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Special Reports


  • The Modern UK Housing Market - Origins and Prospects

    The purpose of this report is to focus on a broad overview of how the private rentedsector has evolved and will continue to develop as a key part of the modern housingmarket. It addresses obvious questions such as the importance of private renting; whytenants rent and investors let properties and who such individuals are; explains howregulation choked the tenure to near death by the end of the 1980s; then how it wasrevived by deregulation, financial innovation, a housing boom, and increasingly affluentand mobile parts of the population; considers how it is faring in the current severehousing market downturn; and examines its future prospects.

    Only brief snapshots will be offered here, as deeper elaboration will form part of amore extensive report on the current state of the overall UK housing market to bepublished in the autumn. Nevertheless, the thumbprints presented here show a largeand vibrant housing sector that is now a major part of the British housing scene andof the economy and society as a whole.

    Part 1: Private Rented Housing

  • The ARLA History of Buy to Let Investment 2001 to 2008

    In association with the ARLA Group of Buy to Let Mortgage Lenders, ARLA has produced a comprehensive report containing the results of the quarterly surveys that have been produced in the period covering 2001 to 2008.

    This research has been collated from the Surveys of Member Letting Agents and data from Surveys of Residential Landlords. These surveys are located in our Buy to Let section, where each survey can be viewed individually.

    The ARLA History of Buy To Let consists of data and graphs in PDF format. If you do not have Adobe Acrobat Reader, you can download a free copy at www.adobe.com

    Buy to Let History 2001 to 2006

  • ARLA Buy To Let Report 2006

    Buy to Let 10 Years Old - Now a Major Industry

    At the tenth anniversary of its launch by ARLA, the Association of Residential Letting Agents, Buy to Let has proved to be a force for good in the housing market and a major industry in its own right. This assessment was presented at No. One Birdcage Walk, Westminster, today (Sept 26), in a specially commissioned report, "Buy to Let, The Revolution - 10 Years On."

    Today over a million households live in Buy to Let properties. These property assets are worth well over £120 billion and the Buy to Let sector contributes over £30 billion to the economy each year. This contribution is worth more than that made by all the pubs, hotels and restaurants in the country and is over four times more than the contribution from the motor industry.

    Presenting his report for ARLA to an audience from Government, The City and the property industry, Michael Ball, Professor of Urban and Property Economics at the University of Reading Business School, forecast an average growth in numbers of Buy to Let tenancies of 20-30,000 a year over the next ten years. He pointed out that while demand for Buy to Let mortgages will grow faster as the sector is still relatively under-mortgaged.

    The report shows that Buy to Let has spread the reach of the private rented sector into areas that had little or no private renting before. This has had the knock-on effect of reviving housing markets and assisting in inner city regeneration.

    In the mid-1990s less than half the PRS was owned by individuals, now they own two- thirds of the sector. This is due not only to individual desire to invest in property but also because corporate organisations have been running down their property assets.

    This private ownership has occurred without the vast majority of Buy to Let investors becoming financially stretched. Investor landlords have substantial cushions of their own wealth, including equity in owner-occupation, employment and other non-rental income.

    Without Buy to Let, the ARLA 10 year report asserts, the Private Rented Sector would be a lot smaller.

    A shrunken Private Rented Sector would have provided for less choice in housing and standards would have suffered. Competition between landlords in the provision of rented property has brought considerable gains to households in rented accommodation. This is one of the reasons why more people rent.

    The benefits of renting appeal particularly to young mobile people. Changing lifestyles, affluence, employment patterns and financial circumstances have combined to encourage more younger people to rent rather than own their homes, as they may have done in previous decades. However, most tenants will build up savings, maybe have children, and so - the report suggests - succumb to the benefits of home ownership.

    But today, many young people are moving to home ownership at least a decade later in life than they did before.

    Commenting on the report, ARLA Chief Executive Adrian Turner said, "ARLA went out on a limb to launch the modern concept of Buy to Let in September 1996, backed by a far-seeing panel of mortgage lenders. Our aim was to bring more and better quality property to the Private Rented Sector. Ten years on we are the first to admit that we could never have foreseen the success this was to be for investor landlords, their tenants and the Private Rented Sector."

    ARLA, the lead professional body for the Private Rented Sector, was backed in the then breakthrough concept by the ARLA Panel of Mortgage Lenders. The original panel of Birmingham Midshires (then known as Halifax Mortgage Services), Mortgage Express and Paragon Mortgages was quickly joined by NatWest followed by GMAC RFC and The Mortgage Business.

    ARLA Buy To Let Report 2006

Note: The information is for guidance only. The responsibility for the financial decision to Buy-to-Let can only rest with the investor. Most letting agents will not accept responsibility for the validity of investments, costs incurred or for mortgage arrangements made, although those who are also registered as financial advisers may do otherwise.

It should be noted that as with any investment, returns and capital values can go down as well as up; and the investor should be fully aware of the terms and conditions applied by the chosen mortgage lender. Letting agents must present their own written terms of business for letting and managing properties

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