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Times Get Tough For Landlords

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By

Christina Jordan

From the Fool blog

Christmas comes early for Centrica investors

Published in Mortgages on 10 June 2008

Existing buy-to-letters are starting to feel the bite with a combination of payment shock, falling prices and diminishing returns.

It's been a bad week for the country's biggest buy-to-let lender, Bradford & Bingley.

The bank announced an £8m pre-tax loss in the first quarter of 2008 (compared to a £108m profit in the same period last year) and has since suffered a 19% drop in its share price.

One of B&B's troubles is that the number of its borrowers who have missed three monthly payments has jumped significantly, by more than a third between December 07 and April 08. This is much faster than the buy-to-let market average, which has nevertheless seen a chunky rise in three-month arrears -- they leapt a third in the last year, according to the Council of Mortgage Lenders.

But why are landlords increasingly falling behind on their mortgage? For many it's for the same reason as residential borrowers - payment shock.

Shock to the system

Payment shock is when you come to the end of a deal, for example a two-year fixed rate, and find that all the available mortgages are priced much higher than your current pay rate - either because of interest rate rises or because lenders have increased their margins, or both. But if you do nothing you will usually automatically revert to your lender's Standard Variable Rate (SVR), which could be priced even higher.

Those who are coming up for renewal on a two-year fixed or discounted buy-to-let mortgage would have taken out their deal when the Base Rate was 4.5% and lenders' margins were trimmed to the bone because of fierce competition. Typical rates for buy-to-let in May 2006 were between 5.25% and 5.75%.

When these borrowers renew over the next few months, they will have the choice of deals priced on average between 6.5% and 7% -- meaning much higher monthly repayments.

A landlord with a £150,000 interest-only mortgage coming off a 5.75% deal and having to renew at 7% would see their monthly repayment rise from £719 to £875 - that's £156 a month.

But that's not their only problem.

LTV squeeze

Average loan-to-value (LTV) ratios have also been squeezed in the last six months. This means lenders are only willing to offer mortgages to those with a significant deposit. While some lenders would offer mortgages at 90% of a property's value two years ago, now many will not go above 75% LTV. This could be a problem for landlords who have not seen their property's value rise by enough to give them sufficient equity in their property.

If you bought a buy-to-let property on a two-year deal for £100,000 two years ago and put down a £10,000 deposit you would have borrowed at 90% LTV. But in order to get a current deal at 75% LTV you would need to have 25% equity in your property - and this would mean your property would have had to have risen in value by around 20% to £120,000.

That won't have happened many areas of the UK, as average house prices have increased by approximately 6% in the last two years, according to Nationwide's house price index. And they are currently declining in many parts of the UK.

If you do not have enough equity to move onto another deal you could be forced onto your lender's SVR - and that will be even higher than most of the deals currently on the market, as typical buy-to-let SVRs range from 7% to 7.5%. On the example given above, that means monthly repayments of up to £937.

And there's more bad news...

Rising rental cover requirements

It's not the just the LTV that determines whether a lender will give you a mortgage or remortgage. Lenders impose a minimum rental income figure which means that the expected rental income from your property has to be equal or more than your monthly repayments.

In the last few years this figure had been creeping down to minimum rental income of 110% or even 100% of monthly repayments, as lenders became more flexible. But current cautious lending as a result of the credit crunch has led to a tightening of requirements and minimum cover has crept back up to 125% or even 130% of monthly repayments.

So if you are a victim of payment shock and your monthly repayment rises to £1,000, your rental income on that property will have to be at least £1,250 - and the figures may not stack up. Again this would rule out the option of remortgaging and leave you languishing on your lender's SVR.

There are still deals to be done at lower rates, higher LTVs or lower rental cover - as long as you know where to look. For example, Bank of Ireland will offer landlords a three-year fixed rate at up to 85% LTV requiring just 100% rental cover - at a rate of 6.99%. Those with a deposit of 25% can get the same deal at 6.79%. BM Solutions will go as low as 6.29% on its two-year fixed rate, but you will need a 25% deposit and rental cover of 125% of repayments. (You can compare these deals with other buy to let mortgages via The Motley Fool Mortgage Service.)

