Showing posts with label UK housing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UK housing. Show all posts

Saturday 6 November 2010

Millions of UK home owners face restricted lending

Millions of home owners face restricted lending

More than 5m home owners will become “mortgage prisoners” or be forced to move to a cheaper area if new mortgage rules are introduced, lenders have warned.

By Myra Butterworth, Personal Finance Correspondent
Published: 4:37PM GMT 04 Nov 2010
95 Comments

The Council of Mortgage Lenders unveiled new figures yesterday suggesting tough new lending restrictions will lead to 2.2 million existing home owners being refused a new mortgage. These so-called “mortgage prisoners” would be trapped in their homes, unable to remortgage or move.

A further 3.4 million home owners would be able to obtain a new mortgage, but they would be offered less than the amount they would have been able to borrow previously, forcing them to move to a cheaper property.

The strict new rules on how much a person can borrow are expected to be introduced next year by the City regulator, the Financial Services Authority. They evolved after banks were accused of giving large loans to borrowers who could not afford them.

Under then FSA’s proposals, the amount a person could borrow would be restricted by taking into account future rises in interest rates and whether they could afford their monthly payments based on a repayment mortgage rather than an interest-only deal.

But the CML said the FSA had “got it wrong” as the rules would actually end up hurting more borrowers than they helped.

Speaking in London at the publication of the research, Michael Coogan, the director general of the CML, described the new rules as “an overreaction to past problems”.

He said: “The FSA is not prepared to change its basic approach on income verification and affordability. This will have market consequences – we think they are intended, and they would seriously undermine the mortgage market in the future.”

Research released by the CML earlier this week showed 45 per cent of people taking out a mortgage this year would have been hit by the FSA’s new rules if they were already in force.

It comes as economists warned that housing market data had already become “increasingly negative”.

Paul Diggle, a property economist at Capital Economics said: “The stock of unsold properties on the market expanded once again and mortgage market activity remains extremely depressed.

“Most of the house price indices are pointing to a weakening house price trend. With the economic recovery set to lose momentum, we expect housing market activity and house prices to fall further next year.

Falling house prices raise the prospect of increasing numbers of home owners falling into negative equity, where their mortgage is greater than the value of their home.

A separate report by ratings agency Standard & Poor’s disclosed that more than one in 10 mortgages in the North West were in negative equity at the end of June.

The FSA said the new rules were aimed at replacing risky lending and unaffordable borrowing with “common sense standards”.


It said home owners were benefiting from historically low interest rates, and that 46 per cent of households had little or no money left after their mortgage and other bills were deducted from their income.

A spokesman for the FSA said: “Even a modest rise in interest rates could lead to a significant increase in the number of families suffering financial distress. This is why it is imperative that we ensure lenders act responsibly and do not return to irresponsible practices, in order to protect consumers from taking on mortgages they cannot afford and potentially losing their homes.”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/8110719/Millions-of-home-owners-face-restricted-lending.html

Saturday 9 October 2010

What next for UK house prices?

What next for house prices?
Prices fell by a record amount in August, prompting fears of a crash.

By Kara Gammell
Published: 5:31PM BST 08 Oct 2010


Just when many families were digesting the news that they were to lose child benefit, have to work longer and pay more into their pensions, they were delivered the bombshell that house prices fell by a record amount.

Last month, more than £6,000 was wiped off the value of the average property as house prices dropped from £168,124 in August to £162,092, the biggest fall since 1983. A rise in the supply of property and a drop in demand fuelled by economic uncertainty pushed prices down 3.6pc.


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So what next? Is this the start of a sustained fall in house prices? Here's what the housing experts have to say.

Martin Gahbauer, chief economist, Nationwide
"Although the Halifax index showed a large drop in September, the less volatile three-month on three-month measure showed a drop of 0.9pc, the same as in the Nationwide index. This compares with three-month on three-month declines of more than 5pc in the deepest phase of the 2008 downturn in both indices. As such, the current declines are still on the modest side. None the less, market conditions have clearly loosened as more sellers have marketed their properties and buyer demand has remained weak. This may exert additional downward pressure on house prices in coming months. At this stage there is limited evidence of widespread distressed selling. Without more of this, price declines of the magnitude in 2008 are unlikely."

Paul Diggle, property economist, Capital Economics
"The hefty drop in the Halifax measure of house prices adds weight to the view that house price weakness is far from over. To our minds, weak housing-market activity indicators mean that further falls in house prices are likely. There is no doubt that this will reduce the amount of equity in people's homes, making it even harder to remortgage."

Martin Ellis, housing economist, Halifax
"Last year, a shortage of properties for sale contributed to an imbalance between supply and demand, a key factor in pushing up house prices. More recently, more properties have come on to the market and reduced this imbalance. Plus, renewed uncertainty about the economy and jobs has caused consumer confidence to falter, dampening demand for home purchases. The factors have been exerting downward pressure on prices.

"In addition, volatility of the month-on-month measure has increased due to low transaction levels across the market; to get the best view of the underlying trend we should look to the quarterly figure – which shows a 0.9pc decrease.

"It is far too early to suggest that this is the beginning of sustained falls. House prices in the third quarter of 2010 were 0.9pc lower than in the second quarter of 2010. The rate of decline is slower than 2008, when it was consistently in excess of minus 5pc and minus 6pc throughout the second half of the year.''

Howard Archer, chief UK and European economist, Global Insight
"While a drop in house prices always seemed probable in September, after Halifax had reported price rises in August and July that conflicted with other surveys, a plunge of 3.6pc month-on-month was off everybody's radar.

"It is important to put the data into perspective. The Halifax data highlights how volatile housing market data can be on a month-to-month basis and from survey to survey. The 3.6pc plunge reported by the Halifax is partly a correction to the rises reported in August and July, which conflicted with other data and surveys.''

