skip to content

Blanchard Consultancy - News

Rightmove could lose three quarters of agents

Saturday, October 11, 2008

More than 75 per cent of UK estate agents are threatening to remove properties currently listed on the UK's biggest property website, according to an online poll.

The survey, by estateagenttoday.co.uk, found that more than three quarters of estate agents will not be renewing their annual subscription to the site because its fees, which can be as high as £500 a month per estate agent, are considered too expensive.

Should the planned defection go ahead, it would leave Rightmove, which boasts around 20,000 agents and developers, a less reliable source of information for homebuyers wanting to compare properties on the market.

The company, founded by Halifax, Countrywide & Connells estate agencies in 2001, saw estate agency membership fall by 3 per cent in the first six months of this year to 11,984. Its retention rate among estate agents was down to 84 per cent in the same period, which Rightmove attributed to the large number of estate agency businesses leaving the industry.

Article continues at Times Online

Labels: , ,

Negative equity: 1.3 million households at risk

Saturday, September 06, 2008

A UK recession could leave up to 1.3 million households in negative equity, analysts predicted yesterday. House prices will fall by 25-35 per cent from peak to trough, compared with just 12 per cent from 1990 to 1995, the Bernstein analysts said. In the "recession case" of a 35 per cent drop, 1.3 million households, or nearly 20 per cent of mortgages, would be in negative equity and banks would lose £38bn over several years, they added.

A slowdown that sees growth of 0.5 per cent next year would result in 400,000 households suffering negative equity. The effect of the far bigger than expected fall in house prices would be offset by lower loan-to-value ratios, less activity near the peak of the market, and higher repayment rates than in the last crash.

On Thursday, Halifax's parent HBOS reported property prices down 12.7 per cent in August from a year earlier. Bernstein said the UK housing market now had strong downward momentum, with mortgage approvals collapsing, estate agents unable to shift stock and industry sentiment gloomy. "With house prices down 12 per cent so far this year on the HBOS index, and significant further falls expected, the fear of negative equity is again stalking the land," the analysts wrote.

Read the full article at The Independent Online

Labels: , , , , , ,

House tax holiday: would it work - and can the government afford it?

Monday, August 18, 2008

In the past decade, home buyers have paid the government £32bn in stamp duty, with the annual amount rising dramatically as the housing market soared and increasing numbers of properties were caught by the tax.

According to the Halifax, just over a quarter of the privately-owned homes in the UK, more than 5.5m, were valued above £250,000 at the end of last year, the threshold at which stamp duty is levied at 3% of the property's value. In 2002, there were just 1.8m properties valued above £250,000.

A family buying the average-priced home in Greater London, currently £291,500, would pay the Treasury £8,745 in tax.

The government has enjoyed a large increase in revenue from stamp duty since Labour came to power in 1997. That year, the yield from residential properties was just £675m. Increases in the rate of tax combined with the impact of rising house prices meant the Treasury collected £6.4bn from stamp duty on homes last year. However, that figure will fall dramatically this year as the housing market has hit a wall and the number of transactions has plummeted to record lows.

Under the current regime, there are four stamp duty bands. Buyers of homes worth less than £125,000 pay nothing. Between £125,000 and £250,000, buyers pay 1% on the price of the home; between £250,000 and £500,000, buyers pay 3% of the price; and above £500,000, they pay 4%. There were 1m properties in the UK valued at more than £500,000 at the end of last year, a threefold increase in the past five years, according to the Halifax.

Consumer groups, mortgage lenders and house builders have lobbied for the lifting of the current thresholds to keep them in line with rising house prices, and those calls have become louder as the housing market has been paralysed by the credit crunch. First-time buyers are under particular pressure as the banks' lending criteria have become tougher and they are being forced to find much larger deposits.

If the higher stamp duty thresholds of £250,000 and £500,000 had increased in line with house price inflation since July 1997 when they were introduced, they would now stand at £720,000 and £1.44m, the Halifax said.

