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First-time buyers offer market a 'glimmer of hope'

Sunday, December 21, 2008

The proportion of first-time buyers entering the housing market increased for the third month in a row in November, figures showed today.

The National Association of Estate Agents (NAEA) said 10.4% of all properties sold during the month were bought by first-time buyers, up from just 8.3% in August.

It said the improvement offered a "glimmer of hope" among otherwise gloomy statistics as the property market suffered from its traditional seasonal downturn.

House prices continued to fall during November, while there was also a dip in the number of sales agreed and the number of house hunters in the market.

The NAEA said the Christmas slowdown meant the full impact of recent interest rate cuts and government announcements to help the housing market would not be felt until the new year.

Read more at Guardian online

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Barclays chief says house prices may fall 30%

Monday, December 15, 2008

One of Britain’s most powerful bankers gave a grim economic forecast last night that the country was only midway through the housing slump and that unemployment was set to soar.

John Varley, group chief executive of Barclays, painted a bleak outlook, saying that property prices could fall by a total of 30 per cent from their peak to the end of 2009 while unemployment could rise to 7.5 per cent of the working population. The previous lending policies’ of banks, in which 100 per cent mortgages and beyond were approved, were “madness”, he said, admitting that banks were partly to blame for the current recession.

It was time they showed “humility”, and said “sorry” to customers for their role in the sharp economic downturn and they needed “to take their share of responsibility”.

Mr Varley said, in an interview to be broadcast on Sky News tonight that there was still more pain coming for homeowners: “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 slow-down, the negative house price inflation started in 2007, it’s accelerated in 2008.

Read the full article at Times Online

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Land Securities slumps to £1.7bn loss

Saturday, November 15, 2008

Land Securities, the UK’s largest property company, has reported a pre-tax loss of £1.74bn as the deepening decline in the property market forced the group to cut the value of its assets.

The company, which made a profit of £365.2m in the same six months last year, suffered writedowns of £1.74bn amid an “unprecedented period of financial instability”.

The plan to demerge Land Securities will be stopped because of the economic conditions, the group said, although it is still working on the sale of outsourcing arm Trillium.

Halting the demerger plan was widely expected among analysts because of the downturn and the departure of chairman Paul Myners to become the Government’s city minister. Land
Securities announced today that Mr Myners will be replaced by Alison Carnwath, the present chairman of MF Global.

Read more at Telegraph online

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Nationwide predicts house price falls into 2010

Monday, November 10, 2008

The UK's largest building society today said it expected house prices to continue to fall next year as it announced it had cut lending by more than two-thirds.

Nationwide Building Society's chief executive Graham Beale said house prices would continue to fall by 1% to 1.5% a month for the rest of the year and there would be further price drops in 2009-10.

Last month, the society said prices were down 14.6% year on year, with the average price of a home now almost £30,000 less than a year ago.

Beale said interest rate cuts, which Nationwide has so far passed on to customers in full, would help the market.

"Rate cuts will help to minimise payment difficulties and alleviate payment shock as borrowers reach the end of their existing deals.

"Reducing prices will improve affordability, which should bring about a recovery in the first-time buyers' market."

Releasing its interim results for the six months to September 30, Nationwide said it had advanced £1bn worth of mortgages, when repayments and redemptions were taken into account.

Read the full article at Guardian online

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Gap between asking and selling prices is widening

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Across the UK, houses are selling at an average of nine percent below the asking price with sellers in some regions being forced to accept as much as 12.5 percent discount off their advertised price, says RICS research published today.

As economic fundamentals continue to worsen, the gap between selling and asking prices is widening. In the North vendors are accepting the lowest offers – averaging 12.5 percent below the marketed price.

Vendors in the North West, East Midlands, West Midlands and Wales are accepting offers averaging approximately 10 percent below but in London the figure stands at 8.5 percent.

London has remained firmer than most as its diverse economy and large job market offers sellers more room for optimism.