PHILIP SHAW, ECONOMIST, INVESTEC SECURITIES
"It is difficult to know how literally to take the Halifax number – it implies that the housing market has fallen off a cliff. Taking September's figure on its own implies that house prices are now 0.7pc below those a year ago. By contrast, the Nationwide estimates house prices are 3pc above 12 months ago.

"If it is right, one hopes that lower prices will help to attract first-time buyers. This would help to stimulate not just housing activity, but spending in the economy.

"The housing market is very nervous right now, but we will get further clues from the RICS survey this week. Don't forget that the market recovered abruptly in spring last year."

SIMON RUBINSOHN, CHIEF ECONOMIST, ROYAL INSTITUTION OF CHARTERED SURVEYORS
"We expect prices to slip a little further over the coming months, but believe the risk of large house price falls is relatively limited. Key RICS lead indicators measuring the gap between demand and supply suggest the gap is beginning to narrow, which points to a more stable picture for early 2011."


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/borrowing/mortgages/8051488/What-next-for-house-prices.html

Thursday 12 August 2010

UK: It's good news that house prices are falling

Low interest rates are the key for first-time buyers and struggling home-owners, says Tracy Corrigan.

Falling prices will be good for the economy
Falling prices will be good for the economy Photo: Alamy
Oh dear, oh dear – house prices are falling again. According to a survey of chartered surveyors, the housing market weakened in July for the first time in a year, and Lloyds HBOS now expects prices to be flat this year.
But is this really such bad news? First of all, the recent weakness follows a surprisingly strong recovery in the second half of last year. As the RICS housing market survey noted, last year's firmer prices were the result, at least in part, of a dearth of supply. When prices improved and the hated Home Information Packs were scrapped by the new Government, more sellers put their properties up for sale… and, lo and behold, prices weakened a bit. Such ebbs and flows are typical of the erratic and seasonal UK property market, which is why it doesn't make sense to worry too much about these short-term movements.
And in fact, if one looks beyond the monthly gyrations, what surprises me about the housing market is not how far it has fallen, but how well it has held up, following the financial crisis. According to Halifax data, house prices dropped 23 per cent from their peak in August 2007 to the recent trough in April 2009, but following last year's second-half recovery, are now just 16 per cent below what were widely acknowledged to be ludicrously inflated levels.
Furthermore, this necessary correction in house prices has been achieved without the pain of widespread arrears and defaults suffered in the 1990s. That is because, thanks to low interest rates, most borrowers have been able to continue to service the interest on their mortgages and even to pay down their debt. It is true that, compared with the bank rate of 0.5 per cent, mortgage rates don't look particularly cheap these days, due to the expanding margins charged by banks. Nevertheless, mortgage rates are low by historical standards, allowing most borrowers to hang on, even in shakier areas of the market such as buy-to-let.
But, some economists warn, the weakness in the housing market is a worrying symptom that confidence in the economy is faltering. Well, up to a point. It is true that people are nervous about taking on new or bigger mortgages at a time when the economy remains weak and their jobs may not be secure. But I can't seem to persuade myself that this is a bad thing. Of course, it would be better all round if the economic future looked dazzling, but since it doesn't, surely it's a rather good sign that consumers are no longer rushing to borrow money they may not be able to repay. This was, after all, one of the root causes of the current economic malaise.
The Bank of England's Inflation Report today is expected to show that the economic outlook remains grim. This means that even if there are mounting inflationary pressures, they are likely to be short-lived. But if the continuing weakness of the economy stops any concerted property market rally in its tracks, it also makes it much less likely that interest rates will rise sharply any time soon, despite worries about inflation; and continuing low interest rates are vital to forestall a sharp downturn in house prices.
There may, then, be a period of flat or slightly weaker house prices. This is surely preferable to a sharp rally. Since the credit crunch, banks have tightened their mortgage-lending criteria, mainly by requiring bigger deposits and cracking down on self-certification mortgages. The Government is imposing tighter rules in these areas to prevent a return to previous patterns of behaviour once recent lessons are forgotten. If, in these circumstances, house prices were to rise significantly, it would become even more difficult for first-time buyers to enter the market. Inevitably, that would mean, in due course, that the new bubble would burst.
In fact, mortgage affordability has already improved as a result of lower prices. Repayments as a percentage of earnings fell to 30 per cent in the second quarter of this year, down from 48 per cent in August 2007, but still some way from 25 per cent at the end of the last decade.
It is to be hoped that the UK property market will become more stable, but if this doesn't happen, the next best thing is to pretend that it has. Unless you are in the uncomfortable position of being a first-time buyer or a forced seller, price fluctuations really don't matter all that much. In the long-term, prices tend to go up, because Britons like to own their own homes and we live in a small island with tight building restrictions.
Neither the current Government's plans to shift planning powers to local communities nor any other policy change is likely to alter this state of affairs fundamentally. I bought my first property just before the peak of the housing market in 1988, yet it is undoubtedly the best financial decision I ever made. When I sold it 12 years later, it had more than doubled in value. The value of the house I now own – and love – has fallen quite a bit in the past couple of years, I imagine, but since I'm planning to live in it for at least another 20, this doesn't worry me either.
The problem with the British housing market is not that we all aspire to own property. That is perfectly sensible. The problem is that we sometimes forget why we want to own our own homes

Monday 19 July 2010

UK: Are house prices set to fall again?

Are house prices set to fall again?

Hearts would have skipped a beat last week on reports that by 2015 there is a good chance that homes will be worth less than they were in 2007.

Published: 3:40PM BST 16 Jul 2010

Graph of house prices
Are house prices set to fall again?


PricewaterhouseCoopers said there was a 70pc chance that British house prices would be below peak 2007 levels in 2015 in real terms, despite a continued expected recovery in prices in cash terms – in other words any rise in property prices won't keep pace with inflation.