Read more at Guardian Economics

Labels: , , , , , , , , , ,

Bank of England stays firmly on the fence

Saturday, August 09, 2008

Plenty has happened since the Bank of England last cut interest rates in April. Inflation has risen to 3.8% - almost double the government's 2% target - requiring the Bank's governor, Mervyn King, to write an explanatory letter to chancellor Alistair Darling. At the same time, the economy has weakened rapidly – today's news from the Halifax of an 11% drop in house prices over the past year is merely the latest evidence of a deflating property bubble.

Official figures suggest Britain continued to expand - if weakly - in the second quarter of the year, but all the signs are that the second half of the year will see the economy slide into its first recession in more than a decade and a half.

Against that backdrop, it was hardly surprising that the Bank's monetary policy committee left interest rates on hold today.

Article continues at Guardian news

Labels: , , , , , ,

First-time buyer scheme announced

Friday, July 18, 2008

A scheme to make homes more affordable by allowing first-time buyers to rent a property as they save up to buy it has been announced today by the government.

Under the pilot scheme, households earning up to £60,000 will be able to rent a new home at a discounted rate for a period of two or three years while building up a deposit to buy a share in it.

Rents will be 80% or less of the real market value.

The scheme, which will be managed by the Housing Corporation, will be open to buyers who qualify for the government's new-build HomeBuy scheme, but are currently unable to buy.

When the buyer can afford to, he or she can buy a share of the property of at least 25% and continue to pay rent to a housing association on the remaining share.

Ultimately, the buyer can purchase a 100% share in the property, or move and take the equity built up in their share.

Earlier this year the government extended the HomeBuy scheme, opening it up to all first-time buyer households earning up to £60,000.

The government said the Rent to Homebuy scheme was designed to give more choice and flexibility to first-time buyers who have been hardest hit by the credit crunch.

Since the start of the year, all of the 100% mortgages available to new buyers have been withdrawn and many lenders have started to ask for a deposit of at least 10%.

Despite price falls, the average price of a property in the UK is still more than £180,000, according to Halifax, meaning a first-time buyer would need to raise a deposit of around £18,000.

Article continues at Guardian Online

Labels: , , , ,

Revealed: the truth behind the housing market scare stories

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

The stream of bad news coming out of the housing market has grown into a torrent in recent weeks, with stories of falling house prices, withdrawn mortgage rates and warnings about payment shocks.

This week, even Prime Minister Gordon Brown felt he had to defend the state of the UK's housing market.

Halifax, the country's largest mortgage lender, announced that house prices fell by 2.5 per cent between February and March, which prompted the PM to concede that "there are difficulties in the housing market" but that a 2.5 per cent drop "is containable".

To help you separate fact from fiction, we reveal the truth behind the assumptions that could cost you money in a falling market.

All the best mortgage deals have vanished

Nationwide recently announced it was restricting its best rates to people with more than 20 per cent deposit but it is not true to say that there are no competitive deals available.

"For borrowers with either a large deposit or a good amount of equity in their home there are still competitive deals available," says Denise Harvey, a mortgage analyst with independent financial comparison service Moneyfacts

West Bromwich Building Society is currently offering 4.99 per cent fixed for two years, for loans up to 75 per cent of a property's value, although there is an arrangement fee of £1,999 to contend with. And Abbey is offering a one-year discounted variable rate of 5.24 per cent with a maximum loan to value of 75 per cent and a fee of £499.

And even for borrowers with less equity in their homes there are still some good deals available. For those with a 5 per cent deposit there are competitive deals available. The Cheshire Building Society is offering a three-year fixed rate of 5.49 per cent, with a fee of £899.

One thing that has changed, however, is the speed with which these rates are being withdrawn and to take advantage of the best rates borrowers have to be prepared to move quickly.

"If borrowers are looking to re-mortgage or move they should be in as good a position as possible. When they are in a position to submit an application they should have everything more or less 100 per cent perfect," says Harvey.

