Landlords seeing 7.6% return on their investments
Landlords enjoyed a 7.6% annual return on their investments by the end of December 2009 according to the latest buy-to-let Index from LSL Property Services
LSL Property Services, which owns the UK’s largest lettings agent network, including national chains Your Move and Reeds Rains says the value of landlords properties rose 3% in the year while rental income after void periods added a further 4.6%.
This means in 2009, a typical landlord made a return of £12,740. This was a combination of modest capital gains of £4,831 on each property and £7,909 in rental income. By contrast, in 2008, a typical landlord would have lost 8.8% even after allowing for rental income.
They lost £23,000 in capital as the property fell in value, and earned £7,900 in rent for the full year, leading to a total loss of £15,100.
David Brown, commercial director of LSL Property Services, says: “Despite the worst recession in living memory, and despite house prices continuing to fall for the first few months of 2009, investment returns in buy-to-let were very respectable.
“The £12,700 the average landlord made on a rented property during the year recouped most of the losses in the housing crash of 2008. Brave landlords who added to their portfolios will be celebrating an excellent year.”
The trend in prices continues to be favourable. Landlords’ properties rose in value by 0.4% in December. By contrast, the average UK rent fell slightly in December, down 0.4% to £661 per month.
Rents have corrected slightly since September giving up a third of the sharp rent rises in the summer. However this was largely driven by falling rents in the large London and South East markets, the only two markets to have seen three consecutive months of rent declines since September. Rents ended 2009 0.2% higher than the previous year.
Yields ended the year at 4.8%. They fell from a peak of 5.1% in March as the recovery in house prices outstripped growth in rents. The remain well above the 4.2% trough at the peak of the housing market at the end of 2007, when interest rates were far higher than today to boot.
Arrears performed very well in 2009, despite the recession. On average 11.7% of rent was unpaid by the date it was due, down from 14.5% in 2008. By the 31st of December 2009, 12.5% of rent was unpaid, far less than last year’s Christmas peak when 15.9% of rent was late. Serious arrears held steady, with 1.1% of rent still unpaid three months after it was due. At the end of 2009, £282m of rent was unpaid by the date it was due, down from £346m at the end of 2008.
2010 is set for stronger returns than 2009. If house prices continue to rise at the current modest rate of 0.4% per month, equivalent to 4.9% for the full year, a typical landlord will make a total return of £16,000 in 2010, equivalent to 9.8%.
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Readers' comments (1)
Anonymous | 15 Jan 2010 11:58 am
This take no account of delapidations, cleaning, repairs, decorating, insurance, mortgage costs, letting agents fees etc.
There has been an improvement in void periods, but rents are still soft and the way tenants leave properties at the end of tenancies is in a poorer condition than they have historically.
I think BTL can be a good long term investment, but reports on returns need to be more balanced.
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