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The Future of the Private Rental Sector The WMBUS Landlords Conference. Kate Faulkner BSc(Econ) MBA CIM DipM. Agenda . I mpact of the recession on the West Midlands PRS Expansion of the Private Rental Sector Risks and rewards of PRS
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The Future of the Private Rental Sector The WMBUS Landlords Conference Kate Faulkner BSc(Econ) MBA CIM DipM
Agenda • Impact of the recession on the West Midlands PRS • Expansion of the Private Rental Sector • Risks and rewards of PRS • Opportunities for landlords to work with Local Authorities and Housing Associations
The recession and impact on PRS Reduce wealth, jobs, confidence Prices fall, lenders panic and tenants struggle to pay rent
West Midlands Property Prices Fell at the same rate as other areas, even London Midlands, North and Wales, slower to recover
But the PRS sector survived…. • Reduced people’s confidence & ability to buy • Increased people’s need for mobility & flexibility • Increased the demand for rental accommodation • Increased the time tenants stay in the rented sector • Reduces a landlord’s voids • Demand for rental properties has increased
A poorly performing economy effects tenants ability to pay rent
Unemployment rates can hurt PRS Good landlords & LAs work together to reduce evictions Office of National Statistics
Average earnings = rent they can pay • UK gross disposable household income (GDHI) • £16,000 per head in 2011 • West Midlands • £14,400 per head in 2011
Impact of recession on rents • Rent rises have to be ‘put on hold’ • Even if demand is higher than supply • Well maintained properties go first • Increase in tenant rent arrears • Protect with insurance • Rents underperform versus inflation • Problem for those relying on rents for a pension • Poor rental income growth & tenant arrears • Can lead to lack of maintenance • ‘Deals’ struck between landlord and tenant • No maintenance, no increase in rent
Rents fell back in 2009/10 http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/rel/hpi/index-of-private-housing-rental-prices/historical-series/iphrp-article.html#tab-Rental-prices-in-England-and-its-regions--2005-2013-
Maintenance is critical to PRS success • Example of a Victorian terrace over 15 years • £500 to £750 per year general maintenance • One new boiler: £3,000 • One new kitchen: £4,000 • Two new bathrooms: £6,000 • Depending on state of property • Re-wiring, damp proof course, new windows and/or roof • Without regular maintenance • Insurance company may not pay out • Mortgage lender may question re-valuations • Property is likely to rapidly lose value and incur higher emergency costs
LHA caps hardly effected West Midlands Source: Shelter
LHA Rates similar to PRS Two bed £460 per month Three bed £511 per month
LHA Rates similar to PRS Two bed £511 per month Three bed £550 per month
LHA Rates similar to PRS Two bed £638 per month Three bed £741 per month
Summary of the recession • Helps explain the ‘risks’ of buy to let • Potential 20% fall in capital value • Potential 5-20% fall in rents • Demand goes up • Be careful not to let maintenance standards slip • Local authorities who understand PRS can help tackle recession issues with good landlords • And landlords can secure a good income • Can secure 6-8% yields on LHA rates
West Midlands population changes • England 27% growth versus 20% growth in W. Midlands Estimated 16% increase in households
Supply increases can affect PRS rents Birmingham City Council
Property prices need to recover Definitely some bargains still to be bought Potentially good rental yield opportunities 8%+ Savills forecast 11% rise to 2017 in Midlands
Unemployment rates on the decline National average is 7.7% Beware ofinterest rate rise! Rates back to 5-7%? Office of National Statistics
Future rental trends • More people are selling up and renting in retirement • West Midlands has quite a young population • More single adult households • Average household size almost halved since 1911 (four to two) • West Midlands size 2.6 • Tenants want a ‘home’, not a temporary place to stay • Estimated PRS will grow by a 20% to 2017 • Help to Buy unlikely to impact on PRS • Cultural change, not just affordability
Risks and rewards Controllable No Control Life events Capital growth Prices & rents Rental income Interest rates Equity level Gross & net income Inflation Government/LA Exit
Why I rent to my local authority • Flat in Reading • Invested because of my husband’s job • He is now home based • We had a choice • Rent privately and maximise the rent • Have all the risks associated with voids, non-payment • Rent to a Local Authority, cover our costs • Be paid directly • Have fewer, if any, voids
What can they offer you? • 30,000 potential tenants on a waiting list • Help to identify needed properties • Help and advice on the 100+ legals to let a property • MLAS accreditation • Cost effective workshops • Direct communication with LAs • Access to individual LA “deals and discounts” • Help ensuring you get paid • Direct payment • Tenant Credit Union Accounts with direct debits
What do they need in return? • Accredited by MLAS • Decent homes! • Youngsters like new builds • Older tenants need one beds • Great EPC ratings • No condensation or damp • Potential LA incentives or green deal • Lower bills = more can afford rent • Can still legally rent it out in 2018
Summary • PRS is expected to grow • Culturally acceptable • Bargains while prices recover • Rental income can be protected through LHA • Manage PRS risks and rewards • West Midlands LAs • Want to work WITH landlords • Offer free help & advice • Latest legal changes to what tenants need/want • Variety of schemes to secure your portfolio success