‘It was a mistake’: The city that fell into a corporate landlord trap

Chris Anders Berlin
Renter Chris Anders is a spokeperson for 'Deutsche Wohnen & Co Enteignen', a group campaigning for privately-owned homes to be put back into social ownership - Craig Stennett

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Mortgage arrears are piling up fast for Britain’s private landlords, having climbed 174pc over the past year.

Despite London’s average rent tipping over £1,000, those letting a couple of mortgaged properties can no longer make the numbers work.

With a quarter of landlords planning to sell up over the next year, according to insurer Simply Business – and many having already exited their portfolios – demand for rental properties is only continuing to rise.

One group is trying to cash in on the opportunity. Household names such as Lloyds Banking Group and John Lewis have published their plans to become “corporate landlords”.

In 2021, Lloyds launched Citra Living – a subsidiary which bought 604 new homes for £168m from Barratt earlier this year.

John Lewis has also said it wants to build 10,000 new homes in and around London as part of efforts to make 40pc of its profits from outside the retail sector by 2030.

But as Berliners will tell you, landlords with deep pockets and boards of investors aren’t necessarily the antidote to a saturated rental market.

In fact, Berliners rue the day their city decided to sell hundreds of thousands of homes to private equity-backed “corporate” landlords to make a quick buck.

The city’s largest renter association has since said that while individual landlords typically raise rents by around 20pc, corporate ones will raise them by as much as 50pc all the while their residents, laden with maintenance issues, are left to feel like numbers on a spreadsheet.

Now, Berlin state officials are struggling to return the properties back to social ownership.

Berlin flats
Renters make up 85pc of all residents in Berlin - Craig Stennett

Chris Anders, 35, has lived in a Deutsche Wohnen-owned apartment in Neuk?lln for four years, and currently pays around €800-a-month – or £700 – for it.

“Their shareholders have nothing to do with the provision of my home. And yet, hundreds of euros of my rent goes straight into their pockets each month,” he explains.

Other corporate landlords with a stronghold in Berlin include Vonovia – Deutsche Wohnen’s new owner – as well as Adler, Heimstaden, Grand City Properties and Covivio.

Their shareholders benefit from around 41 cents of every euro tenants pay in rent on average, according to the research arm of consumer lobby group Finanzwende.

This, among other discoveries, is why Mr Anders became a member of “Deutsche Wohnen & Co Enteignen” (“Expropriate Deutsche Wohnen & Co”) – a campaign group born out of Kreuzberg’s underworld to topple Berlin’s corporate landlords for good.

Two years after gaining a majority in a referendum to put 250,000 privately-owned homes back into social ownership, renters are still campaigning.