A state of indifference has
hit the Derby housing market as sellers
await the outcome of the general election and stricter mortgage regulation
suppresses buyer demand. Now, I have contacted both the BBC and ITV to see if I
can get spot on the live TV election debates and give all parties a bit of
advice regarding the Private Rental Sector. As yet, I have not had a response…
This feeling of apathy is
mirrored around the UK as Rightmove reported the number of homes registered for
sale per estate agent fell to its lowest level for five years in December, with
available stock 10 per cent lower than in the same month a year earlier.
Looking at Derby, in the
summer of 2014, each estate agent in Derby had on average 44 properties on its
books (as there were a total of 2,289 properties up for sale in Derby at the
peak in the Summer of 2014). Our research shows that number has plummeted to 38
per agent in December and looking at first three weeks of January, this number
will lower by the month’s end. While the
lack of new properties coming onto the market in the later months of 2014 in
Derby pushed asking prices up slightly from November to December, traditionally
a quiet season for the housing market, property sellers will need to work hard
in 2015 to complete a sale.
The length of time a property
takes to sell has increased over the last few months. Two bedroom properties in
Derby are now taking 86 days to sell, three bedroom 94 days, four bedrooms 92
days, but here an interesting figure, one beds are taking on average 169 days
to find a buyer.
2015 will be the year of the
selective mover. With only 986 brand new properties a year being built in Derby
since the turn of the Millennium, this woefully low and insufficient number of
new buildings in the City over the past few decades and a systemic change in
the type of properties homeowners want (with families splitting etc so we have
too many larger houses and not enough smaller ones), buyers are becoming
dissatisfied with, and therefore dismissive of what is up for sale.
In my opinion, the heat has
gone out of the Derby property market and I anticipate a moderate reduction
from the high transaction volumes seen in 2014. That might mean Derby landlords
could bag a bargain during this period of uncertainty, especially if the
financial markets do not like the election outcome. Markets and buyers do not
like uncertainty, but savvy buy-to-let landlords know that property investment is
a long term game, and irrespective of short term apathy, a reduction in the
quality and quantity of stock for homeowners to buy or the election, if people
don’t buy property, they rent.
Derby City Council aren’t
building anymore properties, the council house waiting list is decades, not
years for the better type of property.. the only other way to get a roof over
your head is to rent a property! Good
old Bricks and Mortar!