Looking back at the 75th
Anniversary of the D-Day landing a few months ago, it reminded me of the huge
changes that have happened to Huddersfield and more specifically the Huddersfield
property market since WW2. Back in 1946, the average wage in Huddersfield was
just over £5 a week and to buy an average car would cost you just under £600,
yet this is a property blog, so...
The average value of a Huddersfield property in 1946 was £819
In fact, in those 75 years, the average Huddersfield
house had doubled in price by 1961, then again in 1971, 1975, 1980, 1988, 2000
and 2006. Now a lot of those increases (especially in the 1970’s) were caused
by hyperinflation, yet since the start of the 21st Century inflation
has been kept low and since the Credit Crunch (2008/9), whilst property values
have been rising, they haven’t been at the rates experienced in the latter half
of the 20th Century.
Now what a property sells for is irrelevant,
its whether someone can afford it.
Increases in Huddersfield property values
have produced huge increases in equity for many Huddersfield homeowners and Huddersfield
buy to let landlords, yet on the other side of the coin also making housing
unaffordable for other people. The best measure of the affordability of housing
is the ratio of Huddersfield property values to Huddersfield average earnings
(i.e. salary/wages). The ratio works on the basis the higher the ratio, the less
affordable properties are.
In 1997, the average value of a Huddersfield
property was 3 times higher than the average annual wage in Huddersfield, in 2008
it peaked at 6.1, within the next four years it had dropped to 5.3 and since
then has slowly risen to 5.8 times higher.
It can be seen that even though property in Huddersfield
became more affordable after the 2007/8 property crash (i.e. the ratio
dropped), in subsequent years, with house values rising but earnings/salaries
not keeping up, the ratio started to rise. This has meant there has been a
decline in affordability of property in Huddersfield over the last five years -
so for those on particularly low incomes or with little capital, it
unfortunately means that buying a Huddersfield home will never become an
option.
Therefore, the demand for private rented
properties in Huddersfield will continue to grow as many young Huddersfield
people are deciding to rent instead of buy their own house (knowing when their
parents pass away, the equity built up in their parents property will be passed
down - and then they can buy in their 50’s and 60’s - just like it happens in
Germany).
Yet,
that is many decades away and with fewer Huddersfield people wanting or able to
save up the 5% deposit required by mortgage lenders, more and more people are
looking to rent. Tie this in with the subtle shift in attitudes towards renting
since the Millennium and less people jumping the on the bottom rung of the property
ladder, this has driven rents and demand up in Huddersfield over the last few
years. Yet (and it’s an important proviso) the type, location and demands of Huddersfield
tenants has changed over that same time frame meaning you can’t just make money
from buy to let as easily as falling off a log like you did in the early 2000’s.
If you
are an existing landlord with us (or even another agent in Huddersfield) or
someone thinking of becoming a first time Huddersfield landlord looking for
advice and opinion and what (or not to
buy in Huddersfield), one source of information is the Huddersfield Property
Blog https://huddersfieldproperty.blogspot.com/- or drop me an email or phone call and
let’s start a conversation - I don’t bite and I don’t do hard sell ... and
maybe, just maybe, I could help you get better returns from your property
portfolio.
No comments:
Post a Comment