14 June 2006
ARLA Members Survey Report
Second Quarter 2006 109k
The asset value of rental property in London and the South East has
continued to rise in contrast to falls reported in parts of the rest
of the country. Rents have also risen in the south, but fallen
elsewhere. However, the results of the latest ARLA quarterly survey
of member letting agents published today, 14 June, shows that
average asset values and rents throughout the country provide a
healthy investment climate in the private rented sector.
This healthy picture is reported as industry-wide fears are growing
that the temptation to over-regulate coupled to empire-building in
town halls could still impair the growth of the private rented
sector
Despite this, the second quarter survey found that, over the last
three months, ARLA member letting agents have each signed an average
of nine landlords who are new to the rental market. At the same
time, they lost three landlords who have either died, retired or
left the market for other reasons.
10% of ARLA offices have acquired more than 20 landlords who were
new to the rental market and more than half of all offices have
taken on in excess of six novice landlords. The fewest number of
landlords coming new to the market were to be found in prime central
London and the highest numbers were to be found outside London and
the South East.
Rises in the capital values are reinforced by the balance of supply
and demand which is reported as showing that there are more tenants
than there are available properties in London and the South East
with the rest of the country close to equilibrium.
Overall, more than a third (36%) of letting agents say there are
currently more tenants than properties. This compares to 34% who
believe there are more properties than tenants and 29% who believe
supply and demand is in balance. Demand is highest in prime central
London.
Said ARLA Chief Executive, Adrian Turner, "Again, we can report that
the private rented sector is not only alive and well but
flourishing. There is no reason for this not to continue provided
that industry-wide fears that burdensome regulation and
empire-building town halls do not interfere in the healthy growth of
housing choice. This is particularly relevant at a time of so much
discussion about the provision of housing options."
The ARLA quarterly survey of its member letting agents is the
largest survey of its kind with 470 offices responding. It is
supported by the ARLA panel of Mortgage Lenders: Birmingham
Midshires, GMAC RFC, Mortgage Express, NatWest, Paragon Mortgages
and The Mortgage Business. Between them they are responsible for
well over half of all lending in the sector.
Nearly a third of all ARLA letting agents report landlords are
buying more property. This is sharply up from the first quarter of
2006 when only 17% of respondents reported that landlords were
active in the market.
The capital values of both houses and flats in the rental market
have been subject to quarterly fluctuations. However, the overall
weighted average shows a rise in value for rented houses of 0.3% and
2.7% for flats during the last three months.
The vast majority of tenancies (85%) are Assured Shorthold
Tenancies. However, in prime central London a third of all tenancies
fall outside the Housing Act. Instead, contractual agreements are
drawn up by the letting agent, often following detailed negotiations
between the parties.
On average, tenants remain in a property 15.8 months, staying
longest in prime central London (nearly 18 months) and for 14.6
months outside the South East.
The full ARLA second quarter survey can be viewed on:
ARLA Members Survey Report
Second Quarter 2006 109k