Property price bubble talk “premature”, claims buy-to-let specialist

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bubble

The market is far from the prospect of a ‘property bubble’ and current healthy buy-to-let yields, especially outside of London and the South East, are part of the proof that we are not at the end of another a boom/bust cycle, it has been claimed today.

Buy-to-let firm Assetz says strong gross average yields of 7-8% currently being achieved across many economically sound regions of the UK indicate that investments are cash positive and have significant opportunity for price growth – buffered against interest rate rises and dispelling talk of a bubble.

Rental values are also set to continue rising, increasing incomes further as the number of renters surge in line with population growth, and property supply shortages for sales and letting persist.

Assetz says just before the market peak in 2007, average regional gross yields were much lower at 5-5.5% which were not sufficient to cover running costs and subsequent interest rate hikes. Investors at that point were speculating solely on continuing price growth and happy to accept cash losses on rental income after running costs, a very different picture from today.

Further analysis from Assetz illustrates that for a £100,000 property currently achieving an average 8% gross yield, £8,000 in this case, the value would need to grow by around 45% (and for there to be no growth at all in rents) for the gross yield to be reduced to 5.5 per cent. The most recent annual price growth reported by the Office for National Statistics was 4.1% across England, 1% in Wales and -0.7% in Scotland. London’s annual growth was 8.7% from August 2012 to August 2013.

Stuart Law, CEO of Assetz, said: “Yields can be used to assess the health of the property market, indicating whether a boom or bust is looming. The good yields that are currently being achieved show that investors bought at a good price and that prices would have to rise by almost half again to bring yields down to the pre-crash levels where investors were speculating solely on house price growth. ONS stats show minimal growth barely beginning now throughout the country, with the exception of London, thus talk of a price bubble is premature whilst investments are so cashflow positive.

“However, the more a price bubble is referred to the more investors begin to believe it and the speculation begins, indeed we are already seeing the beginning of an expectation of growth returning rather than investors being solely happy with income. Right now, average yields are still offering investors healthy returns and our ‘yield-yard-stick’ indicates we are far from a market collapse.”

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