It doesn’t seem two minutes ago that it was 90 degrees Fahrenheit
in the shade (32 degrees Celsius for my younger readers), hosepipe bans looked
likely and it was simply too hot to sleep at night, yet early indications were,
that as the temperatures soared, the Stoke on Trent property market appeared to
be doing the same.
5.31% more
people moved home in the Stoke on Trent area in the first part of 2018, when
compared to the average number of people moving home (in the same time frame) between
2014 and 2017
So, Stoke on Trent doesn’t seem to have been hit by the same
issues affecting the rest of England where the average number of people moving
home in the first part of 2018 is 11.99% less
than between 2014 and 2017. So, what
is the issue nationally and why has Stoke on Trent bucked that trend? Many have
cited Brexit as the issue – but I think it’s deeper than that.
Both sides of the argument can’t be right! So, what exactly is happening?
Well if you have been reading my blog on the Stoke on Trent property market over the last few months, I have been discussing the threats and opportunities of the current state of fluidity in the Stoke on Trent property market, including the issue of OAPs staying in homes that are too big for them as their children have flown the nest, interest rates, inflation, lack of new homes being built and the long term attitude to homeownership.. yet I have noticed a new trend in the last few months.. the emergence of the ‘sell to renter’.
Sell to Renter?
I have seen a subtle, yet noticeable number of Stoke on Trent homeowners that have been selling their Stoke on Trent homes, renting and wagering that, in the next few years, the Stoke on Trent property market will tumble by more than what they spend on their short-term rental home, before they buy another Stoke on Trent home in a couple of years i.e. a ‘sell to renter’. This type of ‘sell to renter’ is mostly predominant at the middle to upper end of the Stoke on Trent property market – so I’m not too sure if it will catch on in the main ‘core’ market?
So, what does this all mean for Stoke on Trent homeowners and Stoke on Trent Buy To Let landlords?
Well, in the short term, demand for middle to upper market Stoke on Trent rental properties could increase as these ‘sell to renters’ demand such properties. I would however give a note of caution to Stoke on Trent landlords buying in this sector of the Stoke on Trent property market as yields in this sector can be quite low. However, for homeowners of middle to upper market Stoke on Trent properties, you might have less people wanting to buy your type of property, as some buyers are turning to renting?
Like I have always said, Stoke on Trent properties are selling if they are realistically priced (realistic for the market – not a rose-tinted version where someone will pay 10% over the odds because everyone has access to the market stats with the likes of Rightmove and Zoopla!).
P.S Notice the spike in the graph, where the number of property sales jumped to 505 in the month of March 2016? That was all the Stoke on Trent buy to let landlords snapping up buy to let properties before the stamp duty rules changed!
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