Friday, 24 April 2020

What Will Be the Effect of Covid-19 on the Royal Tunbridge Wells Property Market?

So now we are only a matter of a couple of weeks into lockdown, yet can you believe it I am still speaking with agents from all over the UK, and I do not jest, properties are still being sold and let even in these unprecedented times. Yet I would like to address the question I have been asked many times recently “What will be the effect of Covid-19 on the Royal Tunbridge Wells property market in the short, medium and long term?”

These are obviously unchartered times, yet we can look back in history to give us clues and more recently, the bounce back that is happening in China (and their property market). The Covid-19 situation will touch all parts of the Royal Tunbridge Wells and UK property market, and so in this article, I will be considering its impact on Royal Tunbridge Wells property prices, transaction numbers (i.e. the number of people that move home), Royal Tunbridge Wells buy to let landlords and finally tenants and the rents they pay.

The Three Issues with the Virus and the Property Market

The first issue has to be the lockdown itself. Limitations on society’s capability to go about their normal working life will hinder the house buying/selling process. The practical difficulties of moving home and expediting the property sale; from the viewing itself, the Energy Performance Certificate being carried out, the surveyor checking the property for the lender etc., are all issues. Yet the estate agency and legal industries are coming up with some innovative solutions, from virtual viewings to legally watertight delayed completions, where the old owners stay in the house under licence during the lockdown, and the move will take place after the lockdown period.

Secondly, the UK housing market has never liked ambiguity or uncertainty and this virus will play a part on people’s feelings and sentiment towards moving home (or not). 

Thirdly and finally, there is the issue with the money people have, be that wages, whether they have a job (or not) and their overall affluence, on the back of the 29.4% stock market decrease in the last two months (correct at the time of writing this article).
                   
The Background Economics

The economy drives everything including the housing market – and the overall measure of the economy is the Gross Domestic Product figure or the GDP (the GDP is basically the total value of all the goods and services created by the whole UK economy in one year and it currently stands at £2.15 trillion). 

Looking at what has happened in China, most economists believe the UK will experience a short, yet sharp economic shrinkage in Q2 2020 with GDP set drop by 4% to 7% in the one quarter depending on the extent of the lockdown. Then GDP is expected to level out in Q3 2020, and then a significant ricochet (how significant depends who you listen to) in Q4 2020/Q1 2021. 

Now putting politics aside, I have been impressed with Boris Johnson’s response with wide-ranging support for the UK economy and businesses, and whilst it’s far from perfect, help has been in the guise of the Bank of England reactivating its Contingent Term Repo Facility increasing liquidity and keeping the money markets going (important as that was what the issue was with the Credit Crunch), business grants and Government backed loans, together with telling lenders to take a compassionate line to those unable to make mortgage holidays and finally the furloughing of staff, thus allowing a quicker recovery in the economy.

What Will Happen to Royal Tunbridge Wells Property Values?

There are a few doom-monger economists predicting Armageddon, yet I feel a lot of that is to get column inches in the newspapers. The Royal Tunbridge Wells property market is less exposed than it was in the previous four historical property crashes in 1972, 1979, 1988 and 2008. This is because of the following reasons..

1.     Before each of the four crashes, there had been a significant upward spike in property values prior to the crash. We have not experienced that over the last 12 months.

2.     Mortgage interest as a percentage of household income (nationally) was a massive 32% in 1988, 18% in 2008 – yet now it stands at just under 8% (because interest rates are so low).

This is all assuming we don’t have high unemployment. Yet historically, it has been proved house price falls are not caused by high unemployment. It is in fact, that it happens the other way round, that a housing downturn can (not always) create unemployment - yet with the Government furloughing people – this shouldn’t be such so much of an issue.

The value of an average Royal Tunbridge Wells home currently stands at £520,600

As I will explain in the next section, the biggest effect will be on transaction numbers, not on property values. I suspect in the summer there will be some Royal Tunbridge Wells homeowners who will want to sell at all costs, and not care what price they achieve. Savvy property buyers will swoop on those properties and drive a hard bargain, meaning there will be some short-term localised reductions in what properties sell in the summer for those that want to sell at any cost.   