Read the full article at the RICS newsroom

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Believe it or not, house prices are going to soar

Sunday, October 05, 2008

House prices are going to rise again. That may seem a scenario far removed from today's headlines about falling prices and haemorrhaging values. But, according to an influential economics consultancy, prices have to go up for one simple reason - government targets for the minimum number of new homes are just not being met.

A year ago, 'targets' were the order of the day. Gordon Brown announced that in England alone there should be between 240,000 and 297,700 homes built annually until 2016, and that, in total, between 2.9 million and 3.5 million new homes should be built by 2020. In 2007 - before the downturn hit the new-build market - some 174,900 homes were completed: still below target but on an upward path from previous years.

Yet at the start of autumn 2008, figures for housing starts suggest that this year's total will be only about 110,000, according to the House Builders Association. It predicts 2009 and 2010 figures may well fall to a dismal 55,000. The consequence is that the new-homes industry is imploding. The fewer homes built, the fewer people work in the industry, making the downturn even worse. Similar targets, and shortfalls, exist in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

Read the full article at Guardian online

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Financial crisis: Banking crisis bites deeper in construction and manufacturing

One of Britain's best-known builders has slashed 43 per cent off the price of some new homes as the global financial crisis takes an ever-increasing toll on construction and manufacturing.

Barratt Developments offered the discount to buyers prepared to take five or more flats or houses off its hands in its Yorkshire East division, according to the investment bank Dresdner Kleinwort, which has seen documents sent to property professionals.

The bank also claimed that the six leading property agents in Leeds have between them sold just six new apartments in two months.

Demand for new homes has evaporated after the credit crunch led to a 95 per cent reduction in the value of home loans approved in the UK between July and August.

Alastair Stewart, an analyst with Dresdner Kleinwort, said: "Prices of urban apartments appear to have fallen in many cases by 40 per cent to 50 per cent, volumes have dried up to virtually zero, many developers have gone bust and land in many cases appears to be worthless."

Further evidence of an overall slump in the economy came with the news that many car manufacturers have been forced to bring in three and four day weeks as the motor industry faces its worst crisis in 30 years.

Article continues at Telegraph Online

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UK property sales drop to lowest level since 1959

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

The number of houses sold in Britain last month fell to its lowest since 1959 as the government's delayed announcement on changes to stamp duty deterred first-time buyers. HM Revenue & Customs said 62,000 houses were sold in August, less than half the figure for a year ago.

The news came as the British Banker's Association revealed mortgage approvals dived 64% in the year to August.

David Dooks, BBA statistics director, said: "The low number of mortgage approvals in previous months predicted lower gross lending in August and, together with remortgaging, a much weaker net lending figure than of late resulted.

"Falling property prices, economic pressures on households, tighter lending criteria and anticipation of the government's announcement on stamp duty all suppressed or delayed demand in August and will continue having an impact."

Mortgage approvals for house purchases tumbled to 21,086 - the lowest since the series started in 1997 and down from 58,564 in August 2007, when mortgage lending had started to slow.

Article continues at Guardian Property

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Brown's property plan boosts housebuilders

Tuesday, September 02, 2008

Shares in housebuilders rose this morning ahead of the launch of a £1bn government plan to help homeowners. Gordon Brown is expected to unveil a package of measures today to revive the ailing housing market targeted at first-time buyers and vulnerable families.

Shares in Taylor Wimpey jumped 7.6%, up 4.25p at 60.25p in early trading. Barratt was up 5.5%, or 8.5p, at 164.5p while Persimmon climbed 3.9%, or 15p to 400.25p. Bovis Homes advanced 3.4%, or 15.5p, to 466.25p and Wolseley rose 7.5p to 468p, an increase of 1.6%, making it the second-biggest riser on the FTSE 100.

However, the FTSE 100 index was down 20.2 points at 5582.7 points, a fall of 0.36%. Energy groups and miners were among the big fallers. Shares in Tullow Oil fell 3.7%, or 29.5p, to 761.5p, the biggest faller on the FTSE 100, while Cairn Energy dropped 3.5%, or 97p, to £27.13.