Silver linings?

It's been claimed (usually by those with a vested interest) that rents are expected to increase in many areas of the UK. The theory goes that a combination of falling house prices and tight mortgage criteria has put many first-time buyers off buying, forcing them to rent for longer. This increased demand could push up rents and this would enable landlords to fit the tighter rental cover requirements. Phew.

But are rents actually going up?

No, according to the Association of Residential Letting Agents, which shattered the myth that rents are soaring in its latest figures. The Q2 figures show that average rental returns for houses and flats were down from 5.0% to 4.8% over the last three months. Average weighted rents for houses were down 7% from Q1, and 9% for flats.

This all paints a pretty dreary picture for existing landlords. But of course, investing in property is for the long term, so there's really nothing to worry about just yet - as long as you can afford those increased buy-to-let mortgage payments, that is...

More: Has The Buy-To-Let Bubble Burst? | Cut The Costs Of Buy-To-Let

> Compare buy-to-let mortgages at Fool.co.uk

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Comments

The opinions expressed here are those of the individual writers and are not representative of The Motley Fool. If you spot any comments that are unsuitable hit the flag to alert our moderators.

TMFGrandJury 10 Jun 2008, 5:39pm

I'm looking to rent a new property at the moment and am kind of wondering what happens if a landlord defaults on their mortgage. Does anyone out there know?

I'm also wondering if lots of landlords are planning on letting at the moment but will start looking to sell and turf tenants out when the sales market picks up again.

From the looks of your last stat, as a potential tenant with nothing really to loose, I'm going to go in with offers 10% below asking price.

seanturner83 11 Jun 2008, 7:04am

I'd see if you can wriggle out of some or all of the deposit if you are trying to get a cheap deal for renting, at least then if you jump ship or you are pushed you haven't lost too much - at least keep the deposit less than one month's rent.....

filtrak 11 Jun 2008, 7:07am

well, not too much really. just lock the door behind you and pop the keys through the letter box on your way out. the bank will send you a few letters after a month or two (which you won't get because you're not there) and then send a nice person round to discuss your arrears in a civilised manner. they will then start measures to repossess the property, and report your defaulting on the loan to all the credit agencies (your missed payments will already have been flagged up, ringing alarm bells with your other lenders, if any), so you won't be able to borrow money from anyone in future, apart from good mates and "independent" loan sharks. you will be blacklisted by lenders for five - or is it seven? years. apart from that it's a cinch.

filtrak 11 Jun 2008, 7:09am

oh. you're the tenant. ignore previous rambling comment. I guess the bank will want to repossess sooner or later.

supermum87 11 Jun 2008, 7:13am

As a renter you only have right to live in the place for the duration of the tenancy - usually 6 to 12 months.

If the landlord defaults on his/her mortgage the lender can, eventually, repossess and sell the property - at which point you'll be thrown out. It won't happen quickly and you'll get a couple of months notice.

I doubt you will be able to rent anywhere giving less than a month's deposit. Too many tenants vanish never paying their last month's rent and leave damages to the property.

It's also worth making very sure that your deposit has actually been registered under one of the approved schemes - insist on seeing a certificate and check that out on the relevant website. That way you should get what's yours back at the end.

Dointon 11 Jun 2008, 9:08am

Worth metioning that BM solutions and many other BTL lenders will not lend on anything HMO related. BM particularly will only lend to families that are related on one tenancy agreement.

Terrapin1 11 Jun 2008, 9:08am

Local housing allowance replaces the old housing benefit and is now set at realistic market rents- only a moron of a landlord should have a problem, as benefit tenants will also be able to get a deposit guarantee from the local authority. I had it tough all those years ago!

