Showing posts with label housing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label housing. Show all posts

Tuesday, 15 October 2013

Boston Landlord Licensing Plans to Tackle Anti-social Behaviour

This article by BBC News Lincolnshire on October 14th, 2013 reveals Lincolnshire council's plan to introduce a licensing system for landlords.

A Lincolnshire council is planning to introduce a licensing system for landlords to crack down on anti-social behaviour at their properties.

Boston Borough Council said the licenses, which could cost upwards of £490, would help tackle disruption and low-quality housing.

It said there was a link between anti-social behaviour and poor property management.
The National Landlord Association said it could put up costs for good tenants.

Gavin Dick, from the association, said: "There's over 100 pieces of legislation that landlords have to comply with that the council can use to drive out criminal landlords.

"We would encourage the council to use current legislation rather than imposing more costs on good landlords which will be passed through to tenants and increase the cost of accommodation in Boston."

'Sleepless nights'
 
But Kevin Martin, the lead of housing projects at Boston Borough Council, said landlords needed to take responsibility for anti-social behaviour that happens within their property.

"Crime and anti-social behaviour figures in Boston are one and a half times higher than the average for Lincoln, so it's serious enough to present a problem and hence the council's initiative around licensing," he said.

The council said some Houses of Multiple Occupation (HMO), which can be a house split into bedsits or a flat where each tenant has their own tenancy agreement, are a big problem and have resulted in anti-social behaviour, noise nuisance and a build up of refuse.
It said this was linked to the failure of some private landlords and why a licensing system was required.

One woman, who did not want to be named but has been affected by noisy neighbours, said landlords should take more responsibility.

She said: "I've been stressed, I've lost weight, I have sleepless nights, I've gone to bed and put ear plugs in as music is played into the early hours of the morning.

"I've had the police out twice. They don't take notice of the police either."

Consultation about the plans will take place from November to January before a decision is made.

Article Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-lincolnshire-24519290

Friday, 13 September 2013

U.K. House Prices Increase to Record on London Property Surge

This article by
U.K. house prices rose to a record last month as government measures boosted demand and London’s property market continued to surge, Acadametrics said. 

Values increased 0.4 percent from July to an average 233,776 pounds ($370,000), the London-based real-estate researcher and LSL Property Services Plc said in a report today. In London, prices have risen 40 percent from their peak in April 2009, compared with 16 percent nationally.

The Bank of England-run Funding for Lending Scheme has helped to cut mortgage costs, while Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne’s Help to Buy program allows people to purchase a home with a deposit of as little as 5 percent of the value of the property. The BOE has downplayed speculation that a bubble may be brewing, saying activity is still at a low level relative to its pre-crisis peak.
“The property market has turned over a new leaf after years of restrained activity,” said Richard Sexton, director LSL unit e.surv. “The government has been pivotal in providing the aid that the market has been craving for many years.”

Eight of the 10 regions tracked by LSL recorded price gains in the latest three months compared with a year earlier. In the southwest and Wales, where values fell, the declines eased, according to the report.

Acadametrics estimates that completed housing transactions exceeded 70,000 in August for a second month. That would mark the first time that sales over two consecutive months have been above that level since November-December 2007, when transactions were 104,486 and 84,524.

BOE Governor Mark Carney said yesterday that while the market is improving, activity levels, mortgage applications and valuations are still low. He also said prices will continue to increase and the Financial Policy Committee of the central bank will be “vigilant.”

“It is still too early to predict what impact the economy will have on prices, especially as the FPC may apply downward pressure through controls over mortgage supply and pricing,” Sexton said. “Thus nothing can be set in stone yet.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Fergal O’Brien in London at fobrien@bloomberg.net

Article Source: http://www.businessweek.com/news/2013-09-12/u-dot-k-dot-house-prices-increase-to-record-on-london-property-surge

Friday, 6 September 2013

Adult Children Live with Their Parents at Home as Rents and House Prices Rise

This alarming article by Tanya Powley of Financial Times on September 6th, 2013 reveals grown-up children are still living at home with their parents because getting on to the property ladder is increasingly difficult as rents and house prices rise.

