Why House Prices in the UK Might Rise Faster Outside of London After 2015
For several reasons, the
rapid rise in residential real estate is affecting the entire country. The 2015
national election results should cheer investors in housing.
That national 2015 election is
over. Now homebuyers and sellers can vote with their sterling.
In the run up to the election,
politicians from all sides spoke of the nation’s housing woes. Too little
supply for too much demand was the problem, most agreed, with different ideas
on how to fix it. David Miliband and the Labourites bandied about a “mansion
tax,” along with rental increase caps, which arguably dampened sales in London
and the rest of the country in the first few months of the year. House building
also dipped in early 2015, as did prices, as uncertainty kept many buyers and
builders at home.
But within hours of the sweeping
election results announcements, real estate agents in London were popping
champagne corks. “Over the next five years we think that capital values in the
Prime London residential markets could double,” said the executive director of
estate agent Douglas & Gordon. An agent with Sotheby’s told The Guardian, “It is going to be an exciting to be in the
London market over the summer!”
There is general agreement that
much of the concern, now relief, over the mansion tax was London-centric. Price
run ups there recovered much more quickly after the recession of 2008 than
outside the capital city. In 2014, average house prices throughout London went
up by 17.4% while in the rest of the country property values rose at 10%, still
robust but obviously at a lower rate than in the capital. With sufficient
market demand, investors such as those involved in alternative
investments in UK land, and
homebuilders, focused on housing delivery, should be encouraged about ramping
up development.
New buyers in the market might be
daunted by the price hikes – or prompted to take advantage of the various
Government-sponsored schemes to help them. Those include the Help to Buy
programme, which was responsible for more than 70,000 home purchases in 2014.
Another factor is that there is some migration of younger families out of
London, where they reportedly are finding favourable quality-of-life factors in
places like Birmingham, Manchester and Leeds.
Here are what the prognosticators
are saying about UK home prices in the months and years to come outside of
London:
- “Estate agent Savills
predicts that prices will increase by 19.3 per cent over the next five
years across the UK and by 10.4 per cent in London.” (Daily Express, May 8, 2015)
- On its own website, Savills predicts the following house price
value increases through 2016: Midlands, North and Wales 4.0% increase;
Scotland 4.0%; Wider South of England 4.5%; London prime suburbs 7.0%;
London inner commute 7.0%; London outer commute 6.0%. Prime London will
rise 7.0%.
- Savills predicts the following for year 2020: Midlands, North &
Wales 20.4% increase; Scotland 17.5%; Wider
South of England 22.2%; London prime suburbs 25.7%; London inner commute
25.1%; London outer commute 24.5%. Prime London will rise 22.7%.
This is all good for current
owners, of course. Buyers, clearly on the losing end of these hikes, still have
the advantage of rising wages and easier access to credit – easier than in the
past several, post-recession years, that is. And for those homebuilders and
financiers engaged in real asset
investing (e.g., turning land into housing developments), the opportunities
placed before them are considerable.
The Sotheby’s
International spokesperson put it this way in an interview with
PropertyWire.com: “Increasing the supply of homes is the only way to truly
overcome the hurdles that the housing market places for the majority of
buyers,” she said. Lucian Cook, Savills UK head of residential research, said: "There
remains a pressing need for substantially increased new build supply and a far
more co-ordinated long term housing strategy for the UK."
Investors can do good for society and their country by putting money into all kinds of development. But smart investing also means tapping into objective analysis. Speak with an independent financial advisor to learn what kinds of real asset investing works best in your overall wealth management scheme.
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