Even in 2020, after five years of predicted relatively steady growth, the accountants warned there is a 50pc chance that "real" house prices would be below 2007 levels.

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John Hawksworth, head of macroeconomics at PwC, said: "The possibility of a renewed fall in house prices over the next few years cannot be ruled out as mortgage interest rates start to rise again."

And it all seemed to be going well. The price falls that followed the credit crisis appeared to have bottomed, with prices steadily rising over the past year or so. The stamp duty holiday for homes priced under £250,000 has played its part in the recovery.

But the mood has changed. According to Halifax, average house prices have fallen in each of the past three months. Last week, the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) added to the woe by revealing that sellers are outnumbering buyers. This is the reverse of last year, when a shortage of sellers helped kick-start a the recovery of the market.

If sellers continue to outnumber buyers there is a strong likelihood that prices, already slipping, will fall further. The RICS survey said that 27pc more chartered surveyors reported a rise rather than a fall in people putting their houses on the market, up from 22pc in May and the highest reading since May 2007 – a few months before the market crashed.

But what do other economists and property experts think? We spoke to a dozen analysts; half expect house prices to be flat over the year, with many reluctant to predict too far ahead. Three expect prices to be up over the calendar year (but flat from here on in) and three expect prices to fall by between 2pc and 6pc.

Staying flat does not mean these experts are not expecting a fall. Prices have climbed 6pc since January, which means that when experts say they expect prices to stay flat over the year, they are actually saying that prices will fall from here back to where they were in January.

Howard Archer at IHS Global Insight said: "House prices are likely to be erratic over the coming months and will probably be only flat over the rest of 2010. It is hard at this stage to be optimistic about prices in 2011, as the fiscal squeeze will kick in, which will hit people's pockets and lead to job losses in the public sector."

House price forecasts are headline grabbers – but forecasters do get it wrong. For example, in the autumn 1990 an economic adviser at Abbey said: "We anticipate a modest recovery next year, or at least a positive growth in house prices.'' Prices went on to fall in four of the next five years.

In 2004, many experts were forecasting a property crash, claiming house prices had risen to unsustainable levels. But prices rose by 15pc in 2005, almost twice the annual average of the previous 20 years.

At the start of 2009, long-time property bear Roger Bootle, from Capital Economics, predicted that house prices would fall by a further 20pc, leaving them about 35pc below their peak – but average prices rose by 5.9pc, according to the Nationwide House Price Index.

Yet not one of the dozen experts we contacted this week believes that prices will rise during the second half of the year, with unemployment set to rise once public sector spending cuts get into full swing.

For many would-be sellers, it seems a bigger gamble to hold off in the hope that the market will continue to improve, than to sell now given the recovery in house prices and an improvement in the mortgage market.
And for those looking to remortgage, now could be the optimum time. The mortgage market is recovering from the credit crunch. Fixed rates have been falling (they are now close to seven-year lows) and lenders have been relaxing criteria so even those with a 5pc deposit can now get a loan.

But new proposed affordability tests could make it harder for people to get the size of mortgage they expect, while this month the Bank of England warned mortgages would be harder to obtain in the next three months amid fears of a "deterioration in the economic outlook".

In short, this could be as healthy as the housing and mortgage markets get for quite a while.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/borrowing/mortgages/7894731/Are-house-prices-set-to-fall-again.html

Sunday 4 July 2010

UK House prices: is it time to buy or sell?

House prices: is it time to buy or sell?
The housing market's recovery is under threat, so it could be time to act before it's too late.