“Empty nest” syndrome has become a problem of the past for millions of parents who have adult children in their twenties and early thirties still living at home.

The trend of young adults returning to live in the parental home – generation boomerang as they have been called – has grown in recent years, as rents and house prices have risen further out of the reach of would-be homeowners.

Three in ten parents have at least one child aged between 21 and 40 living at home, according to a survey published by the National Housing Federation on Friday. Two-thirds of these parents said their child could not afford to move out.

The poll, which surveyed more than 1,100 parents, highlighted the emotional and financial burden parents face and why the returning offspring have been given another nickname: Kippers – kids in parents’ pockets eroding retirement savings.

One in five said having a grown-up child at home had caused them stress, while a further fifth said it had given rise to family arguments.

“Moving out and setting up a family home of your own is a normal rite of passage,” said David Orr, chief executive at the National Housing Federation. “Yet as rents, mortgages and deposits continue to soar out of reach, it is no longer an option for many.”

Official figures show the number of young adults living at home has jumped by 20 per cent since 1997. According to the Office for National Statistics, almost 3m Britons between the age of 20 and 34 now live at home – of which 1.8m are men.

Amanda Lightstone, a 57-year-old dental nurse, has her youngest son, Andrew, 25, living with her in her three-bedroom house in Edgware, northwest London. She has already lent more than £100,000 to her older sons to help them buy their homes and said she will do the same for her youngest.

“How will he save for a deposit if he starts renting? He will live at home for quite a few years – he’ll be more than 30 when he can afford to buy his own place. I will just have to delay my retirement plans, you can’t have everything!” said Ms Lightstone.

Ann Berrington, professor of demography at the University of Southampton, said the percentage of young adults in their twenties living with their parents has increased since the recession.

Her analysis of the 2008 and 2012 UK Labour Force Surveys found the percentage of women aged between 21 and 22 living at the parental home rose from 46.4 per cent to 55.6 in the four years to 2012.

“The lack of affordable housing is clearly a factor as well as having to raise bigger deposits, but there are other factors at play,” said Professor Berrington.

While research published on Friday showed that in July the number of first-time buyers was at its highest since November 2007, according to LSL Property Services, transaction levels are still significantly lower than at the peak of the housing market.

Local government department figures published on Thursday showed that the government’s housing schemes, which aim to make it easier for people to buy a home with just a 5 per cent deposit, have made little headway.

According to the government, 3,749 people have bought a home through its NewBuy scheme launched in March 2012. This equates to less than 5 per cent of its 100,000 target. The second part of the scheme has had a bigger impact, with 3,000 sales and 10,000 reservations since April 2013.

Paula Higgins, chief executive of the HomeOwners Alliance, said: “We haven’t been building enough houses for 30 years and this is a real embedded crisis that’s not going to go away.”

Article Source:  http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/eb71071c-163e-11e3-a57d-00144feabdc0.html#axzz2e596ach1


Tuesday, 3 September 2013

Deposits Fall and Home Affordability in the UK Improves

According to the new research from Lloyds TBS, the average deposit put down by home owners in the UK in 2013 was £70,540, just 6% higher than a decade ago as as shown on this September 2nd, 2013 article by the Property Wire.
 
The research report says that the average age of a home mover is 40 and affordability for second steppers, that is those moving to their second home, has improved over the last year but fallen over the last decade.

The research also shows that since 2008, the average price paid by a home mover has fallen by 10% from £235,078 to £212,586 in 2013. Nationally, home mover property prices grew by 3% in the past year.

Not surprisingly home movers in London, where prices have been rising faster than in the rest of the country, put down the largest average deposit at £126,528 or 34% of the average property value. This is close to three and half times the average deposit put down by home movers in Northern Ireland at £36,912 and the lowest in the country.

