After the shock of the
Conservatives returning to power with a majority at Westminster, all the
potential issues and possible uncertainties of a hung parliament has lifted the
cloud from the Derby property market. Talking to other Derby agents, surveyors
and solicitors in the area over the last few days, there are signs this has
started a new impetus the Derby property market after a subdued six months,
when an amalgamation of tougher lending conditions, a natural correction after
the strong recovery in Derby property prices in 2014, and political uncertainty
ahead of the General Election slowed demand.
Against the back drop of
Labour’s election promises of rent controls and three year tenancies, some
Derby buy to let landlords were waiting to see how these new policies would be
implemented before they committed themselves to buying more property for their
portfolio. Now that uncertainty has been removed, the long term picture is very
positive.
So, where next for the Derby
property market? Well, with inflation at zero and with the Money Markets happy that
David Cameron is still at No.10, the Bank of England have no reason to raise
interest rates until 2016 at the earliest. As mortgage rates are at their
lowest levels since 2010, landlords with larger deposits will now be wooed by
the mortgage companies in the coming months with low rates.
Over the past couple of years,
Derby landlords have benefitted from a booming Derby job market. Unemployment
in the city has dropped to 3.15%, as a year ago, 5,357 people were claiming
unemployment benefit compared with today’s 3,287. With more jobs and better
pay, as the level of rents is directly linked to tenant’s wages, there has been
an increase in the rental prices tenants are willing to pay for good quality
Derby properties.
Some landlords might be
nervous about the Tory’s plans for the housing market in the next five years in
terms of tenant demand for their rental properties. One plan is for Housing
Association tenants to have the right to buy their property. However, these
tenants were never in the private rented sector and will actually increase the
supply of properties in the housing stock in decades to come. The Government
‘Help to Buy Scheme’ has only helped to buy 180 Derby properties since April
2013. Considering 4,366 properties have changed hands in the last year alone in
Derby, I don’t think it has made a huge difference to our local property
market.
The biggest matter, when it
comes to tenant demand of rental property going forward, comes from the shift
in the mindset and attitudes towards renting itself. Twenty years ago, in some
quarters, you were seen as a second class citizen if you rented a property. Not
any more! In Derby, as in the rest of the UK (apart from Central London),
renting continues to offer good value for money for tenants.
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