As the
trees turn from green to hues of red and brown, the Mid Sussex property market
has a confident feel to it. With the underlying fundamentals of a continued
lack of properties being built, a shortage of properties (both in terms of
quantity and quality) coming to the market and the continued low mortgage rate
environment, buyer enquiries from first time buyers and buy to landlords is
strong and motivation is even stronger, given those inexpensive lending rates
and general demand caused by under supply.
Now of
course, there are a few potential hurdles coming towards us in the coming
months that could affect the Mid Sussex (and UK) property market. Mrs. May has
yet to get her teeth into Brexit negotiations and we don’t know what the US
Presidential elections might do to the money markets around the world, meaning
that on the run up to Christmas, some savvy buyers may take advantage of the
lack of certainty by making cheeky offers. I don’t believe these will have a
huge impact on property values (like the 2008 Credit Crunch).
You
see, property ownership, whether it’s for yourself as a homeowner or buy to let
landlord, is a long term investment. In fact, focusing on buy to let, a number
of landlords who own property in Mid Sussex have made contact with me recently
asking for my thoughts on the future of the buy to let market in Mid Sussex. Well,
as the Politician Edmund Burke said in the 18th century, "Those who don't
know history are destined to repeat it", in other words to see the future
you must look into the past.
Since
the Millennium, the housing market has had everything thrown at it. The recent
Brexit, last year’s General Election, the near melt down of the World Economy
with the Credit Crunch, The Dot Com boom and bust, the housing market crisis in
2008, the housing boom of 2001 to 2004; the list goes on. In fact here is a
graph (courtesy of the Land Registry) of average Property values since the
Millennium in the Mid Sussex District Council area.
Even
though we had the Dot Com bubble burst in 2000, two years later in January
2002, property values in the Mid Sussex District Council area have risen from
£126,600 (in Jan 2000) to £166,400 and kept rising to February 2008, when they
peaked at £284,500. Then we had the Credit Crunch and property prices continued
to fall until April 2009, where they averaged £213,100, but look where they are
now £358,300.
The
point I am trying to get across is long term future property values are more
helpful to landlord investors than the month by month headline grabbing micro
movements in the property market. Look
at the graph and you will see the growth in property values is an upward trend
BUT, the average darts about as each month goes by. So don’t watch the property indexes and panic
if values drop next month or the month afterwards, because even in the glory
days of 2001 to 2004 and 2012 to 2014, without fail, values always dropped
slightly around Christmas, but people will always need a roof over their heads,
and if they can’t buy and the council aren’t building anymore, only buy to let
landlords can meet that demand.
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