Property News

Low Supply Means Rents Set To Rise

Low Supply Means Rents Set To Rise

Low supply has kept rental growth high – and it’s unlikely to slow any time soon.

Knight Frank says it expects stock levels to be particularly squeezed over the summer as high demand from corporate tenants and students exceeds available supply.

The firm has revised its rental forecasts for Prime Central and Prime Outer London in 2022 and now expect rental value growth of 11 per cent in PCL and nine per cent in POL, up from eight and five per cent respectively.

The agency’s residential research guru Tom Bill says: “The distortive effect of low supply has also kept rental value growth high. A sharper slowdown in the sales market would have boosted supply and increased downwards pressure on rents as owners let out property that failed to sell for the asking price.”

On the sales side Knight Frank is now predicting that price growth will end the year in high- rather than mid-single digits.

Homes Selling Within Two Weeks Of Hitting The Market

Homes are selling at such a pace due to supply and demand imbalance.

Stock shortages are seeing one in 10 homes get snapped up within 14 days of entering the market, although in some areas this climbs to as high as one in five, the latest data analysis by estate agent comparison site GetAgent.co.uk has revealed.

GetAgent analysed the level of new properties hitting the market and what proportion of these were being sold subject to contract (SSTC) within just two weeks as UK homebuyers continue to battle it out for what limited stock is available.

It currently takes the average UK homeseller 97 days from the point they first list their home for sale until they find a buyer and the property is marked as SSTC. However, the latest analysis by GetAgent shows that across the UK, 11% of all homes to be listed for sale are accepting offers and being marked SSTC within just two weeks.

Regionally, Scotland is currently home to the hottest market where the proportion of new homes sold within 14 days is as high as 18%. In the South West, 13% of properties are being snapped up within two weeks, while in Wales, the West Midlands, and East of England, the percentage is 12%.

London is home to the slowest market in this respect, with just 7% of all homes sold within two weeks.

At city level, Edinburgh (23%) and Glasgow (19%) see the highest proportion of for-sale stock selling within two weeks of being listed for sale. Bristol also ranks within the top three at 16%, while Portsmouth and Birmingham are also among some of the most likely to see a home sell almost immediately.

Only Belfast ranks lower than the City of London, where not a single home currently listed for sale on the market has sold within two weeks of first being put up for sale.

“Since interest rates have begun to climb, the nation’s property prophets have been out in force to once again call the demise of the UK property market. However, we’re simply not seeing this on the ground,” Colby Short, co-founder and chief executive of GetAgent.co.uk, commented.

“While there has certainly been a return to normality where mortgage approval levels and the rate of house price growth is concerned, buyer demand remains extremely high and property values are yet to show any signs of decline.

“Of course, this doesn’t make the protracted process between accepting an offer and completing on a sale any quicker, but it does cut a considerable amount of time from the overall selling timeline.”