24 September 2007
With relatively low loans on their investment properties, more than
half of all Buy to Let investors expect to increase their portfolios
over the coming twelve months and 90% of investment landlords said
they would not sell should house prices fall, according to the
latest ARLA quarterly Review and Index published today, Monday 24
September. This is based on the largest independent survey of the
Private Rented Sector.
However, if the summer’s demands for changes in the tax regime for
residential property investment were to be met, a significant number
of investors would then consider selling, this latest Review shows.
It is tax changes that would severely damage the Private Rented
Sector.
The ARLA Review and Index for the third quarter shows that 54% of
all landlords surveyed during August expect to make further Buy to
Let investments during the next twelve months. However, if mortgage
interest ceased to be an allowable business expense, more than four
out of ten, 42%, said they were uncertain what they would do.
And, a significant minority, 28%, said they would certainly sell
some property, while ten percent said they would sell out of the
Private Rented Sector altogether.
Commented Ian Potter, ARLA Operations Manager, “With the
institutions less interested in the Private Rented Sector and
private equity companies not filling the gap, the loss of any
private individual investors would seriously effect the rental
market and severely curtail choice in housing.
“Private Buy to Let investors have refinanced the Private Rented
Sector and restored social acceptability to renting,” Ian Potter
added.
The quarterly Review and Index is based on data from the largest
surveys of investment landlords and lettings agents in the Private
Rented Sector. For the summer quarter, and despite the holiday
season, 191 landlords and 463 ARLA member letting offices responded.
These in-depth, independent surveys are supported by the
ARLA Group
of Mortgage Lenders: Bank of Ireland, Cheltenham & Gloucester, GMAC
RFC, Mortgage Express, NatWest and Paragon Mortgages.
The average Loan to Value ratio for Buy to Let investors in the last
Quarter was 59%, marginally less than in the previous quarter. The
proportion with loan to value ratios between 51% and 75% has dropped
marginally, with a corresponding rise for those with ratios between
25% and 59%. Just over a quarter of all Buy to let investors have
loan to value ratios of between 76% and 90%, with only 1.3% with
loans to value of more than 90%.
The Review and Index continues to show that the vast majority of
landlords invest for the long term. The average life expectancy of
their property investments is 16.5 years, with nearly a quarter
expecting to hold their investments for more than 20 years.
Over half of all landlords are investing for long term capital gain,
while the number looking for a combined yield from capital
appreciation and rental income dropped from 45% to 40%. Very few,
only 2.5%, look to make short term capital gains.
The Review shows annual rates of return, including rents and capital
appreciation, for the last quarter across all regions as averaging
11.34% from an outright cash purchase of residential investment
property and 22.26% from a geared residential property investment.
Editors’ Notes: Full details of the ARLA Review and Index, and the
quarterly letting agents’ and landlords’ surveys going back to 2001
are available and can be downloaded via the
Buy to Let section on the ARLA
website.
ARLA is the lead professional body for the private rented sector
with well over 2,000 members’ offices throughout the UK. ARLA
launched Buy to Let in 1996 with the support of the
ARLA Group of
Mortgage Lenders. This initiative was designed to revitalise a weak
rental sector following the housing crisis of the early 1990s.