Cartoon of couple outside estate agent - House prices: is it time to buy or sell?
Photo: HOWARD McWILLIAM
The property market may be Britain's national obsession but it is proving a hard market to call. Despite fears of a second credit crisis, house prices have recovered to within about 15pc of their peak and the latest figures show that the market is still rising, albeit slowly.
"The market is finely balanced. There are similar numbers of buyers and sellers, and no one can say which way prices will go," said Jeremy Leaf, a north London estate agent. "The market has never been more interesting – in some areas it may be time to sell, in others the right time to buy."
So how can you navigate your way through this jungle? How can sellers pick the right time to put their property on the market, and how can buyers make sure that they pay the right price and don't find themselves saddled with unaffordable debts?
For many, the most important factor in deciding whether now is a good time to buy is the likely direction of house prices. The consensus among economists and housing experts is that the recovery is running out of steam, and that prices look set to stall at best and fall at worst. Such pessimism is fuelled by public sector cuts, further job losses and fears of Britain falling back into recession.
Ed Stansfield of Capital Economics said: "Low interest rates should be supportive for house prices. But public sector job losses, tax rises and spending cuts will squeeze household incomes further, as well as denting confidence.
"What's more, the uncertain outlook for mortgage funding means that the availability of mortgage credit is unlikely to improve and could even be tightened again later this year. Given that the market remains overvalued, I suspect that house prices will end 2010 down by 5pc and will drop a further 10pc in 2011."
Hetal Mehta, the senior economic adviser to the Ernst & Young Item Club, said: "It is not looking good for the housing market ... we may be at a turning point." Howard Archer of IHS Global Insight said he would "not be surprised" if house prices were flat overall for the rest of this year and Peter Bolton King, the head of the National Association of Estate Agents, predicted a similar outcome.
Others predict a sharper correction. After all, as a multiple of earnings, housing remains far more expensive than the long-term average.
According to Nationwide Building Society's house price index, the average first-time buyer now needs 4.4 years' income before tax to buy their first home. Nationwide's average price to earnings ratio since 1983 is just 3.3. By this measure of affordability, prices would have to fall by 28pc from their current level to reach the long-term average for first-time buyers.
Interest rates are also critical, both for their influence on house prices and for the affordability of your own mortgage. A Reuters poll of 61 economists last month found that the majority expected no rise in rates this year, followed by an increase to 0.75pc by the end of the first quarter of 2011 and a further rise to 2pc by the end of the year. Once Bank Rate starts to creep up, history suggests that lenders will swiftly follow suit by increasing mortgage rates.
Ros Altmann, a governor of the London School of Economics, said the small print in the emergency Budget suggested that the Government expected rates to rise too. "The Government's change of pension indexation – pensions will be linked to the Consumer Price Index [CPI] measure of inflation instead of the Retail Price Index [RPI] in order to save costs – confirms that the Government itself expects rates to rise," she said. "CPI will be lower than RPI only if rates go up."
But Mr Stansfield said he expected rates still to be at their current 0.5pc at the end of 2011. "The scale of the fiscal squeeze is likely to ensure that economic growth remains pretty fragile and ensure that the economy continues to operate with ample spare capacity. That will push inflation lower and allow the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee to keep interest rates at current levels until at least the end of next year," he said.
For would-be sellers it seems a bigger gamble to hold off in the hope that the housing market will continue to improve than to sell now following a recovery in house prices and an improvement (for the time being) in mortgage lending conditions.
"There has been an increase in the supply of property coming to the market following the abolition of home information packs," said Simon Rubinsohn, the chief economist of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS). "As a result, the number of new instructions being received by estate agents is now outstripping the increase in buyer interest."
The advice to buyers is to drive a hard bargain. The recovery has not brought the housing market back to the boom days and many sellers will be fearful of a housing slump.
"Some areas have oversupply, others have shortages, although sometimes only of particular types of property," said Mr Leaf, who is also a housing spokesman for the RICS. "To find out what is happening in the area where you want to buy, there is no substitute for doing the legwork. Walk the streets at different times to make sure it is right for you. View plenty of properties, make offers, gauge the reaction – sometimes you find out more from rejections."
There is another reason why now might be the optimum time to dabble in the housing market – mortgage rates are at a seven-year low.
You can avoid a nasty rise in your mortgage repayments when interest rates do rise by choosing a fixed-rate home loan. Although these mortgages tend to be more expensive than variable-rate trackers, you can pay less than 4pc for two-year fixes, while those who want certainty for longer could fix for 10 years at 4.99pc from Yorkshire Building Society, although you would need a 25pc deposit.
There are tentative signs that the mortgage market is worsening and so it might pay to act fast. The Bank of England said on Thursday that mortgages would be harder to obtain in the next three months amid fears of a "deterioration in the economic outlook". It said lenders expected to find it harder to secure the cash on the wholesale markets to fund loans. This was the pivotal reason why mortgages became so costly at the height of the credit crisis.
House price bears reckon that many home owners could not cope with a rise in interest rates. Some, they say, are able to keep their heads above water today only because they are paying rock-bottom interest rates – as low as 2.5pc, in some cases. But these borrowers are fully exposed to a rise in Bank Rate, while remortgaging to a fix will see their repayments rise immediately. A tick up in repossessions cannot be ruled out.
For now, the housing and mortgage markets are in as good health as they have been since the credit crunch took hold, but the outlook looks decidedly grim.
Someone with access to funding who could cope with a rise in interest rates might be able to grab a bargain by choosing the area and property type carefully. Existing home owners whose finances are stretched to the limit might equally take the opportunity provided by the current resilience in prices to get out of the market before prices fall.

Friday 18 June 2010

Property investors on top of the world

Property investors on top of the world
JONATHAN CHANCELLOR
June 18, 2010

AUSTRALIA is the fourth-fastest-growing property market in the world after a 20 per cent price jump in the past year.

But China overtook Hong Kong as the world's hottest housing market with a 68 per cent annual price rise, according to a survey of 47 countries by the international estate agent Knight Frank.

''The top four positions in our rankings are all occupied by Asia-Pacific locations, whilst Europe dominates the bottom half of the table,'' said Liam Bailey, the head of residential research. As house price declines slowed in most depressed markets, 25 of the countries registered rises.

Most of the countries where home prices fell were in Europe. Prices rose 8.8 per cent in Britain and 2.3 per cent in the US. But Dubai, which had been the best performer, became the worst, falling 8 per cent.

Asian investors, attracted by a weak British pound and rising rents, were strong in London.

The report says that while housing markets are polarised, each quarter provided new evidence of recovery: ''It remains to be seen if this is another period of sustained growth or the middle peak in a double-dip recession.

''With interest rates now rising, the government withdrawing stimulus and the supply response picking up - albeit modestly - we expect house price growth to slow over the next six to nine months," said the Australia research director, Matt Whitby.

But Knight Frank said 4.8 per cent of Australia's growth was in the March quarter, which the agency believes might have overstated growth.



Source: The Sydney Morning Herald

Monday 31 May 2010

Capital Gains tax: buy-to-let investors must tear up retirement plans

Capital Gains tax: buy-to-let investors must tear up retirement plans

Britons relying on buy-to-let investments as their pension funds will have to tear up their retirement plans and start again, experts warned late last night.

By Myra Butterworth, Personal Finance Correspondent
Published: 12:01AM BST 28 May 2010

According to Savills' new annual forecast, house prices will fall 6.6pc in 2010

The tax rise is a fresh blow to more than a million Britons with buy-to-let mortgages who saw heavy falls in their investments amid the housing slump

The rise in tax paid on capital gains from its current level of 18 per cent will badly hit these investors when they come to sell their properties.

It means those near retirement will receive much lower returns than they were expecting if the Government increases the rate to 40 per cent or even 50 per cent, and will have to continue working later than they expected.

Jonathan Cornell, of mortgage brokers First Action Finance, said: “Clearly anyone that is hoping to fund their retirement from their buy-to-let portfolio would have taken capital gains tax into account. But they had better rip up those calculations and start again as their fund value will be decimated.”

It is a fresh blow to more than a million Britons with buy-to-let mortgages who saw heavy falls in their investments amid the housing slump.

