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Jenny Pannell Charlotte Cook Independent Consultant Partner
PRS – The missing option Workshop For Housing LIN Conference 18 February 2014 Jenny Pannell Charlotte Cook Independent Consultant Partner
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Why “The Missing Option”?
Prevailing mindset on tenure, older people and housing is often: rental options = social housing market options = home ownership + perhaps some shared equity/ shared ownership options for ‘in-betweeners’ So the missing option is often private/ market rent
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Definitions: Market/Private Rent
All housing types: houses, flats, bungalows, retirement housing Available to anyone who can afford it No allocation process as for social/ ‘affordable’ rent (i.e. based on assessed housing/ support/ care needs)
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Definitions: Specialist Housing
Groups of dwellings: small schemes to large retirement villages Age-restricted: 55/ 60/ 65+ Special design features May have support/ care/ facilities available
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Definitions: Mainstream Housing
No age restriction May have special design features (e.g. Lifetime Homes) Or be property type/ location popular with older people (e.g. bungalows, seaside)
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Demand: Overall Under-researched area: often PRS not mentioned
Some evidence of increasing demand, including from owner-occupiers Push factors include divorce/ relationship breakdown and financial issues
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Demand: Specialist Retirement/Extra Care Housing
Girlings and 4 extra-care providers report demand, including from better-off older people paying higher rents Demos research found nearly 60% of survey respondents (aged 60+) interested in moving 25% of these were interested in purchase; 25% interested in renting a retirement apartment on an assured (lifetime) tenancy
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Supply: Mainstream PRS Housing
Mostly from small buy-to-let landlords, ASTs (insecure 6-month lets) Still some poor quality New provision by housing associations and private companies (e.g. Govt Build to Rent): targeted at younger age groups (“young professionals”) and London/SE
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Supply: Specialist Retirement/Extra Care Housing
Girlings (2,500 properties, mainly retirement housing) Places for People (200+ retirement properties managed by Girlings) individuals (often ‘reluctant’ landlords - e.g. on inheritance if can’t sell) a few charities and housing associations (extra care/village models) e.g. Abbeyfield, Belong (NW), Jewish Care and St Monica Trust (SW) a few private providers with PRS options (some inclusive deals e.g. 3 meals a day; not always with tenancies)
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Barriers and Overcoming Them Providers (1)
Local Authorities Secure tenancies Localism Act 2011 Influence over planners
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Providers (2) Housing Associations ASTs Charitable objectives
SPV set up
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Providers (3) Private Companies Funding structure Long term investment
Are they convinced?
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Providers (4) Other Charitable Organisations Is PRS charitable?
“its all relative”
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Finance (1) Need for a successful business model
Lots of small scale “buy to let” Broaden horizons?
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Finance (2) Buy up existing portfolios Create new ones?
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Finance (3) Borrowing capabilities? Sufficient stock?
Income risk (nominations, marketing, evidenced demand)
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Finance (4) Rent regulation Benefits Macro economy
Savings and interest rates
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Development (1) Planning policy Nominations CIL Affordable housing %
Rent levels
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Development (2) Quality of the product Units sizes
On site services/facilities
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Development (3) Investor developer or Develop and out
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Experience (1) Matching the product to the audience Management levels
gold silver bronze Management practices
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Experience (2) Changing the way we think:
ageing population is not a bad thing being a tenant is not a bad thing keeping tenants happy means keeping them in occupation and paying their rent
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Barriers and Overcoming Them: From the Older Person’s Perspective
Need to manage uncertainty about availability, affordability, quality: now and into the future Availability: suitable PRS housing very limited; not on the agenda for most older people, their family/friends, nor advice agencies or providers
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Barriers and Overcoming Them: From the Older Person’s Perspective
Affordability: more likely to be affordable for older people with higher incomes/ significant capital; may be less affordable for those reliant on benefits (LHA issues); higher HB for specialist market-rent housing though problematic (‘exempt accommodation’ issues)
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Barriers and Overcoming Them: From the Older Person’s Perspective
Security of tenure: most older people unlikely to want to move into PRS without longer or lifetime tenancies except those using it as short-term gap-filler Quality of stock and management: PRS still suffers from poor reputation Issues with absentee or constantly changing landlords need for more high-quality well-managed PRS housing for older people
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Thank You Solicitors and Parliamentary Agents Minerva House
Charlotte Cook Partner Jenny Pannell Independent Consultant and LIN PRS Briefings co-author Imogen Blood Imogen Blood Associates Solicitors and Parliamentary Agents Minerva House 5 Montague Close London SE1 9BB DX London Bridge 6 T F
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