2 years ago | 3 comments
There are 129 locations where rent prices have climbed while house prices stagnated or declined, creating exceptional property investment opportunities, research reveals.
These emerging hotspots are scattered across the country, with notable examples including Brent, Hammersmith and Fulham, and Westminster in London.
There are also good performance levels in Salford and Burnley in the North West, and Ipswich and Hertsmere in the East of England, the findings from Lomond highlight.
John Ennis, Lomond’s chief revenue officer, said: “Generally speaking, the property market has held its own over the last year with house prices standing strong despite the turbulence caused by higher mortgage rates.
“Now we have seen the Bank of England reduce rates we are seeing significant optimism coming back in from both buyers and sellers.
“When breaking the market down, there are a multitude of areas that have seen minimal movement in house prices yet where rental values have performed very strongly indeed.”
He added: “This increased level of housing market affordability coupled with a strong rental market performance has helped to significantly improve the yields available to buy to let investors and created opportunities in markets that they may not have previously considered.
“This demonstrates the importance of strategic investment for landlords when looking to create or expand their portfolio.”
The data from Lomond also shows that landlord profits are on the rise as rental yields climb.
Its analysis of government data shows average rents increased by 8.2% in the past year, eclipsing a 2.2% increase in house prices.
Consequently, the average rental yield has jumped from 4% to 4.2%.
While every region experienced yield growth, some areas stand out as particularly lucrative for buy to let investors.
Lomond says that London, the South East, and North West saw the most significant yield improvements.
However, the North East boasts the highest overall yield at 4.9%.
Here are the areas with the largest rental yield growth of 0.4% or more across each region:
The full list of areas can be found from Lomond.
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Member Since December 2023 - Comments: 1573
8:24 AM, 14th August 2024, About 2 years ago
I wouldn’t refer to these places as ‘BTL hotspots’.
Rents may be rising but rental profits are collapsing. Landlords are just waiting for the next onslaught from a government that has huge spending plans but no money to fund them.
Maybe ‘Tenant black spots’ would be a more apt headline.