Yet, these reductions will artificially amplify the property value indexes in a downward direction in the autumn (the ones the newspapers mention when they talk about property value changes) because they will be based on the very low levels of property transactions that will take place in the summer (because there is always a lag). Interestingly we have seen this many times over the years because just about every spring for the last 20 years, we have often seen negative or very subdued figures in the House Price Indexes in the months of January/February. This is because of the lack of property sales on the run up to Christmas a few months before. To give this all some context, property values in Royal Tunbridge Wells are 42.9% higher than 10 years ago – and nobody was complaining about those. To give you an idea what that is in pound notes … 

The average Royal Tunbridge Wells home has risen in value by £156,200 in the last 10 years
The swiftness of recovery in the autumn/winter from that point will depend on the state of the wider economy. With the measures (mentioned above) implemented by the Government, household incomes should continue to remain steady, and whilst holidays and luxuries may be shelved for a year, those Royal Tunbridge Wells people who have been locked up in their Royal Tunbridge Wells homes for weeks on end, might just consider making that move later in 2020, taking advantage of the ultra-low interest rates. This in turn ought to encourage a return to sturdier levels of house-price growth in the medium term (2021/2 onwards).

The Number of People Moving Home in Royal Tunbridge Wells Will Significantly Drop in 2020

I foresee the number of people moving home (i.e. the number of household transactions) in Royal Tunbridge Wells will significantly drop in 2020. This will only really affect the pockets of Estate Agents (as they charge their fee when people move – so if less people are moving, they will earn less) and the people associated with house moving.

Even with virtual viewings and creative legal work, the number of property transactions will be considerably obstructed over the next couple of months. Interestingly, in the Chinese cities that removed the lockdown first (in the middle of March) I have read in the press the number of property transactions has already bounced back to around half of the medium-term average after only three weeks!

This was caused by people delaying their move because of the ‘B’ word (Brexit) over the last 12/18 months, which interestingly saw a massive upsurge with the Boris Bounce in December/January and February.

Worse case scenarios suggested by economists state transactions will drop to 20% of the normal 10 year average number of transactions until the end of Q3 2020, return to 65% by Q1 2021, increase to 100% by the end of Q2 2021 and then 120% in 2022, yet most sensible economists (and often those that stay out of the limelight and don’t go chasing headlines), believe transactions will reduce to 45% to 50% of the 10 year average until the end of Q3 2020, improve to 80% in Q4 2020 and 100% by Q2 2021 with potential for higher transactions numbers in the order of 110% to 130% in 2022. 

It all sounds rather grim doesn’t it, until you dig deeper…

Remarkably, it must be stated the number of property transactions over the last 12 months in Royal Tunbridge Wells are only at 63.2% of the 10-year Royal Tunbridge Wells average … and this was before Covid-19

In the last 12 months, there have been 864 property transactions in Royal Tunbridge Wells, compared to a 10-year average of 1,368 per year

Yet, let’s not forget, these predictions are from the 10-year long term average, and as it can quite clearly be seen, transaction levels are already at a low, even without Covid-19 and nobody was complaining about that apart from estate agents and removal vans!

With the number of Royal Tunbridge Wells people moving being held back, I would anticipate seeing a build-up of supressed demand for Royal Tunbridge Wells property from Covid-19, on top of the pent-up demand from Brexit, especially with many Royal Tunbridge Wells families realising their Royal Tunbridge Wells homes aren’t large enough to contain them as the lockdown experience will push many Royal Tunbridge Wells households to move in late 2020 or possibly 2021 …and as every economics student knows, when demand outstrips supply (because we can’t all of a sudden build more houses), prices go up.

How Will This Affect Royal Tunbridge Wells’ First Time Buyers, Those Trading up, Downsizers and Landlords & Tenants?

FIRST TIME BUYERS - I believe the banks will be a little more wary when lending money to first buyers with their need for large percentage mortgages. The demand for the Help-to-Buy Scheme has been increasing year-on-year, yet its pace of growth has been declining in the last couple years – I foresee demand accelerating in the later parts of 2020. There could be some good deals to be had from new homes builders looking to release cash in Q3 and Q4 later in the year? Maybe the Bank of Mum and Dad might be able to help, yet they too will be stretched, although they might be able to release equity down the generations to their children and grandchildren (see the downsizers section).