The average mortgage advance for a new home mover is £142,046, a quarter higher than a decade ago when it was £101,472.

With the average age of a home mover now at 40 years old, this has increased three years since 2002 when it was 37 in 2002. Most of the increase in buyer age has occurred since 2007.

Typical mortgage payments for a home mover, that is those already in the housing market, stood at 31% average gross disposable earnings in the second quarter of 2013. This has come down sharply from an all time peak of 52% in 2007. This improvement has been due to a reduction in both mortgage rates and house prices.

Housing affordability for second steppers, calculated as the average price of a typical second stepper home less their current equity position, stood at 4.4 times gross annual average earnings in June 2013 compared with a ratio of 4.9 in June 2012.

A typical second stepper's current equity position accounts for 13% or £21,200 of the price of an average second stepper home, a rise from 1% in 2012.

Although the position has improved for those looking to put down a deposit on a new home, for some potential second home movers this may still not be sufficient to put towards a deposit when also taking the cost of moving into account.

‘Housing affordability for the typical second stepper has improved in the past year.

Nonetheless, there are many potential second steppers who are still in their first home which they bought in the run up to and at the peak in house prices in 2007. Many of these home owners may still be unable to move due to having either very low, or negative, equity in their homes,’ explained Nitesh Patel, housing economist at Lloyds TSB.

‘The lack of equity for many home owners in their existing home largely explains why the number of home movers in the first six months of 2013 was broadly unchanged compared with a year earlier in sharp contrast to the number of first time buyers growing by close to 20% over the period,’ Patel added.

The report also reveals a considerable variation in housing affordability between regions, with northern regions more affordable than southern regions for second steppers. This is largely a reflection of the lower prices for second stepper properties in the north. The West Midlands and East Midlands both at 3.1, are the most affordable regions for those in their first home looking to take their next step on the property ladder. While London at 5.7, the South West at 4.6 and the  East at 4.5 are the least affordable.

Article Source: http://www.propertywire.com/news/europe/uk-property-deposits-afford-201309028183.html

Thursday, 29 August 2013

Wind Turbines Don’t Hurt Property Values

This article by John Upton of grist on August 28, 2013 declares that wind turbine won't hurt property values in contrast to the previous reports.

Some people who learn that wind turbines are going to be built in their neighborhood freak out about a couple of things, but science can help put their minds at ease.

First, they worry that their health will be harmed if they develop so-called “wind turbine syndrome.” But there is no evidence that wind turbines actually cause any of the ailments commonly blamed on them.

Next, they worry that the value of their property will fall. “Here come those eggshell-colored spinning things that produce energy but no pollution,” they might mutter to one another in hushed tones. “There goes the neighborhood.”

Fortunately, this concern is equally unwarranted, according to a comprehensive new study by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory researchers [PDF]. From the study:
We collected data from more than 50,000 home sales among 27 counties in nine states. These homes were within 10 miles of 67 different wind facilities, and 1,198 sales were within 1 mile of a turbine — many more than previous studies have collected. The data span the periods well before announcement of the wind facilities to well after their construction. …

Regardless of model specification, we find no statistical evidence that home values near turbines were affected in the post-construction or post-announcement/pre-construction periods. …
[T]he core results of our analysis consistently show no sizable statistically significant impact of wind turbines on nearby property values.
This was the largest study of its kind, but it was not the first. Studies published by the same laboratory in 2009 and 2011 reached the same conclusions.

“Although there have been claims of significant property value impacts near operating wind turbines that regularly surface in the press or in local communities, strong evidence to support those claims has failed to materialize in all of the major U.S. studies conducted thus far,” said lead researcher Ben Hoen.

Hoen and his colleagues dug up similar but highly localized academic studies focused on parts of Illinois, New York, Ontario, the U.K., and the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia. Only the latter study found any evidence of a potential effect of wind turbines on property values.