Energy shares fell amid talk of profit-taking and as US crude dropped to $108.55 a barrel, its lowest level since mid-April, as worries receded over the impact of hurricane Gustav. "There's been a run up in the shares of late with strong earnings and now people are just cashing in," one trader told Reuters.

For more information visit Guardian Online

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House prices slide as average deal yields 90% of asking price

A leading group of property workers has called on the Government to kick start the housing market, as new figures showed that people selling their houses are being forced to cut almost 10 per cent off the asking price to secure a sale.

The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS), said that the Government’s attempts to drag the housing market out of the doldrums have been “limited”, and has made a number of suggestions to kick start activity.

The Government is tomorrow expected to announce a series of new measures to help struggling homeowners and first-time buyers.

Proposals are forecast to include improved support for people facing repossession and shared equity schemes for those trying to get on the property ladder.

Read more at Times Construction news

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Buyers fail to grab bargains as house prices fall

Monday, August 18, 2008

Property bargains are increasing daily as sellers cut their asking prices in an attempt to make wary buyers commit in a slow summer market – but the mortgage drought and a loss of confidence among buyers means that few are taking advantage.

Sellers are asking £5,403 less for their homes than a month ago, with the typical price of a house down, on average, by 2.3 per cent at £229,816, according to a survey on Rightmove, the property search website.

In London, where the market has deteriorated sharply, asking prices have dropped by £21,096, or 5.3 per cent, to an average £379,162 in a month. Prices are down 3.8 per cent in the capital over the past year, compared with 4.8 per cent across the UK.

Despite such reductions, properties appear to be more difficult to sell, with Rightmove-registered agents reporting 78 unsold properties on their books, up from 77 last month. Miles Shipside, a director of Rightmove, said: “Buyers are currently benefiting from the best choice in years.”

Rightmove blames the mortgage drought for the state of the market, adding that transactions are in danger of dropping to levels last seen in 1959.

Despite fears that there could be a surge of properties put on the market as the slumping economy and soaring prices forced more borrowers into difficulties with their mortgages and pushed asking prices even lower, Rightmove says that there is no sign yet of a rush of homes for sale. New listings are 106,000, about 25 per cent lower than typically seen at this time of year. Mr Shipside said: “Those who do not have to sell are holding off.”

Read the full article at Times Online.

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National Association of Estate Agents to create free advertising website

THE trade body that represents hard-pressed estate agents is to create its own free advertising website, a move that threatens to torpedo the business plans of its quoted rival Rightmove.

The National Association of Estate Agents, which represents residential estate agents, is planning to launch Property Live in October and is being supported by its 10,000 members.

The new website could prove devastating to sites such as Rightmove and Findaproperty.com, which charge a monthly subscription of up to £495 to advertise houses and flats on their property portals.

Any further upgrades, such as displaying extra photos, can cost an additional £100 per property.

Article continues at Times Online

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HBOS to prop up builder

Saturday, August 09, 2008

The high-street bank HBOS must inject about £100m of fresh cash into Crest Nicholson in the coming weeks to prevent the housebuilder from breaching banking covenants.

If HBOS, which owns 50% of Crest Nicholson, decides that it is unwilling to support the builder, its investment could be wiped out and the lending banks could step in and take control.

HBOS is also understood to be contemplating bringing in a partner to provide the funding. Hedge funds and private-equity groups are thought to be interested. HBOS has hired debt specialists at Deloitte to assist with the negotiations.

Crest Nicholson, led by chief executive Stephen Stone, was bought in 2007 at the height of the housing boom by Uberior Investments, the private-equity arm of HBOS, and West Coast Capital, the private-equity vehicle of the Scottish retail tycoon Sir Tom Hunter. Their joint venture valued the business at £715m. Hunter is the richest man in Scotland, according to the Sunday Times Rich List.

Article continues at Times Online

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Darling backs away from stamp duty cut

The chancellor, Alistair Darling, is prepared to disappoint millions of would-be home buyers by ruling out proposals to revive the housing market, Treasury insiders warned last night. After a chaotic week of claim and counter-claim about Treasury plans to suspend stamp duty for first-time buyers, Darling has hardened his stance against the move, which he believes could cost billions to little positive effect.