TRADING UP – Many Royal Tunbridge Wells homeowners in their starter homes will be going stir-crazy in their smaller homes, and with interest rates at ultralow levels, some Royal Tunbridge Wells homeowners might forgo holidays and entertaining, and consider putting their weight and finances into moving up market in Royal Tunbridge Wells. That might also be easier, if the Royal Tunbridge Wells downsizers start to move as well.

DOWNSIZERS – There are many Royal Tunbridge Wells retired people, rattling around their large Royal Tunbridge Wells home, with their children having flown the nest and possibly moved away years ago. These Royal Tunbridge Wells people don’t need to move, and so are considered ‘optional home-movers’ – yet the Covid-19 crisis could be the catalyst to make them finally move to be nearer their family around the UK – releasing good sized Royal Tunbridge Wells family homes onto the property market for the ‘Trading Uppers’ to buy.

LANDLORDS & TENANTS – I suspect there won’t be many Royal Tunbridge Wells tenants moving in the next three to four months. Tenants have the peace of mind with a cessation on evictions until the summer and buy-to-let mortgage payment holidays for buy-to-let landlords whose tenants are in financial difficulty (note the tenants have to give proof to their landlord that they are unable to pay with their applications to Universal Credit etc., etc.,). There might be small reductions in average rents, as some Royal Tunbridge Wells landlords undertake to help their tenants in these chastened financial times, yet for most people, rents will continue to be paid, making no major impression on rental prices in 2020.

Let’s not forget, the level of average rents is directly related to tenants wages and I can’t see why this relationship between rents and tenants wages should break after Covid-19, so as wages are held back in the latter parts of 2020 the growth rents over the next year will be subdued. Finally, those Royal Tunbridge Wells buy-to-let landlords sitting on cash might be able to bag a bargain in the summer from a desperate seller, before normality returns in Q3 and Q4 2020.

Conclusion

We are in unchartered territory, yet for the reasons explained in this article and, assuming there are no other seismic shocks in the coming weeks and months – in a few years’ time – this will be seen as a bump (albeit a rather big bump)  - another part of the roller coaster ride of the UK and Royal Tunbridge Wells property market.



Thursday, 12 March 2020

Royal Tunbridge Wells Property Values rise by 402% since 2000

As soon as people find out I am an agent in the property game, I nearly always get asked “Tell me what is happening to the Royal Tunbridge Wells Property Market”, and the answer isn’t always the same or indeed what they want to hear.

To start with, it really does depend on whether you are a buyer or seller. The property market in Royal Tunbridge Wells (like in all parts of the UK) swings like a pendulum between being a seller’s market or a buyer’s market yet, unless you are a Royal Tunbridge Wells first time buyer, Royal Tunbridge Wells buy to let landlord or executors selling a deceased persons estate, the vast majority of the time, people are both (i.e. they are selling to buy on).

The balance of power/negotiating power ultimately depends on simple supply and demand economics. Low supply (i.e. number of properties on the market) and high demand (i.e. large number of buyers) for any product or service (including your Royal Tunbridge Wells property) means prices tend to go up and high supply and low demand would mean prices tend to go down.

Yet supply and demand isn’t the only issue. Location is as important as the type of property and where it sits on the property ladder (i.e. is it at the lower, middle or upper end of the property market when it comes to size, type, price etc.).

Interestingly, the Government have released lots of data about the Royal Tunbridge Wells property market and, after many hours of number crunching, I have found some interesting trends. Whilst most stats look at the overall average of property values/prices, The Office of National Statistics (ONS), also likes to look at the bottom 10% of the market and the bottom 25% of the market.

It’s called the property ladder for a good reason, and the health of the whole Royal Tunbridge Wells property market is very dependent on those bottom rungs of the ladder.

Therefore, three sets of data are segmented as follows, based on the statistics given by the ONS ..

