Buying, selling and letting - January, 2008

 Friday, January 11, 2008
The Tenant’s Survival Guide by Lesley Henderson is an indispensable book for anyone who rents. A landlord herself, Henderson is passionate about ensuring that tenants are not treated like second-class citizens and has taken it on herself to make sure that all future tenants, be they students or professionals, go into an agreement with a landlord or letting agency armed with the knowledge of the laws that are in place to protect them.

The book covers everything you need to know about being a tenant, including chapters on viewings, the new deposit law, harassment and eviction and how your landlord’s mortgage affects you. The Tenant’s Survival Guide is designed to protect you from the worst and help steer you towards the best in the notoriously uneven world of lettings.

Published by How To Books Ltd and available at £8.99 in major bookshops and online retailers.

posted on Friday, January 11, 2008 1:18:27 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Trackback
Call for ‘exchange ready’ HIPs
With the final phase of the roll-out of home information packs (HIPs) now completed, the Association of Home Information Pack Providers (AHIPP) says the challenge now is to improve and add to the pack.
Mike Ockenden, director general of AHIPP, said: ‘We welcome the full roll-out of HIPs in particular because of the help they give to first-time buyers – but this is only the beginning. We are now looking to work with all other industries involved in the home buying and selling process to develop and improve HIPs and their content, so that they can be fully incorporated into the house buying process.’
For HIPs to fully inform potential buyers about properties they are viewing, it is vital that home condition report (HCR) be made a mandatory part of the pack, and that many of the searches that provide information on flooding, ground movement and contamination are included, says Ockendon.
‘By bringing this information back into the pack and certain documents that are required to complete the legal process, HIPs can be made exchange ready. This means that a buyer who has an offer accepted can pass the pack to his or her lawyer, who can rely on the contents and move quickly to exchange of contracts.
‘Exchange-ready HIPs will remove delays from the process and reduce the number of failed transactions – which have been running at over 25 percent, costing consumers £1 million per day. They will also ease the extraordinarily high level of stress associated with buying and selling homes and reduce the cost of the process. Further, they will give aspiring first-time buyers help in owning their first home.’

NAEA amazed at government spin over HIPs     
The National Association of Estate Agents (NAEA) has voiced its reservations over the contents of the recent update on Home Information Packs (HIPs) from the Department of Communities and Local Government (CLG). Within the document the department states that the government commissioned independent economic research and advice to analyse the impact of HIPs and its interaction with current market conditions.
NAEA raised concerns about aspects of this research which was carried out by Dr Peter Williams of European Economics.
Stewart Lilly, President of NAEA, explained: ‘In particular the main conclusion is that there was no evidence to show that HIPs were affecting transactions or prices and that the market slow-up was due to the economic and financial situation. However, it was accepted that HIPs must have had some effect, although it is really too early to be certain. This begs the question of how a decision to proceed can therefore be made.
‘It is disappointing that Dr Williams did not talk to the stakeholders nor take into account or discuss our recent members’ survey. In my opinion his research seriously underestimates the impact of people “testing the water” and it is incorrect to consider them time-wasters as we all know that this is clearly not the case.
‘I do not believe that a correct analysis of stock levels has taken place and there appears to be no attempt made to check listings of three- or more bedroom properties against smaller ones which would, in our opinion, have shown a clear differentiation and proved that HIPs are affecting supply.
‘It is probably true that transactions and prices have not been affected. It is far too early for this to happen and will occur as a result of a reduction in instructions.
‘My own conclusion is that the Government has proceeded on the basis of a report that did not fully look into all the market conditions and in any case accepts that it is too early to come to many firm conclusions.’

posted on Friday, January 11, 2008 1:16:03 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Trackback

Lynsey Sweales of The Money Centre suggests ways of making a success of property investment in 2008.

The void period is the enemy of the landlord, and nearly half of landlords experienced one last year. An unlet property is one of the more serious of the problems associated with property investment but it is by no means the only one.

Buy-to-let has never been without its risks but, with fluctuating interest rates and uncertainty in the UK’s housing market, the spotlight is now on the buy-to-let market more than ever before. This has unsettled some landlords, in particular new investors and those with a few properties but not a large portfolio.

An independent survey of landlords commissioned by The Money Centre has identified three key pitfalls which many landlords experience at some stage. Here are ways to avoid them or minimise the damage they do to your investment.

In the beginning

Much of the success of a buy-to-let property lies in being prepared at the very beginning. Property is never without its risks but by doing meticulous research on the property market in the area you want to buy and ensuring you have the right finance and strategy in place, you can make the investment work hard for you for a successful investment over the long term. Research, planning, sufficient cash reserves and a realistic approach are key to making successful investments in property.

