of growth in the City fell to its lowest level since June 2014. When we compare Canterbury against the regional picture, South East property values rose by 0.4%, leaving them 8.4% higher than a year ago.
Obviously this is a far cry from the price rises we were experiencing in Canterbury throughout 2014. At one point (November 2014 to be exact) property values were rising by 11% a year. All the same, even with the tempering of the Canterbury property values in 2015, property values are still higher. This is good news for local homeowners who had been affected by the downturn after 2007 and still find themselves in negative equity.
However, the thing that concerns me is that the average number of properties changing hands (i.e. selling) has dropped substantially over the last 12 months in the City. In April 2014, 75 properties sold in Canterbury but in April 2015, that figure dropped to 50.  I have been in the Canterbury property market for quite a while now and the one thing I have noticed over the last few years has been the subtle change in the traditional seasonality of the Canterbury property market. It has been particularly noticeable this year in that the normal post Easter flood of properties coming onto the market was not seen. This has made an imbalance between supply and demand, with less houses coming onto the market there is simply not as much choice of properties to buy in Canterbury and with the population of Canterbury ever increasing, this will generally strengthen house price growth for the foreseeable future.
So what does all this mean for Canterbury landlords or those considering dipping their toe into the buy to let market for the first time? For many people, buy to let looks a good investment, providing landlords with a decent income at a time of low interest rates and stock market unpredictability.
However, if you are thinking of investing in bricks and mortar in Canterbury, it is important to do things correctly. As an investment to provide you with income, for those with enough savings to raise a big deposit, buy to let looks particularly good, especially compared to low savings rates and stock market yo-yo’s. I must also remind readers, landlords have two opportunities to make money from property, not only is there the rent (income), but with the property market bouncing back over the last few years, property value increases has spurred on more investors to buy property in the hope of its value continuing to rise.
Savvy landlords with decent deposits can fix their mortgages at just over 3% for five years, making many deals stack up. Nevertheless, low rates cannot stay low forever, because one day they must rise and you need to know your property can stand that test. I saw some Canterbury landlords struggling in the mid noughties, when interest rates rose from 3.5% in July 2003 to 5.75% in July 2007. That might not sound a lot, but that was the difference of making a £100 a month profit in 2003 to having to make up a shortfall in the mortgage payments of £100 per month in 2007.
Its true many landlords were thrown a life raft when the base rate dropped to 0.5% in March 2009. Whilst interest rates have remained there since, mark my words, they will rise again in the future. However, even with the potential for costs to rise, demand for decent rental properties remains high as there are ever more tenants in the market, driving up demand and thus rents. The British love of bricks and mortar plus improving mortgage deals also add up to fuel the buoyant Canterbury property market.
If you are planning on investing in the Canterbury property market, or just want to know more, things to consider for a successful buy to let investment, one source of information is the Canterbury Property Blog www.canterburypropertyblog.com .

Wednesday 12 August 2015

Are ‘would be’ Canterbury homeowners warming to the idea of renting?

 
I was reading a report the other day produced by the Halifax, about the UK property market and why more and more of the younger generation seem to be renting rather than buying. I find it fascinating that over the last ten years, the British obsession of buying a house almost as soon as you left school, and the fact that if you rented you were seen as a second class citizen, has turned on its head to a point where the hopes and dreams to own a nice home will be replaced by the ambition simply to live in one.
In the latter half of the 20th Century, you left school, got a job, bought a small house and kept buying and selling property, constantly upgrading until eventually they carried you out in a box. However, the perceived shame and stigma of renting is no longer the case, as it seems that the British are now beginning to accept a lifetime of renting. This is a very important consideration for both Canterbury homeowners and Canterbury landlords as it will transform the way the Canterbury property ladder looks in the future and I might ask whether or not it will exist at all for some people? The make up of households is one important factor, especially in the Canterbury property market. The normal stereotypical married couple, two kids and dog of the 1970’s and 80’s has changed. More and more we have the need for larger houses where two families come together after divorces (+ kids) and need a property to house everyone through to an increase in the number of one person households.
Looking at the data for Canterbury, of the 10,665 private rental properties in the Canterbury City Council area, 27.62% of those rented properties are one person households (2,946 properties). However, when we compare the number of one person Canterbury households who have bought their own property with a mortgage (i.e. therefore they are still in work), of the 40,107 owner occupied households in the area, only 3,025 of those properties are a one person household (i.e. 7.54%). Compared to a decade ago, this explosion in demand for decent high quality rental properties that one person households require has not been met with an increase in supply of such properties.  More and more I believe Canterbury landlords need to consider this change in the make up of Canterbury households, as I believe this could be an opportunity. As an aside, another interesting stat that raised an eyebrow was that 12.91% of those 10,665 rental properties (1,377 properties) are lone parents households as well. Again, another possible opportunity that Canterbury landlords might want to consider in their future investment plans.
It is true that the Governments introduction in 2013 of the Help to Buy scheme, where first time buyers only needed a 5% deposit, changed the perception of peoples’ ability to buy without having to save ten’s of thousands of pounds for a deposit. However, it might surprise you, 95% mortgages were re-introduced within six months of the Credit Crunch in late 2009, so again it comes down to people’s own perception. Many youngsters think they won’t get a mortgage, so don’t even bother trying.
Coming back to the deposit, it’s still a fact that once you start renting it becomes that much harder to save for a deposit, regardless of the size. Interestingly, 7 out of 8 renters polled by the Halifax (86% to be exact) refuse to sacrifice the quality of accommodation they currently live in to reduce the amount of rent they pay in order to save for a deposit.  This is the crux and the real reason why people aren’t buying but renting... and why demand for renting will continue to grow in the future (i.e. good news for landlords). Canterbury tenants can upgrade the quality and size of the property they live in for a minimal rent increase. The average rent of a two bed property in Canterbury is £1,059pm, but a three bed is only £98pm more at £1,157pm, whilst the average four bed rent is £1,383pm. If you had to make that jump when buying, the monthly mortgage payments would be stratospherically more than that!  Without any social pressure and better quality rental properties compared to a decade ago, we will become a nation of renters within the next generation, as the UK is becoming more like Europe, where renting is ‘the norm’. Who is going to supply all these properties to rent? Landlords! Whether you are an existing landlord looking to grow your portfolio or looking to become a ‘first time landlord’, my thoughts are take advice from as many people as possible. However, as the majority of landlords buy their buy to let properties in the same town they live, you will need specific advice about Canterbury itself. One place for such advice and opinion is the Canterbury Property Blog www.canterburypropertyblog.com

