Social Finance, supported by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, is proposing a new funding approach: the Affordable Homes Acquisition Scheme or AHAS. The core element is long-term (30-year) finance raised from institutional investors at a small premium over the gilt rate and with debt service costs profiled to better match the lifetime cash earnings from managing an affordable rent portfolio – ie cheap to start with and more expensive later.
Use of government-guaranteed debt reduces finance costs, but critically it allows debt service payments to be structured in line with projected portfolio earnings, offering a financially sustainable approach to support new affordable housing supply.
Structured as a new housing vehicle, off the balance sheets of both housing associations and government, AHAS has the potential to reverse the increased capital grant requirement, thereby offering a scalable solution to affordable rent housing provision.
“Deployed alongside current government initiatives, AHAS has the potential to stimulate the creation of new affordable homes with reduced grant at scale”
For the government, the debt is a contingent liability only and does not weigh so heavily on the national accounts as new borrowing. For housing associations that will manage the homes and own a stake in AHAS, it provides a route to expanding their affordable rent provision without overburdening their own balance sheets where retrofit and cladding rectifications are taking away growth capacity short term.
The AHAS model should be complementary to current government initiatives, notably the £12bn AHP and the £6bn Affordable Homes Guarantee Scheme. Using proportionally less grant in the subsidy mix than a typical AHP model, AHAS could help make grant go further. Social Finance estimates that the level of capital grant required can be reduced by up to 35% points relative to the AHP.
An initial pilot of £500m is proposed that could support 2,500 to 3,000 new affordable rent homes. Thereafter, the scheme could scale to £2bn annually, helping to increase the delivery of homes for affordable rent by 25% relative to current figures. Deployed alongside current government initiatives, AHAS has the potential to stimulate the creation of new affordable homes with reduced grant at scale.
Will Damazer, associate director, Social Finance