Stuart2010 11 Jun 2008, 9:24am

I do object to your constant derogatory comments to the housing market and the crash you are almost willing upon us. For goodness sake, things are not as bad as you are making out and as for rentals, in London there is huge demand so the buy to letters are thriving.

tommycb 11 Jun 2008, 9:44am

Stuart2010I (). Intresting information on this site
http://www.creditaction.org.uk/debt-statistics.html

mali7 11 Jun 2008, 10:28am

Sorry if you are struggling with 1.5months deposit in advance, I rather keep my valuable house empty then to let out to you. Anyway luckily there is too many with that kind of deposit wanting to rent.

RobertTresselyan 11 Jun 2008, 10:58am

Landlord Mortgage Default

You can challenge a reposession; If the house was remortgaged after you moved in, you have a "Prior interest" in the property, established in recent case law; You can delay or halt the reposession proceedings.
If you have a valid tenancy you can remain and perhaps offer to buy at a discounted rate. We did exactly that last year, securing a £50,000 discount on a £285,00 house. (We sold immediately, as we were nervous about the market)

You may also have a right to redress against the owner who would clearly be in breach of their duty of care is they are not paying the mortgage when you are paying rent, though they would need assets to pursue.

gartons 11 Jun 2008, 11:04am

No doubt someone will report this comment as being rude or vindictive but remember the old adage that the truth sometimes hurts.
I am not affected by house prices as I have paid off my mortgage but I do sympathise with first time buyers and people on low incomes who are struggling to get on the property ladder.
My only words for BTL investors are, "tough luck".
These people are amongst the chief culprits in pushing house prices to unrealistic levels and I'm sure that in most cases it was sheer greed at the prospect of making a fast buck that took them into BTL.
Well hard luck, you probably thought you were smart at the time you bought in but you forgot the old investing caveat that past results are no guide to future performance when you dipped your snouts in the trough!

RentalBoy 11 Jun 2008, 11:50am

Why does everyone in the UK get so upset when a group of people decide to and take a chance at bettering their lives. Pensions are over, savings accounts don't pay anything....so people discovered BTL investments and they went for it.

Keep up the destructive works and comments you gloom/doom sayers but remember one thing...other countries have several ways for people to better their lives apart from a JOB(Just Over Broke)situation e.g. Basketball, Baseball, Music, Movies, Businesses, Science Competitions, Writing everything from books to screen plays etc. What do we have in the UK...nothing but gloom(even the weather). I consider those who bravely went into BTLs as pioneers and enterpreneurs in a country that does not support self achievement.

You've destroyed movies in the UK, sports(except football whose highest earners are foreigners), musicians can hardly survive(most also have a full or part time job to keep the lights on), NHS practitioners and now enterpreneurs. Next stop for you guys, bankers and their bonuses. The UK needs to grow up and notice that other so called third world countries have caught up and even surpassed her with children attaining higher grades, economic wealth and development without taxing the people to a pulp and ever rising shares from their home grown companies.

There could be an economic wipe out of resources(unaffordable household bills) if we do not take heed......HE WHO HAS EARS, LET HIM HEAR.