That empty feeling

Void periods are to be well avoided. The Money Centre’s research showed that 46 per cent of landlords experienced a rental void during the last 12 months, with the average length of time 14 days.

In order to minimise such voids and the resulting issues, it’s a good idea to take account of a void period when budgeting and have a slush fund with savings to cover a void period so you are not caught short.

Also, make preparations to market your property early on, and ensure you or your rental agent is as proactive as possible to ensure you find new tenants quickly.

Finally, research the demand in your area to determine whether the property should be let furnished or unfurnished and stick to neutral colours for decorating. A property that appeals to a wider range of potential tenants is less likely to stand empty.

Costly repairs and maintenance

The Money Centre’s research showed 38 per cent of landlords questioned have had property damaged by tenants, with an average annual cost of £1,940 for repairs and maintenance – £701 for an individual property, £1,626 for landlords with two to four properties, rising to £3,294 for those with five to 19 properties.

Factor costs of maintenance, such as boiler replacement or new carpets every three to five years, into your budgets and have a slush fund to dip into to cover any potential costs of repair.

Vet your prospective tenants carefully before contracts are signed. Ensure you have their full details, obtain – and check! – references.

Completing the application form at the prospective tenant’s current home lets you see how they look after it.

Ensure you place the tenant’s deposit in one of the three government-authorised tenancy deposit schemes. Not only is this required by law, but these schemes also offer free dispute resolution in case of a disagreement about the deposit at the end of the tenancy.

It is also a good idea to join a landlords’ association to get advice and guidance on legislation and benefit from sharing best practice.

Rental yield gap

The research showed that while 77 per cent of landlords make a profit, 16 per cent break even and seven per cent make a loss. For those times when mortgage repayments are increasing and rental yields are falling, it is important first of all not to panic or make any snap decisions.

Take your time to assess your situation and consider all the options, such as increasing the rent, remortgaging and speaking to a specialist broker to see how they can help.

Always shop around for the best home loan deals and consider using a buy-to-let mortgage broker, who can offer professional guidance as well as help you get the best deal.

Contact The Money Centre on 0800 374611 or see themoneycentre.co.uk

posted on Friday, January 11, 2008 10:56:08 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Trackback

After the roller coaster ride of last year’s property market, the property experts have wasted no time in airing their predictions about what the year has in store for us in terms of borrowing and buying.
Agents are suitably subdued. After the lack of stock that pushed prices sky-high but left them with, erm, a lack of stock, followed by the slowdown that higher interest rates and the credit cruch helped bring about, they can be forgiven for their ‘after the party’ mood. And don’t even get them started on HIPs!

As the year dawns, they are looking towards a market that is steady, if unexciting compared to that of 2007. According to the National Association of Estate Agents (NAEA), prices will be flat this year, while ‘underlying supply and demand factors will help to steady the market’. Further interest rate cuts are forecast, landing at around 5.25 per cent.

Peter Bolton King, chief executive of NAEA, says, ‘The international “credit crunch”, issues with Northern Rock, successive interest rate rises and launch of home information packs (HIPs) are all major events that clouded the housing market in the second half of 2007. As the market strives to right itself again it is hoped that the worst is now over; however all of these events have left behind them considerable uncertainty for 2008. Questions over future problems that may come out of America, the size of any credit squeeze and the exact impact of the HIPs roll out still hang in the air. These could well have a significant impact on the fortunes of the market.’

And prices? ‘The picture is expected to be similar, if toned down slightly, in 2008,’ he says, ‘with overall prices remaining static.‘On a regional level, London and the South East will remain strong as demand continues. Other areas, however – particularly those suffering from lower employment – are likely to see prices plateau or perhaps even depreciate over the coming year.’

Interest rates are starting to come down again following the summer’s rises, and Bolton King predicts more downward movement. ‘Further decreases in the base rate are expected for early 2008 when we may see another quarter percentage point fall. We are unlikely to experience another drop after that, however, until much later in the year. I would be pleasantly surprised if the rate was as low as five per cent by the close of 2008.’

HIPs was the story of last year, and the catfight between the interested parties in the home selling business and a government that appeared to be organising some kind of brewery-based event has been both entertaining and exasperating. And Bolton King has been scathing in his criticism of the policy and its implementation.

‘Home information packs (HIPs) have had a bumpy ride in 2007,’ he says, with admirable restraint. ‘Buyers have shown little interest and at the same time new instructions have fallen considerably. The uncertainty has by no means cleared, either. Although a whole year has passed, it seems that HIPs are as much of an unknown factor now as when we were making our predictions for 2007. The first few months of 2008 will be a telling time. I am really hoping that we don’t see instructions negatively affected by the launch of the final phase in the same way that they have been by phases one and two.’