Average values dropped more than 16 per cent during the financial meltdown in 2008, and even though they have since risen as Britain emerges out of the recession, current prices are still at 2005 levels, according to the latest house price index by Halifax.

Andrew Montlake, or mortgage brokers Coreco, said: “With the buy-to-let property boom during the past decade, many people switched their pension funds out of the stock market and into bricks and mortar. But with the rise in the capital gains tax, they will be hit hard and will no doubt feel let down by the Government.


“They’ll now have to be revisiting their retirement plans and considering their next steps. They made sensible investment decisions and are now being penalised.”

Accountants said it is “inherently wrong” to tax such investments at the same rates as income tax of up to 40 per cent or 50 per cent.

Mike Warburton, of accountants Grant Thornton, said: “It is one thing putting up tax rates, but it is fundamental unfair for inflationary gains to suffer tax at income tax rates.

If someone has invested in shares or property over a long period of time, a significant part of that gain is going to be inflationary. It is inherently wrong to tax that gain at income tax rates. Politicians need to be aware that this is an issue of fundamental fairness - as emphasized at the start of the Queen’s speech.”

Property investors are also suffering from a drought in mortgage finance with lenders restricting the best deals for those with a significant deposit.

The tough situation will force some investors to sell their properties while the lower rate is still in place.
Jeremy Leaf, a spokesman for the Royal Institution of Chartered surveyors, said: “The prospect of higher capital gains tax on the sale of property may in the near term encourage some existing landlords to take advantage of the current more benign tax regime.”


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/capital-gains-tax/7773029/Capital-Gains-tax-buy-to-let-investors-must-tear-up-retirement-plans.html

Tuesday 4 August 2009

UK asset value falls for first time since 1992

UK asset value falls for first time since 1992
The value of all the assets in the UK has fallen for the first time in more than a decade and a half, in the latest evidence of the economic trauma wrought by the financial crisis.

By Edmund Conway
Published: 6:39PM BST 03 Aug 2009


The fall was driven largely by a fall in the value of housing which, at £3.7 trillion, constitutes more than half the nation's net worth. Photo: PA Britain was worth £6.95 trillion at the end of 2008, down 2pc from the previous year, according to new figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS). The total, which has fallen for the first time since the last recession in 1992, takes into account all buildings, roads, factories, cars, trains, machinery and financial assets by the end of 2008, minus debts.

The fall was driven largely by a fall in the value of housing which, at £3.7 trillion, constitutes more than half the nation's net worth.


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According to the ONS, the value of Britain's housing stock dropped by 9.1pc last year – the biggest fall since comparable data began in 1989. It takes the value of the total housing stock down to levels last seen in 2006.

More strikingly, the fall in property prices, when compared with the comparative height of mortgage debt, means that the equity British households own in their homes fell by £423bn, or 14pc, during 2008. Net equity – in other words the extent by which home values are greater than mortgage debt – dropped from 335pc to 274pc in 2008, the lowest cushion since 2002.

Simon Ward, of Henderson New Star, said: "UK households will have to step up their saving to compensate for the huge loss of housing and equity market wealth in 2008, implying mediocre prospects for consumer spending."

Significantly, it is households and non-profit institutions as opposed to financial and non-financial corporations that have borne the biggest brunt of the falls in asset prices. Their assets dropped from £7.5 trillion in 2007 to £6.6 trillion last year – the biggest single one-year drop on record.

Despite the fall, the value of the UK is still equivalent to just under £115,000 for every man, woman and child in the country – and has increased by a factor of more than five since the ONS began keeping national accounts data in 1948.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/banksandfinance/5967533/UK-asset-value-falls-for-first-time-since-1992.html

UK Home owners 'face five years of negative equity'


Home owners 'face five years of negative equity'
Some home owners could be stuck in negative equity for at least another five years as the property market struggles to bounce back, grim figures predict.

Published: 9:09AM BST 03 Aug 2009


'Getting a mortgage can be like winning the lottery,' says the NHF's chief executive Photo: PA House prices will plunge by 12.2pc this year and by a further 4.6pc next year before stabilising in 2011 with a 1.1pc rise, according to research from the National Housing Federation (NHF).

Home owners who bought during the peak of the market in 2007 are likely to be waiting until 2014 to see any profit in their properties, the figures suggest. Homes in England's North West and the east Midlands could be waiting even longer, the figures showed.


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Overall, average prices will rise by 20pc on current values to £227,800 by 2014 as values climb by 8.4pc in 2013 and 6.8pc the following year.

David Orr, the chief executive of the NHF, said: "Our new research shows that while house prices are falling in the short term they will inevitably increase in the long term because of a fundamental undersupply of housing.

"Even though house prices are falling, and are set to remain sluggish in some areas for the foreseeable future, affordability is not improving for many low-to-middle income households."

He added: "For millions of people who want a home, getting a mortgage can be like winning the lottery. First-time buyers and those wanting to buy shared-ownership properties remain victims of a deep freeze in mortgage lending.

"Until lending is freed up, young and lower-income households without access to large deposits will be locked out of the market."

According to Oxford Economics, which produced the figures for the NHF, house prices in England in 2013 will be 3pc below their pre-credit-crunch peak of 2007, but by 2014 they will be 3pc higher.


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/5964212/Home-owners-face-five-years-of-negative-equity.html

Monday 4 May 2009

Housing market to recover quicker than economists first feared

Housing market to recover quicker than economists first feared

The end is in sight for the housing market downturn, according to a leading economic think tank, which has upgraded its previously more pessimistic forecast.

By Harry Wallop, Consumer Affairs Editor
Last Updated: 9:57AM BST 04 May 2009

The housing market is predicted to bottom out later this year Photo: Chris Radburn/PA Wire

House prices only have a little further to fall, and should slowly start to pick up next year, according to the Centre for Economics and Business Research.

