Summer Budget 2015 – Landlords Reactions

Summer Budget 2015 – Landlords Reactions

14:00 PM, 8th July 2015, About 9 years ago 9619

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Budget 2015 - Landlords Reactions

The concern is;

Budget proposals to “restrict finance cost relief to individual landlords”Summer Budget 2015 - Landlords Reactions

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Saeef Khan

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21:55 PM, 21st September 2015, About 9 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "Roger Rabbit" at "21/09/2015 - 21:45":

Please do not rub salt in my wounds mate...I don't think I will accept increase in taxation as it is likely to become unviable financial proposition.

You can't simply push rents up...as increase in rents is dictated by market conditions as opposed to landlords simply hiking the rents. As you have stated earlier that there are a lot of cash buyers who are unaffected...could potentially create uncompetitive market under those conditions.

Roger Rabbit

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22:04 PM, 21st September 2015, About 9 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "Saeef Khan" at "21/09/2015 - 21:55":

We don't have a choice we have to follow the laws of the nation. You can sell up its upto you but I won't be and am probably going to buy more.

I know you can't push rents up. Landlords don't have that power. I think tenants will push up rents as their wages increase. Long term rents will follow inflation IMO so I would assume 3% rent price increases per year

I think most landlords will not like it but once they calm down they will think....what else am I going to put the money into... And decide to just stick with it. I think only landlords who were going to sell anyway in the next few years due to retirement might move forward sales but other than that I'm not convinced many landlords are going to liquidate and leave the market

Kathy Evans

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22:05 PM, 21st September 2015, About 9 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "Roger Rabbit" at "21/09/2015 - 20:56":

20 years ago it was relatively easy to get a mortgage so it was worth building for owner occupation (but we know what happened to house prices. mortgages backed by lief insurance etc) so the situation now isn't quite the same.

Roger Rabbit

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22:06 PM, 21st September 2015, About 9 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "Saeef Khan" at "21/09/2015 - 21:55":

With regards to an uncompetitive market that's silly there are 5 millions rentals its a very competitive market even if these was just 1 million it would be a competitive market. Its not like the energy companies or supermarket's where a big 5-10 control 90% of the market

Roger Rabbit

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22:10 PM, 21st September 2015, About 9 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "Kathy Evans" at "21/09/2015 - 22:05":

No Kathy the UK build rates are determined by a quota system called Planning permissions.
I've done a lot of research into it this isn't the place to discuss it but I will say that if you look at all the councils in the UK the build rates vary enormously.

For example Telford builds about 3x the national average while Waltham Forest half the national average. That's more than 5x difference between the two councils. Clearly its got not a lot to do with Mortgage availability or BTL sector as both councils are in england and are subject to the same fuels regs and mortgage market yet one builds 5x as much as the other

BTL INVESTOR SCOTLAND

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22:11 PM, 21st September 2015, About 9 years ago

This is another very good submission by an accountant,

http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201516/cmpublic/finance/memo/fb42.htm

He points out that unlike contributors to pensions schemes landlords who bought properties for their pensions did not receive the benefit of tax relief on the equity used in the purchase and setting up of the properties.

He also says that small portfolio landlords will be the worst effected as they won't be able to incorporate. The landlords with the largest portfolios and largest incomes can incorporate (without SDLT and CGT) and avoid tax increases.

He suggests applying the tax to new purchases only.

Mark Alexander - Founder of Property118

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22:16 PM, 21st September 2015, About 9 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "Roger Rabbit" at "21/09/2015 - 21:53":

Exactly, there is no appetite for institutional BTL investment in the UK, the absence of REITS as major players is clear proof of that.

In answer to your other question, I am selling up and I know several other landlords are too.
.

Saeef Khan

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22:16 PM, 21st September 2015, About 9 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "BTL INVESTOR SCOTLAND" at "21/09/2015 - 22:11":

Indeed very strong submission.

Ian Simpson

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22:19 PM, 21st September 2015, About 9 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "Ros ." at "17/09/2015 - 09:37":

Ros, what a brilliant article. I am tempted to send some of it to my MP if that's OK with you...?

Kathy Evans

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22:20 PM, 21st September 2015, About 9 years ago

Reply to the comment left by "Roger Rabbit" at "21/09/2015 - 21:45":

At 5% rise a year for 5 years compounded (which doesn't seem to be happening here yet), my properties' values would just about be back at the level they were when I bought them. Not everywhere is like London.

Would big institutions house people like my neighbours who have numerous (well looked after) rescued animals? I bet they wouldn't. Neither the council nor the HAs allow more than a couple of pets, so they rely on the PRS.

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