Huddersfield house prices since the Millennium have risen by 115.69%,
whilst average salaries in Huddersfield have only grown by 51.27% over the same
time frame. This has served to push homeownership further out of reach for many
Huddersfield people as they have to battle against raising considerable deposits and meet sterner
lending criteria, as a result of new mortgage regulations introduced in 2014/5. The private rental market in Huddersfield has grown throughout the last
twenty years with buy-to-let investors purchasing a high proportion of newly
built residential properties that were built and designed for the owner occupier
sales markets. For example, in the Huddersfield
Constituency, roll the clock back 20 years and there were 36,985 properties in
the Constituency, whilst the most recent set of figures show there are 40,502
properties - a growth of 3,517 properties.
However, anecdotal evidence
suggests that a large majority of those 3,517 were bought by Huddersfield
buy-to-let landlords, as over the same 20-year time frame, the number of rental
properties has grown from 2,942 to 7,926 in the Constituency
- a rise of 4,984 properties.
Nevertheless, some say this historic growth of the Huddersfield rental
market might start to change with the new tax rules for landlords introduced by
Mr. Osborne over the last seven or eight months. Yet the numbers tell another
story. Across the board, mortgage borrowing climbed to a 9 year zenith in March this year as the
British property markets traditional Easter rush corresponded with landlords
hurrying to beat George Osborne’s new stamp duty changes – buy-to-let landlords
borrowed £7.1bn in March 2016 (the latest set of figures released) which was
163% up on the £2.7bn borrowed in the previous March.
You see,
from my point of view, I don’t think things will get worse in the buy-to-let market
in Huddersfield and these are the reasons why I believe that:
Firstly, what
else are Huddersfield landlords going to invest in if it isn’t property - the
stock market? Since the Millennium, the
stock market has risen by an unimpressive total of 5.54%, quite different to
the 115.69% rise in Huddersfield property prices?
Secondly, its
true the 3% stamp duty is the first blow on top of a number of other tax changes to be phased
in between 2017 and 2021, such as landlords facing a constraint in their
ability to offset mortgage interest and, if sizeable
numbers of landlords do take the decision to sell their portfolios, this will
lead to a substantial amount of second hand properties being put up for sale. Yet
that might not be a bad thing, as I have mentioned in previous articles there
is a serous shortage of properties to buy at the moment in Huddersfield: the
stock of property for sale being at a six year all time low.
.. Thirdly, if there are fewer
rental properties in Huddersfield, as supply drops and demand remains the same
(although ask any letting agent in Huddersfield and they will say demand is
constantly rising) this will create a squeeze in the Huddersfield rental market
and as a result rents will rise. In fact, I predict even if landlords don’t
sell up, Huddersfield rents will rise as Huddersfield landlords seek to compensate
for increased costs, which means more landlords will be attracted back.
For more thoughts on the Huddersfield
Property market to read articles like this, you might find the Huddersfield
Property Market blog of interest https://huddersfieldproperty.blogspot.co.uk/
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