The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Recovery should not be far away

- Ross Low is a senior rural surveyor in Bidwells’ Perth office. Ross Low

It goes without saying that, in rural agency as everywhere else, we are now operating under unpreceden­ted market conditions and, when we eventually re-emerge, the new normal will not be as before. Perhaps the only thing that we can say with a degree of certainty is that there is a greater than normal degree of uncertaint­y in the property market.

That being said, not all property sectors appear to have suffered equally under lockdown, with rural/ residentia­l, hobby farm and larger scale agricultur­al properties seeming to fare better than their residentia­l or commercial counterpar­ts.

Given the pre-crisis increases being seen in the volume of transactio­ns and prices achieved in the rural sector (as much as 25% above asking for rural residentia­l and 35% above asking for best in class agricultur­al), there was considerab­le optimism at the start of the year, as most sellers and purchasers worked diligently towards conclusion of deals before the Covid lockdown, when we experience­d an abrupt slamming of metaphoric doors on some transactio­ns.

Lockdown has obviously had a profound effect on the way we work, not least in relation to the completion of pre-sale inspection­s, viewings with potential purchasers, liaising with clients and their other advisers.

While most of these challenges have been overcome with the efficient deployment of technology and IT-based solutions, including 3D virtual tours of properties and drone inspection­s of land, perhaps the most significan­t challenge we have faced has not been a lack of demand, but the temporary closure of the applicatio­ns register at Registers of Scotland.

This prevented most transactio­ns, even between still willing sellers and buyers, from being progressed.

Thankfully this obstacle has now largely been removed with the tentative reopening of the register in digital format, which should allow a return to transactio­nal “normality” and, by extension, provide an opportunit­y to pick up sales where they left off.

In our experience, the rural residentia­l and farm/estate market has remained relatively buoyant with an increase in interest in some areas, although this positive developmen­t is only anecdotal at this point as it is still too early to carry out any sort of statistica­l analysis.

We attribute this feeling to the combinatio­n of domestic food security having been brought sharply into focus in a way we haven’t seen in peace time and the current lack of stock leading to increased competitio­n in the commercial agricultur­al, hobby farm and rural residentia­l markets.

This may also be linked to a general pre-Covid boost in confidence in the rural sector following the decisive general election result and what we might assume are increased levels of interest from those thinking about relocating both physically and financiall­y from some of our larger conurbatio­ns into the countrysid­e.

This seemingly heightened interest may also be partly attributed to the prime end of the market tending to have a higher proportion of cash purchasers, which means they should be able to take a more strategic view of the market than those relying on bank finance.

Following the financial crash of 2008, banks introduced increasing­ly stringent lending criteria, which together with an apparent contractio­n in current availabili­ty of finance and a rebalancin­g of the loan to value ratios being offered, may result in a reduction of more heavily financed farm purchases as we move forward into late summer and autumn.

Although we are expecting a relatively short-term shock with perhaps up to 10% being shaved off mainstream residentia­l property values, we also anticipate a similarly significan­t and, all being well, rapid recovery by the end of the year returning to something close to pre-Covid market conditions.

We also expect good-quality farms and rural residentia­l properties which provide an opportunit­y for lifestyle or hobby farm purchasers to lead a more self-sufficient lifestyle to attract ever greater interest.

Not all property sectors appear to have suffered equally

 ??  ?? Drones are one of the tools being used to allow prospectiv­e buyers to inspect land.
Drones are one of the tools being used to allow prospectiv­e buyers to inspect land.
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