0:10 AM, 5th July 2023, About A year ago 82
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Since tenants pay for their landlord’s buy to let mortgage repayments, they should get a share of the profits, one leading commentator says.
John Bird is the founder and editor-in-chief of The Big Issue, a social enterprise and street newspaper, and in the latest issue he says that ‘making money from buy-to-let properties has long been like shooting fish in a barrel for landlords’.
And it is now time that ‘renters got their share’.
In his article, Mr Bird tells the story of ‘Jim’ who, 20 years ago, began renting a flat that, if he could have afforded to, would have bought for £100,00.
But that didn’t happen and over 20 years, Jim’s rent doubled and now the landlord wants him to leave so he can sell the flat.
Mr Bird says that the landlord has issued a Section 21 ‘no-fault’ notice but says that since 2003 when Jim moved in, the flat’s value has rocketed to £500,000.
That means £400,000 has been added to the value of the property while Jim has never missed a rent payment.
Mr Bird writes: “As it was a buy-to-let, the money borrowed from the bank was paid for by Jim’s rent. The person who borrowed the money did not have to pay for the mortgage.
“The buy-to-let arrangement, as long as the property value does not fall, is an ingenious way of borrowing money so that you can increase your income, and also see the steady increase in the value of what you bought with your mortgage.”
He goes on to say that after 20 years, the money paid by Jim hasn’t improved his worth – but his rent payments have increased his landlord’s value.
And when his three months ‘notice is up, he won’t be getting a share of that value.
Instead, he will be searching for a new home and facing a shortage of flats with fast-rising rents.
Mr Bird writes: “What the buy-to-let market has done has increased the chance of quite ordinary people to cash in on gaining wealth and property.
“Around 90% of rentals are owned by individuals who own maybe one or two buy-to-lets.
“It is often their pension and what they want to pass on to their children.”
He says there are firms buying and letting dozens of properties but ‘small-fry buy-to-let landlords dominate the market’.
He continues: “The landlord has not created the increased value. Jim has. So why not cut him in when you throw him out and sell the property for top price?
“I asked this of a woman who told me that she bought a flat five years ago and is now selling it for twice the price: Had you thought of rewarding the person who made this profit for you?
“She pointed out that if the market had gone the other way, then she would have been taking all the risks. True.
“But for the last 30 years making money out of buy-to-lets has been like shooting fish in barrel.”
Mr Bird says that buy to let has enabled investors to build a portfolio who would not have been able to do so without the ‘giant rip-off of the tenant’.
He adds: “The tax relief that goes with owning property you let out, a tax bonus to encourage investment, adds to this.
“Your standing in the community because you own property is reflected in also having to pay less for your credit.
“And you’ve got something to give the kids.”
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Patrick McLoughlin
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Sign Up15:00 PM, 5th July 2023, About A year ago
And what about shared ownership schemes? Should the buyer get an increased share in respect of the part for which rent is paid?
JeggNegg
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Sign Up15:46 PM, 5th July 2023, About A year ago
Landlords seem to be such an easy target to shoot at
by all and sundry, The shooter gets free publicity.
whether it be to get votes in an election or promote a business. we must try and educate and work with our Clients (tenants) and explain many of these facts are actually massively untrue. without a change in understanding by tenants, i cannot see these attacks on landlords stopping.
Robert Johnson
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Sign Up16:16 PM, 5th July 2023, About A year ago
Look what your proposing is an end to the private buy to let market. If that's your position just be honest.
Patrick McLoughlin
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Sign Up16:19 PM, 5th July 2023, About A year ago
Reply to the comment left by Gromit at 05/07/2023 - 07:52
Yes. And expert on how to increase homelessness by destroying the BTL market (who will bother investing on the basis suggested by him?). Recent so called tenant friendly legislation is already reducing rental supply. Bird's latest suggestion would be the final nail in the coffin.
Mark Alexander - Founder of Property118
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Sign Up16:43 PM, 5th July 2023, About A year ago
Reply to the comment left by Patrick McLoughlin at 05/07/2023 - 16:19
I think the final nail was hammered in and the coffin has been well and truly buried for some time now. The only remaining question for me now is when will these idiots conclude that an exhumation of the coffin will result in a miraculous resurrection of the Private Rented Sector.
H MD
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Sign Up16:50 PM, 5th July 2023, About A year ago
A complete Bird Brain.
Let's share the mental stress, exhaustion, finacial sacrifice, tax etc that we landlords endure to give ungrateful idiots like Bird a roof over his empty head.
David Smith
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Sign Up17:03 PM, 5th July 2023, About A year ago
Reply to the comment left by HMD HMD at 05/07/2023 - 16:50
😆 So well put
SimonP
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Sign Up17:06 PM, 5th July 2023, About A year ago
Reply to the comment left by Gromit at 05/07/2023 - 07:52
Not quite sure how Bacon, Lettuce & Tomato (BLT) sandwiches works into the equation. Tasty thought though (for some).
Karl Henderson
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Sign Up17:06 PM, 5th July 2023, About A year ago
What a load of rubbish, I don't rent, I saved and worked hard to get where I am, why should I share it. What an absolute lunacy.
SimonP
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Sign Up17:26 PM, 5th July 2023, About A year ago
So, according to Mr Bird, any capital gain should be shared with the tenant. But over (say) 20 years there may well have been as many as 40 tenants. How does he propose "rewarding" each of those tenants? Apart from trying to locate these people and maybe their heirs (just think of the cost of doing that), what fantastic mathematical formula does he propose using so that each one of those intended recipients gets a "fair share", bearing mind that property values have historically gone down as well as up over time? If a tenant happened to arrive during a peak and then leave during a trough, can landlords then send that person a bill to reflect their capital LOSS? Try getting that case scenario through the Small Claims Courts. 🤣
Not only that but his utterly brainless and ridiculous suggestion is based on the assumption that everyone has a mortgage.
Even 20 years ago I doubt that anyone could have bought a flat for £100.00 as Mr Bird has said: not even a lock-up garage. Just another fake story to whip up the anti-landlord lobby into a further frenzy.