Stuart Law, chief executive of Assetz, predicts average house price growth this year of five per cent, with interest rates falling to five per cent by December. Rents, he says, are set to rise by ten per cent.
‘While we are currently experiencing a lot of negative sentiment in the property market, this is actually no reason to set the alarm bells ringing. If people look at the fundamentals it is actually very hard to find out what all the fuss is about.

Despite a recent slowing in the rate of house price growth across the market, the average figures reported by the major indices show that house prices have continued to grow at a healthy rate over the last two or three months.’

Sub-prime lending will continue to influence the market this year. Law sees more refusals and higher rates being charged – ‘poor credit mortgage applicants struggling to achieve any mortgage offers and those who do secure an offer receiving interest rate quotes that are substantially above those of early 2007.’

‘Buy-to-let lending will recover very strongly,’ says Law. ‘Already buy-to-let mortgages are now 0.3 per cent cheaper than homebuyer mortgages due to the perceived better quality of borrower.’ Hamptons International predicts that UK prices will rise by approximately three to four per cent this year, with prime central and north London outperforming south London.

Also, Hamptons foresees that the introduction of HIPs will contribute to the slow property market early in the year, with growth below one per cent; however, this will pick up in the second quarter. 'For buyers, there should be a greater selection of properties available than we have seen for some time and with downward pressure on interest rates, the cost of borrowing should become cheaper during 2008, helping with affordability issues. For vendors, in spite of the negative speculation, there are still more buyers than properties to sell and if a property is realistically priced, it should certainly sell without too much trouble.’

Regarding buy-to-let, Bradford and Bingley forecasts an upbeat mood among British landlords. Eighty-six per cent of landlords plan to either increase their portfolio or leave it untouched in 2008, and 95 per cent are positive about rental yields, which are holding steady at 5.72 per cent.
Despite the economic challenges ahead following the fallout from the “credit crunch”, property investors are prepared to weather the storm in the markets and are in it for the long run.

Jeremy Law, head of buy-to-let for Bradford & Bingley, says, ‘The social and demographic trends that have been driving the market continue to remain strong, with rental demand remaining robust. If house prices stagnate or fall, we are likely to see demand for rental properties strengthening, leading to improved rental yields. The results from our landlord confidence survey, together with the economic indicators surrounding buy-to-let, reveal that the sector is most definitely here to stay and will remain strong.’

Kinleigh Folkard & Hayward points to the difficulty of forecasting during such tempestuous times. However, the agent expects ’08 to look more like the second half of ’07 than the first half. Neutral prices or a slight drop seem to be the order of the day for London, says KFH – but the country house market may suffer more.

Still-vibrant City bonuses will be a plus for the market, while ‘completely unnecessary’ HIPs will be a drag on the market. All in all, says KFH, ‘a challenging year for the property industry’.
Mortgages For Business sees a positive long-term picture for investors, with the rental market going from strength to strength. Higher fees will be something that buy-to-let purchasers must get used to, as lenders feel the squeeze and pass this on.

Jonathan Moore, head of marketing at Mortgages for Business, says, ‘The availability of competitive mortgage funding will be become an increasing issue in 2008, as securitised lenders who have previously sought funding from the city find new finance either harder to come by or priced at a higher level. This is due to increasingly nervous sentiment in the city towards new lending following the sub prime mortgage lending issue in the US and the Northern Rock problem in the UK.’ But, he says, ‘The buy to let market still represents a viable investment option’.

Jennet Siebrits, head of residential research for CB Richard Ellis Residential Research, predicts price growth in 2008 of three per cent, down from 2007’s final tally of seven per cent. ‘London will outperform the market, with growth rates at six per cent.’

‘We are not predicting a crash and are more optimistic than other commentators. This is largely because the economic fundamentals remain sound. In addition, the market weakness will put off some sellers; people don’t like to sell when they think they are making a loss, whether that loss is perceived or actual. Significant and consecutive house price falls happen when home owners are forced to sell. With a benign economic backdrop we do not envisage that happening. As a result we expect a thin market in 2008 with lower levels of transactions. However, following a rather stagnant year, we expect the market to pick up again.’

Meanwhile, estate agents Halifax have identified ten likely hotspots for 2008, in terms of projected house price growth. Four of the ten, as it happens, are in Scotland: Lochgelly, Paisley, Greenock and Aberdeen.

The only London location in the top league of profitable for this year is Hackney, while the Kent towns of Dartford and Chatham, both the subject of huge regeneration programmes, also make the cut. Rounding out the list are two Welsh spots, Pontypool and Newport, while the sole northen England location is Liverpool, which celebrates 2008 as European city of culture.