So unless you’re investing in real estate in western Germany, you can breathe easy about any nearby wind energy developments. They won’t harm your health, and they won’t diminish the value of your property portfolio.

Article Source: http://grist.org/news/wind-turbines-dont-hurt-property-values/

Wednesday, 28 August 2013

George Osborne's Homes Scheme Could Sideline First-Time Buyers

Help to buy homes scheme could cause property prices to new highs says lenders as shown on this article by Hilary Osborne and Phillip Inman of TheGuardian on August 28, 2013.

Help to Buy scheme may 'give with one hand and take with the other' by pushing costs up by 11% by the end of 2016.

George Osborne's policy of kickstarting the housing market with subsidised mortgages could inflate prices to pre-crash peaks and sideline the first-time buyers it is designed to help, according to a group representing some of the UK's biggest banks and building societies

In the latest warning about the impact of the Help to Buy programme, lenders said property prices could rise by 11% by the end of 2016, with artificially inflated valuations the biggest threat to its success. Without a housebuilding programme to address the extra demand, property prices could spiral to new highs, said the Intermediary Mortgage Lenders Association.

"If house prices continue to rise for the duration of the scheme, then in essence we will be giving with one hand and taking away with the other," said Peter Williams, executive director of the IMLA and director of the University of Cambridge Centre for Housing and Planning Research.

House prices in London are above their 2007 peak, according to the Nationwide building society, but taken across the entire country they remain 9% lower, as IMLA warned that under the scheme the average UK home would cost £180,256 by the end of 2016. That would take average prices close to 2007 peak of £181,975.

The Help to Buy scheme, announced by the chancellor in March, aims to grant mortgages to homebuyers with a deposit of as little of 5% of a property's price.

The first part of the programme, which allows buyers to subsidise purchases of newbuild homes with an interest-free loan from the government, launched in April. It has been credited with reversing a fall in housebuilding and boosting consumer confidence. However, the second part, which will be introduced at the start of 2014 and will offer a taxpayer-backed guarantee to lenders who offer mortgages worth up to 95% of the property's value, has attracted criticism from economists, politicians and other commentators, who have warned it could fuel a house price bubble. Albert Edwards, who heads the global strategy team at Société Générale, described it as a "moronic policy".

IMLA, whose members include subsidiaries of Santander, Barclays and Nationwide that offer mortgages through brokers, said 60% of its members believed the scheme could be undermined by a house price bubble.

While all respondents agreed first-time buyers had the most to gain from the second part of the scheme, they are likely to be the hardest hit by a rise in prices to 2007 levels. This would push the cost of a 5% deposit from £8,321 at the end of this year to £9,013 by the end of 2016.

A recovery in the housing market has accompanied a turnaround in the economy since the beginning of the year. GDP has risen by 1% in the first six months, with most sectors of the economy showing they expanded compared to last year.

However, the TUC is warning that a rise in UK population, by 2.3 million to 63.7 million over the last five years, means the benefits of GDP growth have been spread over a greater number of people. According to a TUC analysis, GDP per head is still 0.7% lower than when the coalition took office and 7.5% lower than the UK's peak level in late 2007.

The TUC's general secretary, Frances O'Grady, warned that the recent burst of borrowing by consumers to fund everything from house purchases to the weekly shop was based on extra debt and not on a rise in incomes.

She said: "Too many people are having to run down their savings or turn to credit cards to spend in the shops, rather than see their incomes grow. And behind improving employment figures are millions of workers whose incomes are falling and who can't get enough hours to make ends meet.

"We all want to see the UK economy back on track but any talk of recovery is meaningless unless we get the right kind of growth."

The current level of GDP per head at £23,728, is mere 0.7% higher than at the lowest point of the recession in September 2009, the TUC said.