Senior officials said the Chancellor might well take no action to prop up the market in the Pre-Budget Report this autumn. 'Alistair is not going to be buffeted into doing something by headlines,' said one insider. 'If the evidence is there that suspending stamp duty would help, then we will look at it. But at the moment the evidence is not there.'

Although work is under way on a range of options involving possible changes to stamp duty and other measures to help buyers, there is deep scepticism about the idea in the Treasury.

Read more at Guardian Online

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City Slickers running scared but arable land prices reach record high

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

UK farmland prices surged at the fastest pace in the RICS’ rural market survey’s history during the first half of 2008 but lifestyle buyers retreated as the credit crunch deepened.

The farmland market jumped forward, with the average price rising by 24 percent (the fastest pace in the survey’s history) from £10,439 to £12,965 in the first half of 2008 and by 47 percent year on year. Arable land rose by 32 percent to £14,453 from £10,439 and pasture land rose by 16 percent to £11477 from £9929. Sharp increases in commodity prices continue to encourage farm investors to expand production or enter the market as purchasers.

The net balance of Chartered Surveyors reporting an increase in demand for residential farmland fell for the first time since 2005 from 50 percent to -3 percent while demand for non-residential farmland remained buoyant at 65 percent. The net balance of surveyors expecting price rises in residential farmland fell from 30 percent to -25 percent. There is an expectation that lifestyle buyers will continue to retreat while the challenging financial climate persists.

Read more at the RCIS newsroom

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Kier rides property storm to hit profit forecasts

Friday, July 18, 2008

Kier Group, the construction, housebuilding and services group, reassured investors that it would meet full-year profit expectations this morning, despite the mounting woes afflicting the property market.

The company, which this month announced 350 job cuts in its residential division, said it continued to see "little evidence of a slowdown in the markets for construction and support services, both of which continue to perform strongly and have record order books".

The shares, which have fallen by almost 60 per cent over the past 12 months, rose by 35p to 945.5p, up almost 4 per cent.

Kier, which was involved in the construction of the Channel Tunnel rail link, said the mixed fortunes experienced by various parts of the company reinforced the benefit of having a range of businesses operating in different sectors of the market.

In a trading update covering the year to the end of the June, Kier said that the level of tender awards in construction had been "very high" and its strong order books reflected continued demand from both public and private sector clients.

It said the division continued to generate strong cashflows, contributing to a year-end net cash balance for the group of more than £140 million, not far short of the £148 miilion balance this time last year.

Article continues at Times Business Online

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First-time buyer scheme announced

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

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Comment: Housebuilders partied like it was '89. And now the pain is like '91

Monday, July 07, 2008

Housebuilders ploughed on with their growth plans at the top of the market and now they're paying the price, finds Mark Leftly.

Once again, Tony Pidgley, the Barnardo's boy turned multimillionaire residential builder, is set to make a killing out of a property downturn. While his peers at Barratt and Taylor Wimpey were getting ready to announce mass redundancies and desperately trying to shore up their balance sheets in the worst housing crisis since the early 1990s, the 60-year-old chief executive of Berkeley announced two weeks ago that the company would spend £350m on cheap land.

Berkeley board members had noted a 25 per cent fall in land prices, so decided to go buying in a move that in effect calls the bottom of the market. Pidgley made the same call in 1991, making him something of a legend in the close-knit world of housebuilding. "By and large the reaction from our shareholders has been first class," says Mr Pidgley, with the biggest of smiles. "The vast majority of them trust the management."

Investors in housebuilding's "big three" – Taylor Wimpey, Barratt Developments and Persimmon – have been far less trusting: their share prices have all lost more than 80 per cent of their value in the past year.

For Mr Pidgley, the game is simple: a decade of uninterrupted growth should have meant that builders had enough cash stashed away for the fall that was bound to occur in such a cyclical industry.

"The City pushes for more and more – turnover growth, profit growth – and it rewards managers if they achieve that," sighs a source. "But the industry is not scaleable; housebuilding needs discipline."

