In
2015 the British government announced major tax reforms for individual
landlords that will be in full effect in tax year 2020/21, being
introduced gradually after April 2017. The new reforms and regulations
have received much media attention as there has been widespread belief
that they were sufficiently skewed against landlords that they could
signal the end of the Buy-To-Let (BTL) investment era in the UK.
Research by Anthony Constantinou and Norman Fenton of Queen Mary University of London, has now been published
that provides the first comprehensive evaluation of the impact of the
reforms on the London BTL property market. The results use a novel model
(based on revolutionary new work in an AI method called Bayesian networks)
that captures multiple uncertainties and allows investors to assess the
impact of various factors of interest on their BTL investment, such as
changes in interest rates, capital and rental growth. Additionally, the
model allows for portfolio risk management through intervention between
time steps, such as the effects of different scenarios of re-mortgaging.
The
results show that, over a 10-year period, the overall
return-on-investment (ROI) will be reduced under the new tax measures,
but that the ROI remains good assuming a common BTL London profile.
However, there are major differences depending on the investor strategy.
For example, for risk-averse investors who choose not to expand their
portfolio, the reforms are expected to have only a marginal negative
impact, with the overall ROI reducing from 301% under the old
regulations to 290% under the new (-3.7%), and this loss comes
exclusively from a decrease in net profits from rental income (-32.2%).
However, the impact on risk-seeking investors who aim to expand their
property portfolio through leveraging is much more significant, since
the new tax reforms are projected to decrease ROI from 941% to 590%
(-37.3%), over the same 10-year period.
The impact on
net profits also poses substantial risks for loss-making returns
excluding capital gains, especially in the case of rising interest
rates. While this makes it less desirable or even non-viable for some to
continue being a landlord, based on the current status of all factors
taken into consideration for simulation, investment prospects are still
likely to remain good within a reasonable range of interest rate and
capital growth rate variations. Further, the results also indicate that
the recent trend of property prices in London increasing faster than
rents will not continue for much longer; either capital growth rates
will have to decrease, rental growth rates will have to increase, or we
shall observe a combination of the two events.
The full paper (with open access link):
Constantinou, A. C., & Fenton, N. (2017). The
future of the London Buy-To-Let property market: Simulation with
temporal Bayesian Networks. PLoS ONE, 12(6): e0179297, https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0179297
The
research was supported in part by the European Research Council (ERC)
through the research project, ERC-2013-AdG339182-BAYES_KNOWLEDGE, while
Agena Ltd provided software support.