As usual there is no shortage of sensational headlines about
the importance of the budget for the Government, and for key Departments
including Health, Work & Pensions and Defence. However, for Oxford’s tenants it is the
headlines about house building that are the most important, and Oxford’s
embattled private landlords it will hope that the budget doesn’t pile further
pressure and expense on them.
In Oxford, whilst prices achieved for sold houses has
continued to rise (with most recent data confirming a 6% rise in achieved
prices over the last 12 months when compared to the prior year), the total
number of transactions (the number of houses successfully sold having been put
on the market) has fallen by 17% to just 2,702.
It is this statistic that should worry everyone. I believe that the fall in the number of
transactions is in part due to lower levels of house purchase by private
landlords, which in turn means that future supply of new rental properties is
not growing to keep pace with demand.
Regular readers of my column will know that I have
identified a growing level of demand in Oxford for small family homes for
rent. As ‘first-time’ tenants start to
plan their families and out-grow their homes, they have a requirement for 3-bedroom
properties in areas with nursery places, good transport links and easy access
to supermarkets and other shops. In
Oxford, this is currently under-supplied in the rental sector, with many
suitable properties instead targeting multiple tenants rather than families.
Without such provision, and with 3 bed properties remaining
prohibitively expensive to buy, these young families will either need to look
outside of Oxford or look for affordable new build within Oxford.
Over the last 12 months in Oxford just 82 new build
properties were sold, that’s just 3% of total transaction in the same
period. Of those new build, 51 were
larger detached properties and just 12 the terraced or semi-detached homes
which tenants with young families are most likely to target.
This double-whammy - a lack of new investment by Oxford’s
private landlords and a dearth of suitable new build - will create a
pinch-point for Oxford’s private renters at a time when demand for rental
properties has never been higher. The
lack of supply is clearly responsible for house prices remaining buoyant at a
time when total transactions have fallen so dramatically. Oxford is a supply-constrained market, and as
a result as landlord costs increase they are likely to result in higher rents.
Following the introduction of a stamp duty surcharge for
owners of multiple properties, and the restriction on landlords’ ability to
off-set the costs of borrowing when calculating their income tax, the
Government has no fewer than 15 ongoing consultations in parliament which could
further affect the private rented sector, but not help to deliver more new
homes that Oxford so desperately needs.
Instead, they will make landlord compliance more difficult, increase the
costs that landlords’ have to bear and, further discourage good ethical
landlords from investing further in Oxford at a time when their investment is
most needed.
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