pasoba 11 Jun 2008, 12:00pm

Hi

Having provided rental accomodation in Ireland since 1996 and in London since 2001 I bought my last property in London in 2004 - I have always seen what can only be described as extrodinary returns on the base investment made. I find it incredible that sane people were convinced to take on 100% IO mortages and subsudise tennants who are risky at the best of times. Rents for me continue to rise but as I provide mainly studios £5 extra a week for each new tennant when their 6 month AST comes to an end has not found any market resistance and innondation of available tennants in a reasonable area of London Zone 2/3. Other landlords (friends) doing the same model similarly are content with their lot and likewise dropped out of purchacing property in 2005 when the figures for rent returns simply failed to support any sustainable BTL ratios which were practiced by Landlords over the years ( rembering that 40/60 split was deemed prudent ) I moved back into engineering and now into the wood industry as I could not see any sence to remortgage to fund a financial pirament - Ok the base values of the present property portfolio have raise dramatically over the years and are faling now but having seen the effects of 1990 as a student there was no way one would take a risk knowing that "the government" would allow interest rates to go to 15% ( Ireland went to 23% ) Try to get rental cover with this type of interest rate ? Banks are clawing back at every oppertunity now but I hope that providing warm / clean accomodation at what is at affordable levels in London for 25 to 30 year old singletons or newly divorsed people that the letting market remains positive with a very good return on invested capital. That said I am emigrating and leaving my portfolio under management ( not with a high street name - there are many individual managers out there who do this type of service "hands on" - mine for example collects £25,000 just for my property tennant management and has several other landlord clients providing additional incom stream - no suits are worn or BMW's seen but service is delivered and boilers, bulbs, carpets etc, etc arranged to be serviced, cleaned etc... In all Happy Tennants, Happy Landlord ( I don't really care if the bank is happy or not - they are a service provider akin to the gas and the electric )
As for the present "panic" about house prices - I cannot understand why the media is fuelling the plight of a small percentage of the market who in reality are the people who bought in the last 3 - 5 years of the present market ( or remortgaged to fund a lifestyle which was not consumerate with their real incom levels ) Much greater travesties have been inflicted on the populace such as the pensions fiasco, taxing us to the hilt for a war, nearly doubling of the tax take from ordinary folk just trying to get buy, among some of the things perpetrated by the leaders. That said the economic slowdown is real, market correction is in full swing and who knows maybe in a year or 3 it may be time to buy again as people always need to live someplace.

KittyKAT109 11 Jun 2008, 12:30pm

In response to the question about landlords defaulting on mortgage payments, make sure you have something agreed with your agents to protect you. My friend was given a court order of reposession of less than 24 hours after her landlord defaulted and disappered, and teh agents neglected to pass on information to her. Despite spending all morning at the courts to extend the court order, she was ordered to be out by 12noon. Luckily she had understand parents and good friends who rallied around... I'm sure this is a very rare occurence however it certainly made me think twice about renting!

ascentium 11 Jun 2008, 3:11pm

I've been a landlord for 14 years now, and am not surprised that many of those who jumped in in the last few years are having problems.

One of the most destructive things ever to happen to the industry was the myth that landlording is "passive income". It's like any other service business - concentrate on areas of market demand, provide a good service, and treat your bankers as advisers who sometimes urge caution... The number of people who have, bluntly, lied to get mortgages, or entered into "creative finance" maybe helped the bubble, but certainly are the first ones to suffer. Those who battened down the hatches, concentrated on sensible business models, and most importantly, understood that landlording is a business with customers and accounts, and processes, seem to be doing well.

hakerite 11 Jun 2008, 3:47pm

Well put Ascentium and Pasoba. Hatch battening or treading water is the order of the day for me. A little quiet period is no problem after a 1700% increase in my actual investment.

Nice work if you can get it......

downaswellasup 11 Jun 2008, 4:07pm

You tell 'em Stuart2010.

Things are still rosey, I couldn't agree more. Flash Gordon will save us ... nay ... the universe.

Just one question, can you recomend anything to keep the sand out of my ears?

rustybrain 11 Jun 2008, 6:26pm

Landlords are now legally obliged to use a Deposit Protection Scheme so the tenant need not worry about losing their deposit if they are entitled to its return.

If a landlord has a desirable property in a good location there are no signs 'at the moment' of rents going down - if anything they seem to be rising in Surrey.

Not all landlords are newbies with 100% mortgages!

emptybarrel 12 Jun 2008, 11:05am

"I consider those who bravely went into BTLs as pioneers and enterpreneurs in a country that does not support self achievement. "

Giggles..are you really being serious with this comment? Get real! The reality is you bought at cheap prices and got lucky when prices and rents increased. It had nothing to do with bravery or enterpreneurial skill. You are confusing yourself with the likes of Dyson and Edison.

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