1.     Lower 10th Percentile of the Royal Tunbridge Wells housing market – i.e. the bottom 10% in terms of value of properties sold – e.g. small apartments and ex-local authority properties in the less popular areas which mainly attract buy to let landlords.
2.     Lower Quartile of the Royal Tunbridge Wells housing market – i.e. lowest 25% of Royal Tunbridge Wells property in terms of value of properties sold e.g. starter homes, first time buyer homes and slightly more up market buy to let property.
3.     Overall Average of the Royal Tunbridge Wells housing market – which takes into account the whole market from the top to the bottom.

…. And if one looks at our figures for Royal Tunbridge Wells and the local authority as a whole, you can see the three different parts have performed quite differently.



The ‘Lower 10th Percentile’ and ‘Lower Quartile’ parts of the Royal Tunbridge Wells property market have been driven over the last 20 years by two sets of buyers. The first are landlord investors who fuelled the increase of private rented properties in Royal Tunbridge Wells. 

The other set of buyers in the ‘Lower 10th Percentile’ and ‘Lower Quartile’ Royal Tunbridge Wells property market are the first-time buyers (FTB), which over the last couple of years, has been in the ascendency. 

Looking at the stats themselves …


Lower 10th
Royal Tunbridge Wells percentile

(i.e. the bottom 10% of the property market)
Lower
Royal Tunbridge Wells Quartile

(i.e. the bottom 25% of the property market)
Overall Royal Tunbridge Wells Average
2000
£56,900
£74,900
£91,800
2019
£210,000
£280,000
£460,800

You might ask, what do all these different figures mean to Royal Tunbridge Wells’ homeowners and Royal Tunbridge Wells’ landlords alike? Quite a lot – so let me explain. 

If we applied the best percentage uplift figure (i.e. from the Royal Tunbridge Wells ‘Average’ market), to that Royal Tunbridge Wells ‘Lower 10th percentile’ housing market 2000 figure, the 2019 figure in the table above of £210,000, would have been £285,600 instead – quite a difference you must agree?

Every Royal Tunbridge Wells’ homeowner and Royal Tunbridge Wells’ buy to let landlord should learn from this information that there are many mini-property markets and not just look at the overall averages. When you comprehend there isn’t just one Royal Tunbridge Wells Property Market, but many Royal Tunbridge Wells “mini-property markets”, you can spot trends and bag yourself some potential bargains. 


There are so many bargains in the Royal Tunbridge Wells property market at the moment, especially for Royal Tunbridge Wells buy to let landlords looking to expand their property empire. Do feel free to give me a call or drop me a line if you would like to know where they are!  

Friday, 21 February 2020

Royal Tunbridge Wells Property Market – Is it Time to ‘Plan’ to Get the Builders In?


 Even though the new legislation was placed on hold because of the recent General Election, it is expected the Government will start fining around half of all UK local authorities for failing to build enough new homes as Westminster starts to force local authorities to build more homes with the new laws.

The Conservative Government has gone on record with an ambition to build 300,000 new homes each year from the mid-2020s (aspiring as the average for the last 13 years has only been 177,000 pa). So Downing Street see the planning system as requiring root and branch change to ensure local authorities deliver on that promise.  The Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government’s ‘Housing Delivery Test’, which should be launched on an undetermined date this year, will hold local authorities to account for ensuring they hit their own specific house building targets. 

If a local authority is unable to show that it has a five-year stock of land for building new homes, it gives builders greater rights and liberties to build their new homes where the builder wants (not where the local authority wants). 

This will mean there will be a house building free-for-all

as the council will have less control over the setting, types of properties, contribution to infrastructure and location of any new home development. 

Only 44% of local authorities have a local plan that is less than five years old.

Locally, Tunbridge Wells isn’t in that 44% of local authorities. The current situation is, a draft Local Plan is in preparation.

Yet, the original question of this article was to find out if we are building enough homes in Royal Tunbridge Wells and the surrounding local authority area i.e. should we get the builders in? Well, the Government set targets for local authorities for the number of homes they should build each year. The latest set of data is for 2018, so for the three years up to and including 2018 i.e. 2016/2017/2018,

New home building target for Tunbridge Wells was 1,656 new homes, yet it achieved 1,457, a shortfall of 199 new homes





So, what does that all mean for the Royal Tunbridge Wells property market?