The think tank earlier this year predicted that house prices could tumble by as much as 40 per cent from their £196,000 peak in the summer of 2007. But it now thinks it is more likely they will decline by 28 per cent "peak to trough" by the time the housing market finally hits the bottom later this year.


By the end of 2013 house prices should have increased by 23 per cent to £170,000 from their predicted nadir this year of £144,000.

The improved forecast comes on the back of a series of more positive figures to emerge from the housing market.

The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors said last month that the number of potential buyers asking estate agents to look around properties had increased for five consecutive months.

RICS said the number of new buyer enquiries increased at the fastest pace since September 2003. Moreover, the number of properties being sold by estate agents during March increased for the first time since November 2007.

Meanwhile, the Land Registry said house prices dropped by just 0.4 per cent during March, the lowest monthly fall for 11 months.

But the CEBR cautioned home owners not to get carried away by the positive data, warning that house prices have a further 8 per cent to fall, as rising unemployment will cause increased number of people to sell their homes in a hurry.

However, it is forecasting a relatively robust recovery by 2012.

Ben Read, managing economist at cebr, added: "Going forward, house prices are likely to remain in the doldrums for some time, as what is likely to be a slow recovery in the real economy translates into weak wage growth and stubbornly high unemployment – factors that will put a fairly heavy lid on house price inflation.

"We may start to see stronger house price growth towards 2012 or 2013 as the huge downturn in new housebuilding over the past 12 to 18 months leads to significant under-supply over the medium term."

The think tank predicts the average cost of a home will increase by just 3.1 per cent between the fourth quarter of this year and the final three months of 2010, followed by a further 2.5 per cent rise the following year.

But the house price growth is expected to pick up again during 2012 or 2013, with the average cost of a property recovering to £170,000 by the final quarter of 2013, up from a predicted £144,000 at the end of this year.

This will still be below the peak price of £196,000 that was hit during 2007.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/houseprices/5268360/Housing-market-to-recover-quicker-than-economists-first-feared.html

Sunday 19 April 2009

Almost one million UK home owners in negative equity, says CML


Almost one million home owners in negative equity, says CML

Almost one million home owners are in negative equity, the Council of Mortgage Lenders has suggested.

By Myra Butterworth, Personal Finance Correspondent

Last Updated: 7:54AM BST 18 Apr 2009

It claimed that about 900,000 home owners currently have some degree of negative equity, where the value of their home is less than their mortgage.

Bob Pannell, head of research at the CML, said negative equity had "resurfaced" as house prices have fallen and that it "will contribute to subdued property turnover".

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However, the CML said the majority of those in negative equity - around two thirds - face only modest shortfalls of less than 10 per cent, equating to around £6,000 for those first-time buyers with negative equity, and £8,000 for other home-buyers.

The CML's estimate is less than some economists' predictions that nearly four million home owners are already suffering from the predicament. And it is still less than the 1.5 million households estimated to have negative equity at the depth of the last housing market slump in 1993.

It said: "Falling house prices have once again raised the prospect of negative equity for borrowers. Although negative equity may reduce a household's coping strategies should they encounter payment difficulties, it does not of itself affect the ability to keep up mortgage payments or create a risk of repossession."

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/borrowing/mortgages/5166433/Almost-one-million-home-owners-in-negative-equity-says-CML.html

Comment: Probably not dire. Once the housing problems settled and confidence returns, these negative equities will disappear. Should inflation sets in, the losses may turn to gains.


Monday 30 March 2009

British property not quite a bargain yet

British property not quite a bargain yet
Saturday, 21 March 2009 23:36

“YOU REALLY SHOULD buy a property in London if you’ve got some spare cash; they’re going for a song!” a Londoner friend said recently. Indeed, after years of a property boom that saw prices triple, the UK housing market has crashed following the global credit crunch, with average house prices having fallen about 20% from their peak and the bottom of the market yet to be seen.


Anecdotes of prices of some central London properties plunging 50% — estate agent Hamptons International cites a London property worth £1million in December 2007 going for £470,000 in January 2009 — have attracted interest from investors, particularly foreign buyers drawn by bargain prices and a weak sterling. Recent figures from Hamptons reveal that properties in prime central London saw a 20% increase in European buyers in 4Q2008 y-o-y, while 12% more European and American investors registered to purchase property in the rest of the country.

Foreign interest has resulted in some central London property prices bucking the trend. According to property website Primelocation.com, prices in Mayfair and Knightsbridge rose for the fourth consecutive month in February by 0.94%, compared with the 0.56% fall in southeast London and 1.83% drop in southwest London.

Investors should, however, be aware that there may be further downside. Analysts warn that prices are set to fall further as they have yet to reach their fair value. Comparing total house prices with economic output, RAB Capital’s Dhaval Joshi said in The Observer that house prices will need to fall by another 15% before they are fairly valued. MoneyWeek reports that the UK house price-to-earnings ratio is currently 4.8, compared with the long-run trend of between 3.5 and four times, and that prices should fall another 17% to 39% before hitting fair value. Numis Securities, however, thinks house prices could fall by as much as another 55% if the market over-corrects itself to the same extent as during the 1990s recession. It’s a scary figure but highly possible, given the worsening economic outlook.

UK housing sales have remained at their lowest level since 1978, with an average of 9.5 transactions per agency over the three months to February, according to the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS)’s latest UK housing market survey. The Guardian reports that London agents are experiencing the worst transaction levels, with only six properties sold per agency over the three months to February.

The slowdown in transactions, however, is not due to a lack of demand. The RICS survey found that new-buyer inquiries in London jumped to a two-year high in February, as chartered surveyors reported a 44% rise in new-buyer inquiries, up from 25% in January. There is, apparently, strong interest nationwide, particularly in London and the south of England. Some analysts, however, see this as just “window shopping”, and do not foresee these inquiries leading to a marked rise in actual sales any time soon.

