I was having an interesting chat the other day with a couple of solicitors at a Cambridge business networking event, when the subject of a lack of property for first time buyers came into the conversation. I followed the chat up with an email with my findings, findings that I would like to share with you today.
They may be asset rich thanks to recently rising property
values, but let us not make the landlords the bogiemen they could easily be.
Despite all these benefits enjoyed by private landlords, let us not forget the
good they have done, especially in Cambridge.
Property values today in Cambridge are still 4.5% below the
2007 property boom levels (2007 being the peak of last property boom before
everything dropped in 2008/9), yet inflation has risen by 26% in the same time
frame, so in real terms, properties today are 21.5% CHEAPER than they were in
2007. Just think how low they would be without landlords buying all those
rental properties in the city. Interest rates are at an all time low and first time
buyers only need to save a £8,000 deposit to secure a lovely 1 bed apartment in
the Southeast Cambridge area with a 95% mortgage. Forget what the papers
say, first time buyers can borrow money relatively easily on a 95% mortgage and
nine times out of ten, it’s cheaper to buy than rent. So why aren’t people
buying?
The number of people choosing to rent, either for lifestyle
or economic reasons, has grown over the last 15 years. I also believe they will
continue to grow for some time to come (as does every report on the subject).
In fact I would go as far to predict the number of rental properties in
Cambridge will have risen from the 11,170 properties recorded in 2011 to 14,800
by 2021. Sounds fanciful? Well in 2001, there were only 7,295 privately rented
properties in Cambridge.
It is a fact that we as a Country are more and more turning
into a European model when it comes to homeownership, where the norm is renting
for the first ten years, as opposed to the norm from the 1960’s to 1990’s,
where first time buyers were encouraged to buy as soon as they got a job.
Tenants, in particular, will also feel the benefit from
potential changes in the market. The likelihood of interest rate increases in
late 2015, existing economic conditions, combined with the uncertainty of new
Government manifestos following the General Election in May will result in low
demand for people to buy yet also put a dampening effect on increases in rent.
As long as landlords buy the right sort of property, that allows for a reasonable
yield, decent capital growth, everyone will be a winner. If want a chat
about what would make the best sort a property that would offer that in
Cambridge, then please email me on cambridge@northwooduk.com
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