More buy-to-let landlords selling up
More buy-to-let landlords selling up By: Andrew Regan
The number of residential landlords selling their
properties is at a three year high, as many try to cash in their properties at
the height of the market, according the Royal Institution of Chartered
Surveyors.
Landlords are also deserting the market due to a significant
drop in the yields on flats as that area of the market suffers from over-supply,
concerns on interest rates, and restrictions on lending from cautious financial
institutions. Despite the fact that capital gains tax on properties will be
reduced next April, a significant number are selling now, perhaps pre-empting
the big sell-off next spring.
The RICS revealed that the number of new
landlord instructions dipped 19% in the three months ending in October.
Instructions are regarded as an indication of the strength of the buy-to-let
market and some experts believe that its demise could significantly impact on
the overall housing market, exacerbating existing problems.
The latest
Lettings Survey shows an increase in the percentage of landlords selling
properties when tenants leases expire, up to 6.5% from 6.1%, the third
consecutive quarterly increase and it now stands at the highest level since
January 2005. RICS housing spokesman Jeremy Leaf believed that current economic
uncertainty and a more cautious approach from lenders were factors in dissuading
would-be investors.
Many buy-to-let mortgages were immediately withdrawn
after the collapse of the sub-prime market in the USA, and since the near
failure of the Northern Rock, UK mortgages in every sector including residential
properties have been harder to obtain as banks and building societies have
significantly tightened their lending criteria.
When the buy-to-let
mortgage was first launched in 1996, only 20,000 were taken out but according to
the Council of Mortgage lenders (CML) this figure rose to 990,000 in September
2007, with the amount advanced totalling 116billion.
But, as lenders get
more cautious so the average deposit required has risen significantly. In
November 2007 the average deposit for buy-to-let mortgages was 30% compared to a
standard 8% only five years ago. Another major requirement of many lenders in
the buy-to-let market is that rents are at least 125% of the monthly mortgage
payment.
So, due to the reduction in borrowers willing to lend, would be
buy-to-let investors are unable to compare mortgages as favourably as they could
in recent years. As a result many have turned away from the market considering
the potential risks too great, or because they are simply unable to afford
it.

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