The reason for poor sales is the lack of funding, as the availability of mortgages tightens due to the credit crunch and first time buyers struggle to cough up the higher deposit or downpayment required — this now averages 25% of the property price, a long way from the 0% to 5% during the good times.

The current rate of mortgage approvals is still less than half of what it was a year ago, even if it has levelled out to an average of 31,000 a month for the past six months, as reported by the BBC. Last week’s indications that the Financial Services Authority may consider limiting the size of home loans in future to protect people from borrowing too much will certainly not help matters.

Grim unemployment figures — Office for National Statistics data revealed last week that unemployment has risen to its highest level in 12 years with nearly 2.03 million jobless in the three months to January — also means that would-be buyers concerned about their jobs will be reluctant to commit to a house purchase. Expectations of a further fall in prices are also holding back buyers; as Guardian Money editor Patrick Collinson said in his housing price blog recently, no one in their right mind would sink their life savings into a property if they felt it was about to drop 20% in value.

Anecdotal evidence suggests the contrary in some situations, however. Location will always matter, as well as a lack of supply. A house-hunting friend in Cambridge recounts situations where several of her offers for family homes were quickly outbid. The offers were for homes in a village location near good schools: Very few such properties ever come up in the market.

In the meantime, investors eyeing lucrative rentals should watch out for falling rental rates in London, where the top-end rental property market has been hard hit by cutbacks on employees’ rental allowance and by an exodus of financial expats from the City. According to Primelocation.com, prime London letting prices have fallen for the 11th consecutive month in February, registering 13.7% lower than the same time last year. Stock levels are up 97% on last year, as house sellers unable to secure a good price resort to renting out their properties instead. More and more of these “unplandlords” are expected to enter the market as the property sales market is not expected to bounce back any time soon, adds property expert Sarah Beeny in the Evening Standard.

Investors with spare cash would do well to tread carefully and do their homework before responding to the siren call of bargain British property.

Lim Yin Foong was editor of Personal Money, a Malaysian personal finance magazine published by The Edge Communications, from 2001 to 2006. She is currently based in the UK.

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Thursday 12 March 2009

House prices 'could fall by further 55 per cent'

House prices 'could fall by further 55 per cent'
House prices may fall by a further 55 percent and there is a "very real probability" that Britain will be bankrupted, a leading investment bank has warned in a private note to clients.

By Robert Winnett, Deputy Political Editor
Last Updated: 10:41PM GMT 11 Mar 2009

People who bought buy-to-let flats are expected to “begin panic selling” and the average home value could drop below £100,000.

The predictions in a 298-page report from Numis Securities, a City investment bank, are the bleakest yet on the deteriorating state of the British property market.


However, in the note written last month, Numis said: “Despite UK house prices already having fallen 21% from the peak, we do not believe that the correction is anywhere near over.

“Our core headline forecast is that UK property prices remain between 17% and 39% overvalued based on fair valuation. Moreover, history has shown us that when property…which has experienced a price bubble corrects, the price tends to fall below fair value for a period of time, as confidence in that market remains low. Prices could fall a further 40-55% if the over-correction was as bad as the early 1990s in our view.”

The report warns that “city centre flats” and “new executive homes” are likely to record the biggest reductions and describes investing in buy-to-let property as a “poor man’s hedge fund”.

“It is the action of these amateur investors over the next few months which we are most concerned about,” the report says. “We expect some to begin panic selling their portfolios, with the peak volume as is almost always the case with private investors, being at the market trough.”

Yesterday, Alistair Darling, the Chancellor, warned that the world is facing the most difficult economic conditions for “generations”.

However, the Numis report is scathing of Government attempts to help the economy.

“The Prime Minister and Chancellor have publicly stated that they want banks this year to lend at 2007 levels,” it said. “We think this is a crazy policy, given that too much debt was one of the prime reasons why the economy has its current problems.”

It also criticises the huge debts being run up by the Government to pump money into the economy. Yesterday, John Lewis, the retailer, said that the £12.5 billion cut in Vat has not made “any long term difference at all”.

The Numis report says: “The bankruptcy of the UK is a very real probability as the UK Government is trying to stimulate a greater debt burden in a grossly indebted economy. We believe the scale of the macro imbalances in the UK means there is no prospect of a recovery in 2009 and we expect the UK to be mired in a deep recession through all of 2010.”

Last night, the Conservatives said that the Numis analysis increased the pressure on the Prime Minister to apologise. Grant Shapps, the shadow Housing minister, said: “This is a devastating critique of the Government’s record and how Gordon Brown’s credit bubble will lead to a mountain of debt, a wave of repossessions and negative equity misery. Labour Ministers must take direct responsibility for fuelling buy-to-let speculation.

“Gordon Brown’s fingerprints are all over this economic wreckage and he should now have the decency to at least apologies for his mistakes.”

Yesterday, it emerged that the number of borrowers falling behind with their mortgage repayments has already doubled in the past year. According to Moody’s Investors Services, borrowers more than 90 days in arrears have increased to 1.5 percent of all home loans compared to 0.6 percent a year ago.