Tuesday 4 August 2015

Why are less Canterbury people moving house?


 
 
During my school years (some years ago......), my parents seemed to move every other year (or it seemed that way). In reality, looking back at the house moves, we actually moved four times before I left home. However, whilst my parents kept the removal van people in business whilst I was at school, from research I have carried out it shows things have changed considerably in Canterbury over the last few decades, and interestingly, the trend is getting worse ... for the removal van people at any rate!
In Canterbury, there are 19,850 properties. However, after we remove the 4,089 council houses, 5,955 privately rented houses and 352 houses where the occupants live rent free, that leaves us with 9,454 owned properties (be that 100% outright, with a mortgage or shared ownership). This means 47.6% of the properties in Canterbury are occupied by the owner (the national average is interestingly 64.2%) but the number of people who have sold and moved house in Canterbury, over the last 12 months, has only been 1,261. This means on these figures, the homeowners of Canterbury are only moving on average every 7.49 years.
These are the reasons. Firstly, the cost of moving house has risen over the last twenty years. Secondly, with many re-mortgaging their properties in the mid 2000’s before the price crash of 2008, there is a reluctance or inability in a small minority of homeowners to finance a home sale/purchase, due to lack of equity. These are both factors driving fewer moves by existing homeowners.
However, the big effect has been the change in house price inflation. Back in the 1970’s and 1980’s, house prices were doubling every 5 to 7 years. Even in Greater London, with its stratospheric property price increases over the last few years, it has taken 13 years (August 2002 to be exact) for property values to double to today’s levels.
This change to a relatively low inflation Canterbury property market (i.e. Canterbury property values not rising quickly) is significant because the long term consequences of sustained low house price growth is that it eats into mortgage debt more slowly than when property price inflation is higher. Canterbury homeowners cannot rely on inflation to shrink their debt in real terms as much as they did in say the 1970’s and 1980’s.
So what does this all mean for Canterbury buy to let landlords? Well for the same reasons existing Canterbury homeowners aren’t moving, less ‘twenty something’s’ are buying their first home as well. Canterbury youngsters may aspire to own their own home, but without the social pressure from their peers and parents to buy their first property as soon people reach their early 20’s, the memory of the 2008 housing crisis and the belief the hard times either aren't over or the worst is yet to come, current and would-be homeowners are warming to the idea of renting. I also believe UK society has changed, with the youngster’s wanting prosperity and happiness; but wanting it all now... instantly... today... without the sacrifice, work and patience that these things take. As a society, we expect things instantly, and if it doesn’t come easy, doesn’t come quick, some youngsters ask if it is really worth the effort to save for the deposit? Why go without holidays, the newest iPhone, socialising four times a week and the fancy satellite package for a couple of years, to save for that 5% deposit if there is no longer a social stigma in renting or pressure to buy as there was... say... a generation ago?
Even though, in real terms, property prices are 5% cheaper than they were ten years ago (when adjusted by inflation), 30% of Canterbury properties are privately rented (nearly double it was twenty years ago). As a result, the demand for rental properties continues to grow from tenants, meaning those wishing to invest in the buy to let market, over the long term, might be on to a good thing? For advice and opinion on the Canterbury Buy To let property market, one source of information is The Canterbury Property Blog www.canterburypropertyblog.com .