Regionally, southern England and Scotland are likely to record the highest house price growth during 2008 – but growth on the whole is expected to be rather modest in comparison to the house price inflation that we saw during 2007.

posted on Friday, January 11, 2008 9:50:18 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Trackback

With UK prices staggeringly high during 2007, many would-be buyers ventured outside Britain to get on the ladder, invest or shop for a holiday home. However, the autumn’s credit crunch brought with it uncertainty regarding property investment – and that includes overseas purchases. What will the overseas market be like in 2008? And where will the hotspots be? Property Secrets’ chief analyst Simon Tweddle says Central and Eastern Europe will be front-runners – and the Czech Republic city of Brno, in particular – will be the hottest locations for investors. 

It is true that investors have cooled in the wake of the Northern Rock fiasco, he says – however, he wants to ‘reassure investors that property is still a very viable option’. First, the UK: Tweddle says the domestic market ‘will see decelerating with high prices, possible economic difficulties and a tightening credit environment [meaning] further high growth is not possible. Average growth is likely to be above 0 per cent helped, by a healthy market in the south of the country.’

London price growth will be between two and five per cent in the year, he forecasts. In Poland Tweddle predicts Katowice will be the winner, with major cities ‘taking a breather’. Third-tier cities, he says, are priced low and should see some growth. In Slovakia, Bratislava looks an excellent bet, he says, predicting that prices will rise by 15 per cent; in Trnava, ten per cent. The Czech Republic still has a strong economy, and Prague is expected to see a very healthy 25 per cent acceleration. Brno should see 30 per cent growth – ‘It’s booming right now’, he says, with high demand for low stock resulting from low prices. Romania, now an EU member for one year, has seen the market accelerate strongly.

‘Bucharest, the capital of booming Romania, is attracting huge amounts of FDI,’ he says. 'Unemployment is around 2.5 per cent and wages are rising rapidly. Expect high price growth rates for the next two years.’ Bulgaria, Tweddle says, has been hurt by overselling on the coast, ‘though now the cities are starting to look like attractive investment locations’. Sofia should see growth of between ten and 20 per cent. Elsewhere in Eastern Europe, ‘The Latvian economy has seriously overheated. Mortgage lending has started to become much more restrictive and the economy is in danger of coming off the rails.’ Prices have peaked in Riga, he says. In Lithuania, meanwhile, ‘there is little room for growth’.

Estonia’s economy ‘continues to boom and like its Baltic cousins its starting to have to put the brakes on to prevent the economy overheating. It’s a risky market now with not much room for growth.’ Hungary, says Tweddle, is suffering from both economic and political difficulties. ‘Mortgage finance is poor and there a few prospects for growth in the short term.’ Slovenia is ‘burdened by regulation’ with finance still not widely available to foreign buyers. And Croatia, although improving in its fiscal health, ‘still [has] some way to go before EU membership. Mortgages are not available to foreigners.’ Prices in Zagreb should show 15 per cent growth, he predicts.

posted on Friday, January 11, 2008 9:39:59 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Trackback
 Wednesday, January 09, 2008

                                                                                              
It’s a more challenging market at the moment, but people still want to move. Following these tips could well make the difference between buyers choosing your home and someone else’s, says Simon Dunand

1 Make sure your property has kerb appeal by sprucing up your outside space in the front. Tidy beds and put some pretty plants outside the front door, make sure the paintwork is clean and tidy and polish front door furniture.

2 First impressions count when people enter your home. Make sure your home smells appealing, don’t leave cat litter around and air the house before viewings by opening windows.

3 Remove all personal photographs and neutralise decoration. People want to imagine themselves living there, so don’t make it personal.

4 De-clutter any lobby areas overflowing with coats and boots – put them in a cupboard temporarily. Make beds and tidy the floor area, so people are not stepping over your belongings.

5 Improve lighting to enhance ambience and invest a little money in soft furnishings. They can greatly improve the look of your rooms for little outlay.

6 Clean and tidy surfaces in the kitchen and make sure it doesn’t smell of last night’s dinner and don’t leave washing up in the sink! Bathrooms should be de-steamed and all personal belongings removed. People do not want to see evidence of your shaving or showering.

7 If you have a fire, light it to add that warm and welcome feeling.

8 Place some flowers in a vase to make the hallway welcoming.

9 Vacuum before viewings so the carpets look clean and free of debris.

10 Most importantly, be out for viewings if you can. Prospective buyers want to talk about your house with the agent and be relaxed while view the property. Your presence may make them feel uncomfortable and put them off.

Simon Dunand is managing partner at estate agent Gascoigne-Billinghurst.

posted on Wednesday, January 09, 2008 11:29:00 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Trackback
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