Birmingham Post

First-time buyers’ boost as buy-to-let hammered

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According to ThisisMone­y, the result has seen the vast majority of landlords selling off existing properties and not replacing them with alternativ­es at the same value, not expanding their portfolios, and/ or paying down their mortgages. The battering has been intense: April 2016: Three per cent stamp duty surcharge introduced for all buy-to-let purchases.

January 2017: Bank of England imposes stress testing on buy-to-let mortgages of less than five years. Rent must now typically cover mortgage payments at 145 per cent at a mortgage rate of 5.5 per cent.

April 2017: Phased reduction of tax relief on buy-to-let mortgage interest begins.

October 2017: Bank of England imposes portfolio rules for landlords with four or more properties, meaning lenders must review a landlord’s full portfolio of properties when each new mortgage is assessed.

The IMLA report estimates that between 2000 and 2017, buy-to-let landlords invested £289 billion into the sector, bringing 1.8 million properties into the rental market.

At the same time, real rents have fallen 4.4 per cent across the UK.

According to the trade body, a fifth of landlords have indicated that they plan to reduce the size of their portfolios.

The howls of protest are getting louder.

Kate Davies, IMLA executive director, told ThisisMone­y: ‘We urge the Government to reassess the impact of the recent far-reaching regulatory changes to buy-to-let investment and allow a period of policy consolidat­ion.

‘Our nation’s buy-to-let investors provide a service that’s vital to millions of UK tenants. We need to support and protect a sector that does so much for so many.”

Separate data published by UK Finance suggests more landlords are falling behind on their mortgage payments.

There were 5,100 buy-to-let mortgages in arrears of 2.5 per cent or more of the outstandin­g balance in the fourth quarter of 2017 – two per cent more than in the same quarter of the previous year.

Within the total, there were 1,200 buy-to-let mortgages with more significan­t arrears representi­ng 10 per cent or more of the outstandin­g mortgage balance.

This was 20 per cent greater than in the same quarter of the previous year.

Hardly a crisis but an indication of how tough things are.

But the regime, far from easing, is set to ratchet up the pain.

The Tenant Fees Bill is moving through Parliament. It will prevent landlords and agents from charging tenants any fees on top of their agreed rent. In contrast, first time buyers, Trevor Law is managing director of Eastcote Wealth Management, chartered financial planners,

based in Solihull. Email: tlaw@eastcotewe­alth.co.uk

The views expressed in this article should not be construed as financial advice

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 ??  ?? > The tide is turning on buy-to-let properties after several new policies
> The tide is turning on buy-to-let properties after several new policies

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