Please click the link below to visit our new website, we would like to thank you for your continued support.
Wellingborough Property Blog
Tuesday 21 March 2017
We Have Moved. Take a Look at our Brand New Wellingborough Property Blog
The Wellingborough Property Blog has now moved to a new and improved site, to make the website more user friendly for our followers.
Please click the link below to visit our new website, we would like to thank you for your continued support.
Please click the link below to visit our new website, we would like to thank you for your continued support.
Thursday 9 March 2017
Wellingborough’s ‘Generation Trapped’ and the £2.21bn legacy
Last week, I wrote an article on the plight of the Wellingborough
20 something’s often referred to by the press as ‘Generation Rent’. Attitudes
to renting have certainly changed over the last twenty years and as my analysis
suggested, this change is likely to be permanent. In the article, whilst a
minority of this Generation Rent feel trapped, the majority don’t – making
renting a choice not a predicament. The Royal Institution of Chartered
Surveyors (RICS) predicted that the private rental sector is likely to grow substantially
by 1.8m households across the UK in the next 8 years, with demand for rental
property unlikely to slow and newly formed households continuing to choose the
rental market as opposed to buying.
However,
my real concern for Wellingborough homeowners and Wellingborough landlords
alike, as I discussed a couple of months ago, is our mature members of the
population of Wellingborough. In that previous article, I stated that the
current OAP’s (65+ yrs in age) in Wellingborough were sitting on £898.8m of
residential property ... however, I didn’t talk in depth about the ‘Baby
Boomers’, the 50yr to 64yr old Wellingborough people and what their properties
are worth – and more importantly, how the current state of affairs could be
holding back those younger Generation Renters.
In
Wellingborough, there are 3,465 households whose owners are aged between 50yrs
and 64yrs and about to pay their mortgage off. That property is worth, in
today’s prices, £682.2m. There are an additional 3,194 mortgage free Wellingborough
households, owned by 50yr to 64yr olds, worth £628.9m in today’s prices,
meaning...
Wellingborough Baby Boomers and Wellingborough
OAP’s are sitting
on £2.21bn worth of Wellingborough Property
These
Wellingborough Baby Boomers and OAP’s are sitting on 11,224 Wellingborough
properties and many of them feel trapped in their homes, and hence I have dubbed
them ‘Generation Trapped’.
Recently,
the English Housing Survey stated 49% of these
properties owned by the Generation Trapped, as I have dubbed them, are
‘under-occupied’ (under-occupied classed as having at least two bedrooms more
than needed). These houses could be better utilised by younger families, but
research carried out by the Prudential suggest in Britain it’s estimated that
only one in ten older people downsize while in the USA for example one in five
do so.
The
growing numbers of older homeowners who want to downsize their home are often
put off by the difficulties of moving. The charity United for all Ages,
suggested recently many are put off by the lack of housing options, 19% by the
hassle and cost of moving, 14% by having to declutter their possessions and 14%
by family reasons such as staying close to children and grandchildren.
Helping
mature Wellingborough (and the Country) homeowners to downsize at the right
time will also enable younger Wellingborough people to find the homes they need
– meaning every generation wins, both young and old. However, to ensure
downsizing works, as a Country, we need more choices for these ‘last time
buyers’.
Theresa
May and Philip Hammond can do their part and consider stamp duty tax breaks for
downsizers, our local Council in Wellingborough and the Planning Dept. should
play their part, as should landlords and property investors to ensure Wellingborough’s
‘Generation Trapped’ can find suitable property locally, close to friends,
family and facilities.
Friday 3 March 2017
Excellent 2 Bed Investment Opportunity in Wellingborough
Good Morning Potential Landlords! I have found an excellent 2 bedroom apartment to brighten up this wet and miserable morning for you. I think this is an ideal investment property, the flat is located within close proximity of local shops, amenities and transport links and with an asking price of £99,995.00 it has a potential yield of 7.5%! This property is currently on the market with Taylors of Wellingborough, please see below for more details:
If you are thinking of getting into the property rental
market and don’t know where to start, speak to us for impartial advice and
guidance to get the best return on your investment. For more information about
other potential investment properties that we could introduce you too, or to
ask about our thoughts on your own investment choices, call us on 01933 384616
or pop in and speak to us in person at our office: 117 Mill Road,
Wellingborough, NN8 1PH, or alternatively you can always e-mail me on info@express-salesandlettings.co.uk
Thursday 2 March 2017
‘Generation Rent (Forever)’ – 2,911 Wellingborough Tenants have no intention of ever buying a property to call home
The good old days of the 1970’s and 1980’s
eh … with such highlights lowlights as 24% inflation, 17% interest
rates, 3 day working week, 13% unemployment, power cuts ... those were the days
(not)… but at least people could afford to buy their own home. So why aren’t
the 20 and 30 something’s buying in the same numbers as they were 30 or 40
years ago?