Mark Clare and Peter Redfern, the chief executives of Barratt and Taylor Wimpey respectively, believed that the industry was scaleable – that it was ripe for consolidation. Last year Barratt bought rival Wilson Bowden for £2.2bn, while Taylor Woodrow and Wimpey merged, creating two FTSE 100 forces.

Former directors at Barratt were not convinced by the strategy; the company hadn't made a big acquisition in two decades. Last week their doubts only grew stronger as the company, burdened by £1.7bn of debt, announced 1,000 people would go from its 6,700-strong workforce.

Leslie Kent, a director and analyst at broker FinnCap, says Barratt's decision to buy Wilson Bowden at the top of the market has caused its current plight. "It paid 22 quid for every 11 quid of assets," he points out.

The falling values of those assets and the decline in house sales meant Barratt was in serious danger of breaching its banking covenants. However, a trading statement this week is expected to confirm that Mr Clare has managed to find £400m of fresh debt to help finance repayment of the Wilson Bowden acquisition. He should also announce that he has negotiated a relaxation of Barratt's covenants.

Taylor Wimpey's problems run even deeper. On Monday the board confirmed speculation it had changed the terms of its credit facility – on the condition it raised equity. By Wednesday this capital raising was in chaos when a trading statement reported that negotiations with investors had not led to "a satisfactory transaction". If the situation is not resolved, or house prices don't rise dramatically, Taylor Wimpey will next year find itself in breach of "one or more" of its banking covenants, the statement added.

"The Taylor Wimpey stuff is really scary," says a property banker who is also a veteran of the 1990s crash.

Mr Kent at FinnCap adds that Taylor Wimpey's woes have been exacerbated by the way in which the merger was completed. Under accounting rules, one party had to be viewed as the acquirer and Taylor Woodrow was accorded that honour, with the result that Wimpey's land bank was valued at 2007 prices. As this was the peak of the market, that value have since fallen heavily, hurting the balance sheet.

"Builders that haven't made big acquisitions will find their land revaluations will not be in the same order of magnitude," says Mr Kent, before hinting that this won't necessarily protect their share prices. "The stock market takes no prisoners; all housebuilders are tarred with the same brush."

Article continues at The Independent

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99 percent of house buyers could benefit under RICS stamp duty proposal

Friday, July 04, 2008

The UK Government must overhaul stamp duty land tax radically to create a fairer system for consumers, says RICS (Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors). Proposing a system that would benefit 99 percent of home buyers, RICS called on the Government to find a way of implementing the policy, which will provide a boost to the economy and the faltering housing market.

RICS proposes the abolition of the existing slab tax system*, replacing it with a two tier marginal tax system. No one will pay stamp duty on the first £150,000 of a house price. Above this value a 2.5 percent marginal rate would be charged on every pound up to £250,000, with a 5 percent marginal rate applying to every pound thereafter.

Everyone purchasing a home under £1 million will pay less stamp duty, benefiting 99 percent of all prospective homeowners. Currently, a buyer looking to purchase a £270,000 property will pay £8,100 in stamp duty. Under the RICS proposal they will now pay only £3,500, a saving of £4,600 making the property market more accessible, especially for those first time buyers struggling to pull together the funds needed to get on the property ladder.

With transaction levels plummeting first time buyers have been hardest hit seeing their home ownership dreams evaporate. With long-term house price rises outstripping wage inflation, food and fuel bills rising, and tighter lending criteria being applied by mortgage companies, the residential property market is becoming more inaccessible.

RICS Director of External Affairs, Gillian Charlesworth said:

“After having mortgages pulled from beneath their feet from lenders facing the full brunt of the credit crunch, consumers are looking to the Government for help. HM Treasury needs to find a way to implement this policy or, if they can’t do this imminently, to introduce a stamp duty holiday that will get the market moving.”


Initially the RICS proposal will reduce Government revenue by up to 24 percent, but given the 40 percent rise in stamp duty revenue in recent years (up from £4.6 billion in 2005/06 to £6.45 billion in 2006/07) there is room for the Government to manoeuvre.

