| Residential
rents have picked up at their fastest pace in four years according
to The Royal Institution for Chartered Surveyors’ (RICS) latest
lettings survey, published on 3 September.
Tenant demand for rented property continues to rise in the
quarter to July, having held firm over the previous quarter.
Demand is strongest for flats as prospective first-time buyers
still struggle to get onto the property ladder, despite a
subdued sales market.
Levels of new available rented property
have picked up after stagnating in the last quarter, though
the increase is slight and not enough to cap rents.
More buy-to-let investors are entering the market. Existing
landlords are also less likely to sell when tenants’ agreements
expire. Landlords are exiting the market at half the rate
of this time last year.
Increasing rents continue to lift
gross yields for the second consecutive quarter. However,
the renewed growth in new investor instructions will increase
the supply of available property and has led surveyors to
dampen their outlook for growth in the sector.
Surveyors’ expectations for rent rises have decreased across
all regions other than London and the South West. However,
there is little chance of short-term rent falls as tenant
demand remains strong.
According to RICS spokesperson, Jeremy Leaf:
‘The return of buy-to-let investors
to the market is a result of expectations that interest rates
have peaked. They may also have been encouraged by the fact
that the housing market, though subdued, has not collapsed,
despite widespread fears it would do so.
‘August’s interest rate cut is unlikely to reduce tenant demand
as tough affordability means renting remains the only realistic
option for many.’
Source :
RICS |