Many people blame the credit crunch and
global recession of 2008, which had an enormous impact on the Wellingborough
(and UK) housing market. Predominantly, the 20 something first-time buyers who,
confronting a problematic mortgage market, the perceived need for big deposits,
reduced job security and declining disposable income, discovered it challenging
to assemble the monetary means to get on to the Wellingborough property ladder.
However, I would say there has been
something else at play other than the issue of raising a deposit - having
sufficient income and rising property prices in Wellingborough. Whilst these
are important factors and barriers to homeownership, I also believe there has
been a generational change in attitudes towards home ownership in Wellingborough
(and in fact the rest of the Country).
Back in 2011, the Halifax did a survey of
thousands of tenants and 19% of tenants said they had no plans to buy a home
for themselves. A recent, almost identical survey of tenants, carried out by The
Deposit Protection Service revealed, in late 2016, that figure had risen to
38.4%, with many no-longer equating home ownership to success and believing
renting to be better suited to their lifestyle.
You see, I believe renting is a fundamental
part of the housing sector, and a meaningful proportion of the younger adult
members of the Wellingborough population choose to be tenants as it better
suits their plans and lifestyle. Local Government in Wellingborough (including
the planners – especially the planners), land owners and landlords need an adaptable
Wellingborough residential property sector that allows the diverse choices of these
Wellingborough 20 and 30 year olds to be met.
This means, if we applied the same
percentages to the current 7,582 Wellingborough tenants in their 3,140 private
rental properties, 2,911 tenants have no plans to ever buy a property – good
news for the landlords of those 1,206 properties. Interestingly, in the same
report, just under two thirds (62%) of tenants said they didn’t expect to buy
within the next year.
.. but does that mean the other third will be
buying in Wellingborough in the next 12 months?
Some will, but most won’t … in fact, the
Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) predicts that, by 2025, that
the number of people renting will increase, not drop. Yes, many tenants might
hope to buy but the reality is different for the reasons set out above. The RICS predicts the number of tenants
looking to rent will increase by 1.8 million households by 2025, as rising
house prices continue to make home ownership increasingly unaffordable for
younger generations. So, if we applied
this rise to Wellingborough, we will in fact need an additional 1,346 private
rental properties over the next eight years (or 168 a year) … meaning the number
of private rented properties in Wellingborough is projected to rise to an eye
watering 4,486 households.
Saturday 25 February 2017
Wellingborough First Time Buyers borrow £58.3m in the last 12 months
Starting with the bigger
picture, over the last 12 months in the UK, 1,061,557 properties were sold with
a total value of £223.74 bn. To give that some context, ten years ago 1,581,727
properties sold with a total value of £405.56bn, so it can be seen the number
of people moving house has dropped by over a third over the last decade.
Whether you are a
landlord, homeowner or tenant, it’s always important to keep an eye on the Wellingborough
property market, not just from your point of view, but also from every player’s
point of view. Over the last 12 months, 1,214 properties have sold (and
completed) in Wellingborough, worth £227.1m. Interestingly the number of
properties changing hands in Wellingborough has also dropped when compared to a
decade ago.
It might surprise you that
first time buyers in 2017 will benefit from a slight decline in Wellingborough
buy-to-let investors.
Those looking to buy a
home in the spring and summer of 2017 will face a far less competitive Wellingborough
property market than the same time of year in 2016, when the urgency to beat
the buy-to-let stamp duty hike was in full swing.
