Because of the way the RPZ regime was introduced, many landlords find that they can now achieve a gross yield of less than 6% on their property. That's often the equivalent of a net, after-tax, yield of around 2%.
I do find some of this stuff confusing. May I ask how the yield is calculated?
For sure, and a bit more besides. Social justice, security and general welfare of the people might be factors also.
Who are they selling too? Most likely other landlords or FTB's or people trading up? Either way or or, the property remains in circulation and is available for occupancy.
You have only picked part of my post and used it to your context. If a rented property is purchased by an owner occupier then the no of bed spaces available in the rental market has reduced.
Eh, no.So the biggest culprit for turning away would be investors would be rising house prices?
And the biggest driver of landlords selling up is the capital gains to be realised with house prices the way they are.
That said, given the volume of trade on daft.ie I dont think it unreasonable to assume that it is not too far off the mark.
Eh, no.
The biggest "culprits" are unfair taxation and overbearing regulation.
Curious then that in Q4, Daft reported rents across the Dublin regions ranging from €1,646 (north County Dublin) to €2,110 (south City Centre) while the RTB stated at the time that average Dublin rents were €1,620.
So which is more accurate than the other?
If Daft.ie is out of kilter with what is reality then so be it. Im only making an assumption that it is a reliable source primarily on the level of media attention afforded to it.
Im happy to accept that it is not an accurate measurement if that can be shown to be the case.
I dont see how "unfair taxation" and overbearing regulation leads to reducing yields. If I set my rent at €1,000pm my tax due on that, whether fair or unfair, is set. If government sets a RPZ limit of 4% then I can increase rent in two years time to €1040pm.
How is my yield reduced?
The RTB stats cover all tenancies reported, including periodic re-registrations, but they don't publish enough data to see what volumes they're basing their data on but given that they do include data from long-term tenancies, it should be the better data.
The Daft data only covers properties advertised on their platform over the period, so misses out a large section of the market, and hey, if you're renting a property at a significant discount to the market rate, you're not likely to want to move, right?
If (controlled rent)<(market rent) then mechanically the yield is lower than it would be absent rent controls. It's just arithmetic.
There are landlords who found tenants in 2012/3 when market rents were low, and kept them below-market when the real increases in market rents happened in 2014-16.
Some of these landlords are at 30%-40% odd below market rent at this point. It's a long time before they get anywhere near market rent at 4% a year.
It doesn't seem right to punish these landlords for being fair with sitting tenants.
Of these 12, I would guess that only 1 advert (priced at €1388/month) is reflecting a rent which is abiding by the 4% RPZ rules.
If im a tenant and I agree a rent of €1000 a month, then I have a reasonable expectation that rent increases will be in line with increases in my income or increases due to interest rate hikes.
Again, why? The landlord will try to get the highest rent they can. Conversely the tenant will try to get the lowest rent they can.So if a landlord is prepared to ask rent at €x at point a then as part of long-term strategy (with a long-term tenant) they should be prepared to ask rents with increases in-line with income and/or increases in line with expenses rising, such as interest rates.
But they weren't "being fair". They made a commercial decision to lower rents to attract and keep tenants. They dropped rents to a level they were, as part of their long-term strategy, happy to charge in order to attract a tenant.
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