574% Return for
Cheltenham Buy To Let landlords since 2000
Buy to let is essentially different
from investing in stocks and shares or putting money in the Building
Society. Whilst these other investments (Building Society , Stocks
and Shares etc) are passive i.e. once the money has been
invested it you leave it alone, with buy to let, things are more
hands on, in fact it’s almost a business. One thing the landlords I
speak to say is the fact that they like buy to let because it is both
an investment as well as a business. It is this factor that attracts
many of my landlords – they are making their own
decisions rather than entrusting them to others (such as City Whiz
Kids in London playing roulette with their Pension Pot).
So if you are
investing in the Cheltenham property market, you can earn from your
investment in two ways. When a property
increases in value over time, it is known as 'capital
growth'. Capital
growth, also known as capital appreciation, this has been strong in
recent times in Cheltenham, but the value of property can go down as
well as up just like shares. Rental income is what the tenant pays
you - hopefully this will grow over time. If you divide the annual
rent into the value (or purchase price) of the property, this
is your yield, or annual return.
I
was talking to a landlord who bought a flat in the Tewkesbury Road
area of Cheltenham. He bought a very pleasant studio flat in 2000 for
£27,500. It sold again in February just gone for £67,000, a rise of
143.63% in just over 14 years – a compound annual return of 6.57%.
However, the real
returns are for those Cheltenham landlords who borrowed money to
purchase their buy to let property. They have made significantly
higher returns than those who paid 100% cash. If the landlord had
borrowed 75% of the £27,500 purchase price of the Tewkesbury Road
studio flat on an interest only 75% mortgage, he would have only
needed to invest £6,875 (as his 25% deposit... borrowing the
remaining £20,625), but his £6,875 would be worth today, £46,375
(£67,000 less £20,625 interest only mortgage)... a rise of 574.54%
- a compound
annual return of 14.61%... and I haven’t even mentioned the rent he
would have received in those 14 years!
This demonstrates how the Cheltenham
buy to let market has not only provided very strong returns for
average investors since 2000 but how it has permitted a group of
motivated buy to let Cheltenham landlords to become particularly
wealthy. In fact, if this landlord had continued to re-mortgage the
property as it went up in value, he could by our reckoning have had
an additional two or three properties (albeit with larger mortgages
but greater future potential).
As my article mentioned a few weeks
ago, more and more Cheltenham people may be giving up on owning their
own home and are instead accepting long term renting whilst buy to
let lending continues to grow from strength to strength. If you want
to know what (and would not) make a decent property to buy in
Cheltenham for buy to let, then please contact me on
neil.west@belvoir.co.uk.
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