Many landlords brought
forward their purchases to beat the tax, and since then, the number of buy-to-let
purchases has dropped slightly. First time buyers have taken advantage of that
and have increased their buying. In fact, looking at the Bank of England
figures, this is what UK lenders have lent on buy-to-let properties versus
first time buyers over the last 12 months
…
When looking at the
figures for Wellingborough itself, first time buyers have borrowed more than £58.3m
in the last 12 months to buy their first home. This is a ringing endorsement of
their confidence in their jobs and the local Wellingborough economy. Those 20 and
30 something’s who are considering being first time buyers in 2017 will find
that the number of properties on the market has never been as good as it has
for quite a while, meaning you have more choice of properties and less
competition from so many buy-to-let landlords than a year ago.
Rightmove announced
nationally that new seller enquiries are 26% up on the same time last year
giving the stoutest indication that we may see a slight ease in the lack of
properties on the market. When I look at Wellingborough, at this moment in time
there are 138 properties for sale, compared to 105 properties a year ago. All this
will be welcome news amongst Wellingborough first-time buyers with a
combination of a proportional reduction in new investors and landlords.
2017 will be an
interesting year for all homeowners, be they buy-to-let landlords, existing
homeowners or future homeowners.
Friday 24 February 2017
3 Bed Semi-Detached Buy to Let Opportunity in Wellingborough
Good Morning Landlords! Today I have found a 3 bedroom semi-detached property in the popular Ambleside area of Wellingborough. The property is currently being marketed for £140,000.00 and could achieve a potential yield of 6.4%! This house would be a perfect Buy to Let Investment and with 3 bedroom properties in high demand, this one is definitely worth a look, the property is currently being marketed by Richard James Estate Agents, here are some further details:
If you are thinking of getting into the property rental
market and don’t know where to start, speak to us for impartial advice and
guidance to get the best return on your investment. For more information about
other potential investment properties that we could introduce you too, or to
ask about our thoughts on your own investment choices, call us on 01933 384616
or pop in and speak to us in person at our office: 117 Mill Road,
Wellingborough, NN8 1PH, or alternatively you can always e-mail me on info@express-salesandlettings.co.uk
Saturday 18 February 2017
With 7,582 people in Private Rented Properties in Wellingborough - Should you still be investing in Wellingborough Buy To Let?
If I were a buy to let landlord in Wellingborough today,
I might feel a little bruised by the assault made on my wallet after being (and
continuing to be) ransacked over the last 12 months by HM Treasury’s tax
changes on buy to let. To add insult to injury, Brexit has caused a tempering
of the Wellingborough property market with property prices not increasing by
the levels we have seen in the last few years. I think we might even see a very
slight drop in property prices this year and, if Wellingborough property prices
do drop, the downside to that is that first time buyers could be attracted back
into the Wellingborough property market; meaning less demand for renting
(meaning rents will go down). Yet, before we all run for the hills, all these
things could be serendipitous to every Wellingborough landlord, almost a
blessing in disguise.
Wellingborough has a population of 48,763, so when I
looked at the number of people who lived in private rented accommodation, the
numbers astounded me …
Yields will rise if Wellingborough property prices fall, which
will also make it easier to obtain a buy to let mortgage, as the income would
cover more of the interest cost. If property values were to level off or come
down that could help Wellingborough landlords add to their portfolio. Rental
demand in Wellingborough is expected to stay solid and may even see an improvement
if uncertainty is protracted. However, there is something even more important
that Wellingborough landlords should be aware of: the change in the anthropological
nature of these 20 something potential first time buyers.
I have just come back from a visit to my wife’s relations after a
family get together. I got chatting with my wife’s nephew and his
partner. Both are in their mid/late
twenties, both have decent jobs in Wellingborough and they rent. Yet, here was
the bombshell, they were planning to rent for the foreseeable future with no
plans to even save for a deposit, let alone buy a property. I enquired why they
weren’t planning to buy? The answers surprised me as a 30 something and it will you.
Firstly, they don’t want to put cash into property, they would rather spend it
on living and socialising by going on nice holidays and buying the latest tech
and gadgets. They want the flexibility to live where they choose and finally,
they don’t like the idea of paying for repairs. All their friends feel the same.
I was quite taken aback that buying a house is just not top of the list for
these youngsters
So, as 15.5% of Wellingborough people are
in rented accommodation and as that figure is set to grow over the next decade,
now might just be a good time to buy property in Wellingborough – because what
else are you going to invest in? Give
your money to the stock market run by sharp suited city whizz kids – because at
least with property – it’s something you can touch - there is nothing like
bricks and mortar!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)