Article Source: http://www.theguardian.com/money/2013/aug/28/george-osborne-housing-policies-damage


Monday, 26 August 2013

Mortgages Up By Third as Housing Sales Soar

Sarah O'Grady of Express discusses the banks' approved mortgages is third higher compared to last year as the housing market continues to step up according to this article on 24th August, 2013.

The number of mortgages approved by banks is a third higher than a year ago as the housing market revival continues to gather pace.
Some 37,200 approvals for house purchases worth a total of £5.7billion got the green light in July, the British Bankers’ Association reported.

This was only slightly down on a 17-month high of 37,337 the previous month.
The BBA said the “stronger pattern” seen in the mortgage market since the start of the year has continued into the summer.

Mortgage approvals to home buyers are 31 per cent higher than in the same period last year and re-mortgaging approvals are 40 per cent higher.

However, overall mortgage lending remains “subdued” because homeowners are making high repayments on their loans, the BBA said.

Various Government schemes to boost the housing market mean several mortgage lenders have been offering their lowest ever rates.

With poor returns generally on offer on savings, this has made it more attractive for people to use any spare cash to pay down their mortgage debt.

BBA statistics director David Dooks said: ­“Mortgage activity has strengthened during 2013 with the help of Government schemes. But high ­repayments and redemptions mean that we are not seeing increases in net mortgage borrowing for the high street banks.”

Jonathan Harris, director of mortgage broker Anderson Harris, said that despite the uplift in activity, house sales are still far lower than they were at the height of the boom years.

Tuesday, 20 August 2013

UK Property Firm Reports Surge in Interest from Australian Investors

PRWeb on August 20, 2013 reveals Knight Know international's interest has extended it's reach into the outback after seeing the high demands in the UK property market from Australian investors.

After selling properties in Asia, the Far East and The Middle East, Knight Knox International has now extended its reach into the outback, after seeing an upsurge in the amount of interest in the UK property market from Australian investors. 

Following the Knight Knox International’s exhibition team’s first ever attendance at an Australian property exhibition, the North West investment firm can report that interest from Australia is indeed high, after taking over 89 enquiries in the three-day show.

Two main factors are being identified as the reason for this upsurge. The first of which is the costly nature of the Australian property market which freezes out many of its own home-grown investors.

Identified in the 2013 Annual Demographia International Housing Affordability Survey as the third most unaffordable major market, properties across Australia continue to experience rises in price.

So much in fact, that the house price index for 8 major cities in Australia rose by 2.6% during Q1 2013, with a surge of 8% in properties in Darwin, an upscale of 6.1% in Perth and a rise of 3.6% in Sydney, according to the Australian bureau of statistics.

The second reason behind this rise in Australian investment is the continuing depreciation of the Australian dollar causing many to put their money in UK Stirling and property, allowing them to both secure their funds and gain financial rewards.

The value of the Australian dollar has been dipping dramatically since April, with the IMF reporting that the dollar has depreciated by around 10% since; this is just one of a series of major drops the dollar has experienced, it also fell by about 7 per cent between May and mid-June and falls such as this, are another reason behind the upsurge in interest in the UK property market.

Alasdair Mcdonald, a member of the Knight Knox International exhibitions team spoke of the rising interest from Australian investors, which he saw direct evidence of at the Sydney Homebuyer and International Property Investor Show.

Alasdair commented: “When discussing potential investment options with Australian investors their true feelings come to the fore, they expressed that there is no country that they would prefer to invest in more than the UK because of the security and also because they are investing in pounds sterling, as well as generating a steadily increasing income on the net rental side. Also as an overseas investor they will be paying zero capital gains tax and be taxed considerably less on their rental.”

The Knight Knox International Exhibitions Team will continue exhibiting on the team's first visit to Australia on August 23rd at the Homebuyer & Property Investor Show, Melbourne.
Investors are urged to come along to the three day event which comes to a close on the 25th of August, to take advantage of exclusive offers the team will be offering in the UK buy-to-let and student accommodation market at the event.

 Article Source: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2013/8/prweb11027188.htm