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Why Britain’s buy-to-let boom is over


01-20-2018

The Economist explains
Why Britain’s buy-to-let boom is over
When yields are plummeting below 5%, the new class of homeowners may see its sun setting

The Economist explains

by C.W.


THE days of “Downton Abbey” and “Jeeves and Wooster” may be over, but in modern Britain a new sort of landed gentry has emerged. These days one in 30 adult Britons—and around one in four members of parliament—is a landlord. They have piled into the so-called “buy-to-let” market, buying properties and then renting them out to other people. The rental income from buy-to-let properties, which we estimate at £55bn-65bn ($73bn-87bn) a year, is equivalent to some 3% of GDP. Yet the growth of Britain’s buy-to-let market has sharply slowed of late. Evidence from Savills, a property firm, even suggests that for the first time landlords may be selling up in large numbers. Why is the new landed gentry struggling?


The business cycle is partly responsible. Britons have invested so heavily in the buy-to-let market in part because loose monetary policy has pushed down returns on savings in their bank accounts. Meanwhile, with Britain’s house prices so high, many parents have bought property in order to hand over something to their children when they grow up, and have rented it out in the meantime. Buy-to-letters, in other words, have increased the demand for properties available for purchase (thus pushing up house prices), while simultaneously increasing the supply of places to rent (thus keeping rents in check). So it is no surprise that the yield on such investment has been on a downward trend. It recently fell below 5%, tying its lowest level since records began in 2001. That makes buy-to-let a less attractive proposition.

Yet the government has also played a role. In 2016 it raised stamp duty, a tax on homebuyers, by three percentage points for those buying second homes, including buy-to-let properties. It abolished a generous “wear-and-tear” allowance for those letting furnished properties, and in April began tightening the rules on how landlords write off interest costs against income tax. These changes are enough to turn healthy annual profits into losses, especially for investors in higher tax brackets and those with large mortgages. London’s house market has been particularly affected by these measures.


With further tax changes on the way, the future does not look bright for Britain’s modern gentry. Though that may hurt some investors’ incomes, it has its upsides, too. Financial regulators may be relieved; buy-to-let mortgages tend to be riskier than owner-occupied ones. And Britain’s younger generation, among whom home-ownership rates have fallen sharply in recent years, will hope that fewer buy-to-letters will snap up property that they had hoped to buy for themselves. Like the lords and ladies of “Downton Abbey”, the new landed gentry may find their best days are behind them.

www.economist.com/

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