The RICS proposal for Stamp duty land tax

• Slab tax system reformed to a two tier marginal tax system that reduces barriers to vast majority of homebuyers moving onto or through the market
• No-one pays SDLT on first £150,000 of home purchase
• 2.5 percent marginal rate on the value of homes between £150,000 and £250,000
• 5 percent marginal rate on the value of homes over £250,000
• The thresholds for stamp duty rates should then be annually indexed, reflecting house price growth and inflation
• Everyone purchasing a home up to £1million would pay less stamp duty
• Purchasers of the most expensive homes would pay more stamp duty. However, the increases are relatively minimal – the SDLT bill on a £1.5m home would only be 8% higher in total (£5,000 extra).
• Government would initially lose up to 24 percent of revenue.

Read more at the RICS newsroom

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BBC presenter: media to blame on house prices

The former BBC economics editor Evan Davis said yesterday that journalists could have done more to warn the public about the credit crunch that triggered the current housing price crash and general financial turmoil.

Davis, now a presenter on BBC Radio 4's Today, said the media may have helped to drive up the market by over-reporting statistics on rising house prices in the runup to the credit crunch crisis.

"I do ask whether we did our best to warn people of impending problems during the upswing of the [economic] cycle," Davis said at the Radio Festival in Glasgow yesterday.

"My line is, 'My God, we tried', but when everything is going well people don't want to hear it. We suffered from giving warnings a bit too early in the whole cycle.

"If, like me, you were saying in 2002-03, 'Remember folks, house prices can go down as well as up', by 2005 that warning was beginning to lose a bit of credibility," he added.

"We did warn them but didn't warn sufficiently loudly or clearly, and might have warned a little too early."

Davis, who was interviewed by his BBC colleague Jeremy Vine in Glasgow, said the media may also have helped inflate the market by reporting on every new house price survey - even when several of them were coming out in the same week.

"There was a period when online - not just online and not just the BBC - when house price stories were very interesting," he added.

"If you report the same thing five times then it sounds like they are going up even more. We in the end drive these things up just as the media did in the dotcom boom."

Read more in Guardian Housing news

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House prices fall as sellers 'recognise market realities'

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Homeowners have started to drop their asking prices as the reality of the downturn in the housing market hits home, a report out today shows.

The property website Rightmove said the average house price fell 1.2% to £239,564 in June, from £242,500 in May, and further reductions would be required to sell homes where there was an oversupply. It suggested what buyers could afford would continue to deteriorate because of rising living costs and higher mortgage rates due to the credit crunch.

Miles Shipside, commercial director of Rightmove, said: "For most sellers that will mean whatever they thought of asking for their property at the peak of the boom, they need to take at least 10% off. Otherwise their property will stagnate.

"In spite of the lowest housing transactions for 30 years, new sellers had been coming to the market asking record prices. It was a mad state of affairs that defied the laws of economics. Thankfully, new sellers are now taking some proactive steps to price more realistically from the outset to attract increasingly hard-pressed buyers."

The biggest drop in house prices was in the south-east, where they dropped 2.4% to £303,828 in June. In the south-west they decreased 2.2% to an average £258,696. Prices fell 1.6% to £225,565 in East Anglia and 1.4% to £399,010 in Greater London.

Although asking prices rose in the north, the West Midlands and Wales, these areas have seen some of the steepest price falls in previous months, with average asking prices 3% lower in the West Midlands than they were a year ago, and 2.6% lower in Wales.

The lack of buyers is widely blamed on tighter mortgage lending conditions.
The Council of Mortgage Lenders said that lending almost halved during the first quarter of 2008, resulting in 142,300 mortgages.

Halifax, Britain's biggest mortgage lender, announced last week that it would raise its fixed rates on loans by half a percentage point - the 20th time it has changed its rates since the start of the year.

Homeowners who have more than 25% equity in their houses face an increase on a two-year fixed-rate mortgage from 6.49% to 6.99%. On a £150,000 home loan, this adds £47 a month to repayments.

