
Edinburgh Lettings 0131 558 3000 Edinburgh Sales 0131 652 7313 Glasgow 0141 333 1345
15/07/2009
At his New Town business, DJ Alexander, the slowing of the sales market and the subsequent hike in rentals has been a godsend.
On one hand, business at his eponymous property rental firm is booming – but on a personal level, the downturn has spelled something of a disaster because of his involvement in the collapsed investment fund, Heritors Residential Property.
Alexander has upped the number of properties on its books by 600 to 5,000 – and with a 15 per cent commission on a fully managed property, the figures are good. He is expecting a 15 per cent rise in turnover to £45 million for the year to August.
He explains: “What has been difficult for us is that things have changed dramatically in the market.
“In 26 of the 27 years I’ve been in property, it has been pretty straightforward to predict that the market will rise. That is no longer the case.”
He adds: “The residential lettings market has been fantastic. No matter what happens economically, people always need a place to live. They have babies, get married, separate – their situations change and they need to move accordingly.
“The difference now is that people are reluctant to buy or sell because of the market, so they are renting more.”
And they are renting longer. Alexander’s figures show that the average lease was 11 months at the end of last year – now it is 18 months.
He recalls that at the start of the downturn, last year, demand was far exceeding supply: “Then, all of a sudden, it went full circle,” he reflects. “People wanted to move and couldn’t sell, so decided to rent out their properties instead – and even builders started to rent out some new build properties because they couldn’t sell.
“Then there was an oversupply in the market. We have come through that now in that there is a healthy demand, and by God there’s a healthy supply too.”
Alexander is known to have personally bought a number of properties, as well as his “significant” investment in Heritor’s.
He admits: “I had put my hard-earned money into it – it was basically money I expected to retire on. Now I’ll have to work for an extra ten, maybe 15 years. It was horrible, but these things happen. You just have to get on with it.
“I am very fortunate in that my main core business has been fantastic. I had a good business going into the recession and I expect to have an even better business coming out.”
There is a hint of wistfulness in his voice as he muses: “The majority of people’s wealth in the UK in recent years has been on the back of property. I don’t think it will ever go back to the halcyon days.
“People got carried away, wanting bigger cars, bigger houses and so on. I think when something happens, you’ve just got to adjust your lifestyle and start appreciating things you took for granted.”
As for Heritors, although he won’t be drawn on details of his investment, the property entrepreneur admits the cash he put in was in seven figures.
But Alexander is now dusting himself down and throwing all of his energy into developing his rental business.The latest stats show that the firm let a total of 133 properties in June – around 15 per cent higher, year-on-year. And his two UK offices in Glasgow and Edinburgh – DJ Alexander also boasts a small but growing operation in Dubai – have taken on a “handful” of extra staff in the past year, taking the total headcount to 49.
DJ Alexander, which generates some 90 per cent of its income through property rental, added a sales business to its portfolio 12 years ago. Income from that side of the business is 40 per cent lower in the current year, but Alexander is not too worried.
“It is a small proportion of our business,” he explains, adding that the division sells around 20 properties a month.
In fact, the division was set up initially to service clients who had been renting out properties but then decided they wanted to sell.
“People were asking us for recommendations of where they should go,” recalls Alexander. “And it seemed ridiculous not to set up our own sales side – as otherwise we were just watching the business go elsewhere.”
And watching business go elsewhere is not something that appeals to Alexander.
Conserve your cash – and your skills
David Alexander gives his tips on surviving a downturn.
• Cash is king in any downturn.
Do not spend money unless it’s crucial to your business and budget for much harder times.
In my opinion, this recession has not reached its bottom. If you budget for much harder times and it doesn’t happen, then you will be in a good position – but if it does, then you will be able to survive it.
• Try to tweak, improve or finesse your service.
You have to remember that your clients will be feeling the recession too.
Anything you can do to improve the service you’re giving people will help – and make people more likely to bring you return business.
• Look after your key staff.
You will need them to work harder and longer and you need people to be motivated and work together.
Also, don’t be afraid to part company with poor performing staff. When things are good, you may be able to carry people who are not pulling their weight, but in a downturn, you cannot do that. It is very difficult, but you have to make sure that everyone is performing.
YOUNG STARTER
DAVID Alexander’s first property venture was an estate agency which he opened in Leith in 1982 when he was only 21.
Initially focusing on sales, he decided to start a letting operation at the insistence of one customer and later closed down the sales side of the business.
In 1989, he moved his operation to Edinburgh city centre, opened an office in Glasgow in 1997 and, in 2007, launched a small operation in Dubai.
THE SCOTSMAN, 15 July 2009
MY DECADE
28/12/2009
A Glasgow townhouse at £1.5 million
13/12/2009
Mortgage curbs have their upside
10/12/2009
A tie does more than merely save your neck in a downturn
20/11/2009
Is it worth it?
15/11/2009
Top ten: Forget about property prices and home in on the rental income
07/11/2009
Renting is as good a measure of economic confidence as buying
24/10/2009
Stair way to heaven
23/10/2009
Residential lettings give clue to wider economic performance
15/10/2009
Back to the Future
13/10/2009
Another of our properties is Sunday Times 'Rental of the week'
27/09/2009
How first time buyers can lick stamp duty
22/09/2009
Surge in residential lets despite fewer executive postings to cities
13/09/2009
Where did it all go wrong?
13/08/2009
Rents drive housing investment more than capital gain
26/07/2009
Renting a home can be cheaper than you think
16/07/2009
Coping with the credit crunch
15/07/2009
Why there are still good reasons to invest in residential property
01/07/2009
Labour of love
28/06/2009
Yield is now the focus for buy-to-let investors
20/06/2009
High-flying executives push up rental prices for city flats
19/06/2009
One of our properties named Sunday Times ‘Rental of the week’
07/06/2009
A flat-tastic prospect
05/06/2009
Scotsman property editor gives star treatment to one of our homes for sale
04/06/2009
Rise in new-build home sales offers glimmer of hope to battered industry
31/05/2009
Capital tips to help you reduce tax expenses
30/05/2009
Sunday Herald thanks D J Alexander
17/05/2009
Why renting second home is best way to save cash – and face
14/05/2009
A new code for letting agents
10/05/2009
Sharp fall in corporate residential property rentals as firms suffer
19/04/2009
Misery of the 'two-mortgage' trap
16/04/2009
Buyers return but Scottish housing market still tight
15/04/2009
Homing in on mortgage needs
07/04/2009
Like two old-fashioned fairground favourites, the property market continues to be scary
01/04/2009
Rise of the surprise landlord
29/03/2009
Ask the experts
22/03/2009
Energy ratings get a green light
21/03/2009
EXPERT RECOMMENDS
11/03/2009
Renting is a capital idea
06/03/2009
EXPERT RECOMMENDS
04/03/2009
BPF calls for a radical shift to rentals
02/02/2009
Gloom stalks the housing market but ‘hockey stick’ revival is on the cards
29/01/2009
More for your money
29/01/2009
House prices 'won't recover until 2013'
18/01/2009
Scotland's engine room may be on the brink of seizing up
10/01/2009