Even with the shortfall, there are positive and negatives to this. The Royal Tunbridge Wells property market is not broken, yet it does need to get the builders in. Irrespective of the results from the last three years, we have over three decades of under building, which has created issues regarding affordability of homeownership and older generations being stuck in homes too big because there aren’t enough suitable homes for them to move to, i.e. bungalows. The stabilisation of the General Election has been a net positive to overall confidence in the local property market, meaning Royal Tunbridge Wells homeowners and Royal Tunbridge Wells landlords looking to sell their home in the coming spring and summer will find decent demand (although sellers still need to realistic with their pricing).

Unfortunately, the negatives are that many Royal Tunbridge Wells renters that want to buy, are unable to as they can’t save after paying their rents and feel as if they’ve been left behind. I know the Government recently launched their “First Homes” scheme for selected first time buyers at the start of February, where a 30% discount would apply to “a proportion of new homes” and would be subsidised out of contributions from builders, the Tory’s have previously promised to build 200,000 cut price homes for first time buyers back in 2015, yet the National Audit Office has recently confirmed they never built a single one!

The simple fact is, we as a country need to build far more affordable homes in the areas where people want them. This means the dream of homeownership will be a greater possibility for our children and grandchildren in the future. Our local authority needs to continue to plan the housing needs (and associated infrastructure) to ensure that as we live longer and continue to grow as country - we have the homes in place to live in that are suitable for every generation.

Friday, 17 January 2020

Royal Tunbridge Wells’ Landlord’s £7.8m Tax Bill

I am asking Greg Clark the Conservative MP for  Tunbridge Wells to remind the Chancellor Sajid Javid and Prime Minster Boris Johnson to use their persuasive skills to highlight and take a more holistic approach and attitude to the private rented sector and tackle issues which affect a Royal Tunbridge Wells landlords’ capability and capacity to strategically run an effective buy-to-let business.

For the last thirty years, the Government have passed responsibility of housing the masses from local authorities (i.e. council housing) to the estimated 1.5 million British buy-to-let landlords.

However, since 2015/16, Royal Tunbridge Wells landlords have faced increasing tax burdens as each year goes by, with the removal of mortgage interest rate relief on income tax (Section 24), the introduction of the 3 percent surcharge on stamp duty, and the reduction of the letting relief on capital gains tax. 

My research has calculated the total income tax contribution by 2,059 Royal Tunbridge Wells private landlords in the tax year 2015/16 was £5,373,588

However, the eradication of higher rate mortgage interest relief (also known as Section 24) announced in 2015 by George Osborne has been estimated to add a further £1.9 billion nationally to landlord’s tax liability. Whilst raising money from landlords is an easy target, and the tax receipts attractive, it does make the landlords financial burden even heavier.

And by 2021/2, when the full extent of the Section 24 relief kicks in, that income tax liability will rise to £7,845,439
for those Royal Tunbridge Wells landlords

This doesn’t even take into account additional liabilities such as Capital Gains Tax, the 3% additional duty on top of the prevailing Stamp Duty Land Tax and VAT.

Ambiguity and a lack of certainty is the foe of all investment, which has been seen with Brexit. Now, just as things are starting to get rosy in Q1 with the pent-up demand released with the ‘Boris Bounce’, the last thing we need as a ‘collective’ property industry is for the Government to see us landlords as a constant cash cow. This new Tory government must acknowledge the value the majority of private landlords offer by housing in excess of 9.45 million people in the country. 

Westminster needs to take a balanced approach to the significant issues of possession (especially with the impeding removal of section 21 evictions), taxation and all rental properties needing to be at least an ‘E’ energy efficiency rating, to connect the value the private rented sector offers the country by effectively housing over a fifth of the population and avoid unintentional consequences by making renting a private rented property harder for tenants … because, it’s not financially viable to buy (or retain) a buy-to-let property with the way things are going against the landlord.