Those of you who regularly read my weekly articles in the Stoke
on Trent Property Blog will know I like to keep abreast of the Stoke on Trent
property market. Something attracted my attention this week about the local
property market, something I wanted to share with my many readers.
Over the last month,
there appears to have been an anomaly in the local property market, whereby
asking prices in the town have hardly increased, yet property values have
increased, albeit at a much faster rate.
The average asking price of a Stoke on
Trent property, according to Rightmove, rose 0.1% this month and the average value of a Stoke on Trent property rose
by 0.9%.
So how does this relate in monetary terms? This anomaly has driven the average asking price of a Stoke on Trent
property up slightly to £140,900 whilst the average value is now £136,000.
So why the difference? Technically an ‘asking price’ can be any price that a homeowner wants to place his
or her property on the market for. Unfortunately, many times this is done
without research and can result in overpriced properties that don't sell. As
the Summer months are normally slightly quieter, those left on the market
wanting to sell often temper their asking prices (thus the minor growth on
0.1%) to try and generate interest in their property.
On the other side of the coin, the property ‘value’ is the price that a willing
buyer is prepared to pay and a willing seller is prepared to sell at. Therefore,
in a nutshell, Stoke on Trent property values are continuing to rise and those
homeowners in Stoke on Trent who have properties on the market, last month on
average, increased their asking prices only minutely.. great news for property
owners and buyers alike!
In previous articles, I have spoken about the continued
fundamental shortage of property coming on to the market compared to buyer
demand. That is especially true for homeowners wanting to upgrade to a better
house/better location. I can appreciate Stoke
on Trent home owners are reluctant to put their own property on the market
speculatively and wait for the right property to become available and some high
demand locations can suffer from a property stalemate.
Most homeowners don’t want to sell and have nothing to buy.
But that’s the beauty of the much maligned English and Welsh
house buying process. You can find a purchaser for your property, then ask them
to wait. By agreeing a sale (subject to contract) before you try to buy sounds
concerning to many, but with fewer properties for sale you need to have a buyer
for your property or you will be treated as a less serious buyer yourself. If
you cannot find the right home for you, you can slow the deal with your purchaser
until it comes along. If nothing suitable does comes along and you lose your
buyer then the worst outcome is that you have to find another purchaser or take
your property off the market and stay put for now, and as long as you mention
this at the start they must not commit to any costs until you have agreed your
onward purchase.
However, for the landlord/buy to let investors, these
potential problems are nothing further from the truth. As I write this article,
there are over 160 flats for sale, over 650 terraced houses and over 700 semis
for sale in Stoke on Trent. Landlord/Buy
to let investors can normally pick up some bargains in the Autumn months, as
sellers who are selling their homes often have a pressing need to sell by this
time.
The types of houses a Stoke on Trent landlord typically
buys, are not the same types as the homeowners wanting to move to a posher area
of the town as they are attracted by larger semis and detached properties. The
best types of properties for buy to let are the smaller flats, terraced and
semis (not the big detached ones). There are in fact too many of these smaller
properties for sale .. just look at the numbers of properties for sale
(mentioned in the previous paragraph).
If you are a landlord or thinking of become one for the
first time and want an unbiased opinion on a potential purchase, regardless of which agent is selling it, then please pop in to either of our offices or give us a call 01782 262880 (Hanley) or 01782 453001 (Newcastle)
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