Don't buy now

For first-time buyers struggling to get on the housing ladder falling house prices are very welcome. However, unless prices start to fall at a consistently fast rate the decision to wait could be a false economy, warns Melanie Bien, of mortgage broker Savills Private Finance.

She says that unless you are living with parents, the amount that a prospective buyer pays out in rent, particularly in parts of the South-east, can offset any decrease in the purchase price of a house.

Someone paying £800-a-month rent, for example, would pay an extra £4,000 by delaying a purchase for five months.

"While you would have been paying a mortgage if you had bought instead of renting, you will still want to make sure you end up in front once the difference is deducted from the potential fall in property values," adds Bien. "First-time buyers would be better off making their decision based on affordability and finding a suitable property."

Andy Pratt, chief operating officer of mortgage broker Alexander Hall, says prospective buyers should talk to a mortgage broker and work out how their rent compares with the cost of buying. Buyers should also consider that buying a home is a long-term commitment and not a short-term speculation on house prices.

"Unless you believe house prices are going to correct by 20 per cent or more, it is a long-term investment and people should be out there looking. It is a buyers' market and there are some bargains to be picked up," says Pratt.

No deposit – no mortgage

Mortgage lenders have been keen to move out of higher risk areas of lending and, as many first time buyers are now finding, high loan to value mortgages are one of the areas they are avoiding.

First to go were those deals offering more than 100 per cent of a property's value, as a combination of a mortgage and personal loan, and the last two weeks have seen an increasing number of lenders move to withdraw loans offering up to 100 per cent of a property's value.

"In essence, all the 100 per cents have disappeared and there are fewer lenders offering 95 per cent. So there are some mortgages available but their criteria for 90 per cent or higher are far tighter than they were before," says Pratt.

To get around this, he suggests speaking to family to try to raise the deposit. "Be prepared to consider parents and family for deposits or look at finding some other funding, such as savings they have made for a rainy day, and use as much as they can for a deposit," Pratt adds.

Buy-to-let landlords are fleeing the market

Many commentators have predicted a deluge of buy-to-let property coming back on the market as landlords try to exit the market, encouraged by a combination of low rental yield, falling house prices and a change to the capital gains tax (CGT) rules – which means many owners of second homes will pay only 18 per cent instead of 40 per cent CGT on the profits of a sale.

Alexander Hall's Pratt says long term professional landlords are in the market for the long term and are not put off by market jitters. But part-time landlords, with only one or two properties, will be looking at the exit.

"The dynamics have fundamentally changed. A large proportion of those will consider selling and looking at other investments," says Pratt.

However, while the tax changes will encourage some "profit taking", demand for rental property is still high and the majority of landlords are in it for the long haul, adds Bien "Most landlords see property as a viable alternative to a pension, as a way of saving for retirement, so regard it as a long-term investment," she says.

Is there going to be a house price crash?

Prices are certainly coming down. The 2.5 per cent drop reported by the Halifax is the biggest single drop in house prices since the price crash of 1992.

But this is not an exact picture, as prices are still 1 per cent higher than they were last year and there are big regional variations. Prices in Greater London are up by a further 1.6 per cent this month, and in the East Midlands they are up by 2.2 per cent. But this is offset by some big falls, with prices in Wales and the West Midlands down almost 5 per cent.

Martin Ellis, chief economist at Halifax, says that a house price crash is unlikely. The crash of the early 1990s had a different economic profile with rapidly rising inflation and big increases in interest rates and unemployment.

"That's a long way from where we are at the moment," Mr Ellis says. "Yes, we're expecting to see the economy slow over the course of 2008, and that's likely to see some upward movement in unemployment but we don't expect this to be dramatic." His prediction is for "low, single-digit" house price falls this year.

But others estimates are not so optimistic. The International Monetary Fund suggests in a report published this week that the UK housing market will follow the US example, but on a two-year time lag. This would be very bad news for UK homeowners as the US house prices fell by more than 11 per cent in 2007.

For more info visit the original story here.

Labels: , , , , , , , ,