The Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML) latest snapshot of the
buy to let mortgage market shows us that buy to let landlords haven’t been put
off by the Chancellors announcements on the way buy to let’s are taxed.
Last month, the CML stated £1.4billion was borrowed by UK
landlords to purchase 10,500 buy to let properties, up 26.5% from the same
month in 2014, when only 8,300 properties were bought with a buy to let
mortgage. Go back two years and the number of buy to let mortgages used for
purchasing (again not re-mortgaging) is 36.4% higher! Even more interesting has
been the fact that the average amount borrowed has risen as well. The average
buy to let mortgage last month was £133,330, up from £128,480 a year ago.
In Stoke on Trent, I am speaking to more and more landlords,
be they seasoned professional landlords or FTL’s (first time landlords), as
they read reports that the Stoke on Trent rental market is doing reasonably
well, with rents and property values rising. Interestingly, one landlord recently asked how
much he should be paying per square foot (more of that in a second).
The first thing you have to decide is whether you want great
capital growth or great rental yield, as every knowledgeable landlord knows,
you can’t have both. Over the last twenty years, property values in Stoke on
Trent have risen by 60.52%, compared to Greater London’s 436.2%. This has proved
that capital growth increases faster in the more expensive South, but your
investment money doesn’t go very far, meaning there won’t be as much rental
yield from a 1 bed flat in Chelsea (2% per year at best with a fair wind) as a
2 bed semi in Stoke on Trent. However, whilst the figure of 60.52% is an
average for the area, certain areas of Stoke on Trent have seen capital growth
much higher than that and others areas much worse (we have talked about those
in previous articles).
If you recall in an earlier article, my research reveals
that Stoke on Trent apartments tend to generate a better yield than houses,
probably because several sharers can afford to pay more than a single family.
But houses tend to appreciate in value more rapidly and may well be easier to
sell, simply because there are fewer being built.
So what should you be buying in Stoke on Trent, and more
importantly, how much?
- The average apartments in the town are currently selling for approximately £154 per square foot.
- Terraced houses in Stoke on Trent are currently obtaining, on average, £85,300 or £119 per square foot,
- An average semi in Stoke on Trent is selling for £123,500 (and achieving £144 per square foot).
Now these are of course averages, but it gives you a good
place to start from. In the coming weeks, I will look at rents being achieved
on Stoke on Trent houses and apartments, and the yields that can obtained,
depending how many bedrooms there are. In the meantime, if you would like to
read more articles like this, then can I suggest you visit the Stoke on Trent
Property Blog?
No comments:
Post a Comment