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Yield Compression

The rate of growth is a combination of rental and capital growth. Although capital growth is often rental-dependent, a higher price may be obtainable from an owner-occupier rather than an investor or developer. Also, because a difference can exist between the value of a property and a proposition, investment sentiment can affect growth.

A recent sentiment, that came into being in 1999 or thereabouts, is "yield compression" - essentially a gamble on interest rates. For example, a shop investment let at £20,000 a year and priced at £200,000 (yield 10%) when mortgage interest is 5% might be thought a bargain, so the price goes up to reflect the difference between the return and cost of borrowing. Nowadays, we have what I call 'confidence compression'  where buyers are banking on capital growth as the gap narrows between the cost of borrowing and the investment yield. 
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