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/houseprices/4974499/House-prices-could-fall-by-further-55-per-cent.html


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Monday 2 February 2009

House prices 'could fall 40 per cent without loan boost'

House prices 'could fall 40 per cent without loan boost'
By Sean Farrell, Financial EditorMonday, 2 February 2009

House prices could drop by a total of 40 per cent unless the Government steps in to boost lending, a report says today. The extreme scenario painted by the Centre for Economics and Business Research (CEBR) would see prices plunge by a record 25 per cent this year after last year's 16 per cent slide.
If the Government's banking bailout is able to boost mortgage approvals to 50,000 a month from the current level of about 32,000, the price fall from peak to trough could be limited to 32 per cent with values bottoming out in the first quarter of 2010, CEBR said. But without effective intervention to increase lending, the total fall would be 40 per cent with prices stagnating until 2012 and not getting above 2003 levels until the following year.
As part of a range of measures to get banks lending again, the Government intends to guarantee mortgage-backed securities to restart the market for securitisation – packaging up of loans for sale to investors. Securitisation provided £200bn of finance for banks in 2007 before the market was paralysed by fears stemming from the sub-prime crisis in the US.
The plan was recommended by Sir James Crosby, the former chief executive of HBOS, who predicted in November that, without action, net lending for house purchases could fall below zero as fewer loans are made than are paid off. Bank of England figures on Friday showed a rise in mortgage approvals to 31,000 in December from 27,000 a month earlier. The surprise increase followed data from the Royal Institution of Chartered surveyors that showed new buyer enquiries beginning to rise.
Halifax, the country's biggest mortgage lender, has pointed out that prices for first-time buyers are now more affordable than for years but potential buyers remain wary of further falls while banks are limiting their lending as bad debts rise.
Benjamin Williamson, an economist at CEBR, said: "The glimmer of light at the end of the tunnel for the beleaguered housing market is that prices and interest rates are now at levels whereby any improvement in lending is likely to lead to substantially increased activity and at the very least a bottoming out in house prices. However, if lending remains close to current very low levels, the spectre of the biggest annual drop in UK GDP since post-war demobilisation in 2009, with concomitant rises in unemployment and collapsing confidence, will likely lead to an acceleration in house price falls."
CEBR said that the crisis in the housing market lay at the heart of the credit crunch and that direct intervention to shore up the supply of mortgages would stimulate activity. The research unit added that a recovering housing market might play a part in a broader boost to consumer confidence that would help revive the economy.
Interesting? Click here to explore further

http://www.independent.co.uk/money/mortgages/house-prices-could-fall-40-per-cent-without-loan-boost-1523110.html

Monday 22 December 2008

House prices to crash 30 per cent, Barclays chief executive John Varley warns

House prices to crash 30 per cent, Barclays chief executive John Varley warns
House prices will crash a further 15 per cent next year, the boss of high street bank Barclays has admitted.

By Myra Butterworth, Personal Finance Correspondent Last Updated: 8:52AM GMT 15 Dec 2008

John Varley of Barclays Photo: Daniel Jones
In a remarkably candid interview, John Varley, the group chief executive of Barclays, warned that Britain is only mid way through the house price slump - meaning the total fall could be as much as 30 per cent.
He described as "madness" the previous lending policies' of banks, in which 100 per cent mortgages and beyond were approved.
Mr Varley admitted that banks were partly to blame for the current recession, saying it was time they showed "humility" and said "sorry" to customers for their role in the sharp economic downturn.
He said banks needed "to take their share of responsibility".
It is the first time that the chief executive of a major bank has spoken so openly in the current climate about the role lenders have played in the sharp turnaround in home owners' fortunes.
The admission comes on the back of the Government giving banks billions of pounds of financial support following the worst banking crisis since 1929. Barclays did not receive government funding.
Mr Varley's comments, made to Jeff Randall, the Daily Telegraph's editor-at-large and to be shown on Sky News this evening, are a dire warning to families across Britain who have already seen the value of their savings and homes plummet amid the credit crisis. They could dissuade potential buyers from seeking loans or moving home. Jonathan Cornell, of mortgage brokers Hamptons Mortgages, said Mr Varley's comments could aggravate the situation further.
The average home in Britain has already dropped £36,000 in value since August last year, according to the country's biggest lenders Halifax. Its latest figures show the average value is now just £163,605.
A further 15 per cent fall would see the average value of a home crash by an additional £25,000 to less than £140,000 based on these figures.
Mr Varley said: "Our view was that from the top to the bottom, you would see a fall of something like 25 to 30 per cent. I suspect we're about halfway through that at the moment. I mean that slowdown, the negative house price inflation started in 2007, it's accelerated in 2008.
"We're probably about halfway through that period, so in other words we've got another 10 to 15 per cent to fall between now and the end of next year. That would be our assessment."
The house price crash has already left many homeowners in negative equity, where the value of their home is worth less than their mortgage.
In the early 1990s, when house prices fell by 10.6 per cent over a prolonged period, 1.8 million home owners had to stay put or face losing thousands when they sold up.
The borrowers who are most vulnerable are those who bought a home with a loan of at least 100 per cent of the value of their property.
At the height of the property boom, when banks were more willing to lend, loans were available at 125 per cent of the value of a property.
Asked for his reaction to the practice, Mr Varley said: "Looking back on it, madness."
Mortgage experts said that lenders would need to offer a wider range of deals to borrowers before the property market showed any signs of recovery.
Melanie Bien, of mortgage brokers Savills Private Finance, said: "Those hoping that the bottom of the housing market had already been reached will have to wait a bit longer with around another 10 per cent drop in prices in 2009 forecast.
"It will then be a while before prices recover but once the bottom has been reached, potential buyers will once again show an interest in purchasing. All we need then is more choice of product at 90 per cent loan-to-value with better rates than are currently available to help first-time buyers in particular onto the housing ladder."
Home sellers have been forced to lower their asking prices dramatically in the past month to achieve a sale.
Around £5,000 was knocked off the average price of a home in the past month, according to property website Rightmove.
It said the average value of a home in Britain dropped from £222,979 in November to £217,808 this month, a fall of 2.3 per cent. House prices are now 10.2 per cent down from May this year.
The figures are higher than those produced by Halifax as they are based on asking prices rather than completions.
Rightmove forecasts that house prices will fall an extra 10 per cent by the end of next year. However, its survey also suggested that the sale prices actually being achieved by estate agents is already down 25 per cent since May.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/houseprices/3759542/House-prices-to-crash-30-per-cent-Barclays-chief-executive-John-Varley-warns.html