Thanks @AlbacoreA I think we are close on point without either of us laying monopoly on the defintion of 'landlording'.
I think you've completely misunderstood
I would respectively ask anyone who disagrees with this and who is a landlord to exit the market and allow good landlords, who understand what the business is about, to enter the market.
The market hasn't been allowed to work properly for 9 years, even longer as there was a rent freeze previously.there is a market failure
Not enough want to enter the market, that is the main issue the government is trying to tackle and you want people to exit.I would respectively ask anyone who disagrees with this and who is a landlord to exit the market and allow good landlords, who understand what the business is about, to enter the market.
This signals to me that when it comes to the fundamental and essential utility of housing our population, now, and for future generations, there is a market failure.
For both sides of the equation - tenants and landlords.
Is that a fair assessment?
For both sides of the equation - tenants and landlords.
Sister Sara has to be a wind u
Kinda of a bit much blaming a worldwide crisis on landlords
orchestra of taxes, planning regs, rpz rent caps, building standards factors....it is simply not attractive enough to build new homes/apartments
I'm not blaming landlords
They are your sole focus on this thread
You sound like a good landlord, someone who is providing accommodation to others who need it and they are paying you rent. You are obtaining the capital appreciation on the property also.
This sounds like a good news story. This is how landlord/tenant leases should operate. Well done!
stopping building public housing and privatisation of that. Which lead to Commoditization of housing across the world.
A prefect storm.
Primary focus for sure, they are inextricable from the issue. Here is the substance of my OP
the boomer generation implemented a short squeeze on housing......and weaponized the planning system & local government to do it.
The market hasn't been allowed to work properly for 9 years, even longer as there was a rent freeze previously.
Do landlords create demand or build property? No. If landlords vanished overnight we'd still have more demand than supply. So they are totally separate from housing crisis.
If you model an asset at 25-30 years & are capped at 2% growth, it won't get beyond any investment case.What is the obsession with achieving 'market rent'?
I do not understand. You let at a certain price in 2014 and presumably you were happy with that? That was 11yrs ago so what mortgage repayments you are liable for (if any) are, maybe 1/3 less the market rate of mortgages than they are now for the same property?
You sound like a good landlord, someone who is providing accommodation to others who need it and they are paying you rent. You are obtaining the capital appreciation on the property also.
This sounds like a good news story. This is how landlord/tenant leases should operate. Well done!
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