

To better capture net changes in the size of the PRS, we have developed an innovative approach in which we estimate both inflows and outflows. Several of these measures focus on property outflows, with offsetting inflows harder to identify, and often lagged. Together, these measures suggest sales of private rental properties over 2022 are unlikely to have exceeded 100,000. There are a range of existing measures that use varying definitions of what ‘counts’ as inflows and outflows from the private rental market.
#Sales finances how to
Even when a match can be made, we need to make choices about how to define what counts as a property movement between the private rental and owner-occupier markets, versus properties changing hands between landlords. It often requires linking different property-level data sets, and common identifiers between these data can be hard to match.

Sales of privately rented properties can be both an indicator of stress among landlords, and a trigger for stress more generally – for example through making renting more expensive, or through pushing down house prices.īut it is difficult to measure changes in the size of the private rented sector (PRS).

#Sales finances code
Money Markets Committee and UK Money Markets Code Greening our Corporate Bond Purchase Scheme (CBPS) Operational resilience of the financial sector Wholesale cash distribution in the futureįinancial market infrastructure supervision