The increase follows similar moves from several rivals in the past week, including First Direct, which raised what had been the cheapest fixed rate on the market.

The number of properties for sale in the UK now outweighs the number of buyers by over six to one. There are 25% more properties on the market than six months ago, which means that 1 million sellers are competing for just 150,000 buyers.

Average unsold stock per agency branch rose to a record 75 homes, up from 73 the previous month.

Rightmove used the asking prices of up to 200,000 properties for its figures.

Read more at Guardian Money

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Barratt shares soar on report of bank deal

Shares in Barratt Developments soared yesterday after reports that the embattled housebuilder had reached a deal with banks to put its finances on a firmer footing.

The company's shares jumped more than 25 per cent after Building magazine reported that the housebuilder had reached an agreement with banks to waive a clause that would have put Barratt in breach of its banking covenants after a land valuation writedown later this year.

Analysts said the reported deal was a encouraging sign that banks would help not to allow housebuilders to break their covenants.

The agreement would make other refinancing options that have been mooted in recent weeks, such as a debt-equity swap or a share issue, much less likely for the sector's most indebted.
It was reported that the waiver would remain until Barratt had repaid the remaining £400million it borrowed to fund the £2.2billion acquisition of Wilson Bowden in February last year, and that it has until the 2011 to do so.

The banks - Royal Bank of Scotland, UBS, HSBC and Lloyds - joined Barratt in saying that they would not comment on the reports but the housebuilder confirmed that talks were continuing.

A Barratt spokesman said: “We continue to have constructive discussions with all of the banks and have nothing to add to our statement from last week.”

However, sources close to the talks played down the reports, saying no such deal had been made yet.

That did not stop the speculation sending shares in Barratt soaring, with other rivals such as Persimmon and Taylor Wimpey also seeing rises close to double digits on the back of the market rumours.

Shares in Barratt closed up 12 per cent, or 9.5p, to 87.75p.

The possible deal was first suggested last week when Mark Clare, the chief executive, said he believed “we could get some sort of waiver” from banks allowing limits to be breached temporarily while the company looked to secure funding from sales or from investors.

Despite the jump in price, Barratt's shares are currently worth a tenth of their value a year ago.

Original story from Times Business

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Don't bite the 'magic bullet': beware of quick fixes if you fall behind on your mortgage

Saturday, June 14, 2008

More and more households are hitting trouble with their debts, says Julian Knight, but there are better solutions than IVAs or sale and rent-back.

People feel the bills mounting up and then they are falling behind with their mortgage. Often they do not face up to it until they are being taken to court. Sadly in about one in five cases we advise on, we have to tell people they will lose their home."

These are the words of Frances Walker at debt charity the Consumer Credit Counselling Service (CCCS), which recently launched a helpline for people in mortgage trouble (0800 138 1111) as the rising cost of living drains their resources. Likewise, the National Debtline charity reports a 23 per cent rise over the past year in the number of people coming to it citing mortgage arrears.

Paul Mullins, chief executive at National Debtline, says some lenders, facing the new reality of falling house prices and tighter personal finances, are now giving people in mortgage difficulties a more sympathetic hearing: "Attitudes have changed from a couple of years ago. The lenders know that, in the current market, they won't get much for a property repossessed and then sold at auction."

But Ms Walker says that lenders – particularly in the sub-prime market – are still expecting too much of those in debt difficulty, applying pressure and loading late- payment penalty charges.

Under these circumstances, it's easy to see how the old maxim "desperate times call for desperate measures" might appeal to some borrowers. However, some of the radical solutions available to people in arrears can often backfire. In particular, critics have rounded on providers of individual voluntary arrangements (IVAs) and sale and rent-back schemes.

In recent years, more and more people have taken out an IVA – a type of insolvency where the debtor agrees with his creditors to repay a certain percentage of his borrowings over a set period. Sometimes, up to 75 per cent of the debt can be written off. However, IVAs are highly controversial because the firms that act as go-between often charge hefty fees and impose penalties for missed repayments. Some in the banking and debt charity sectors have also accused IVA providers of in effect mis-selling the products, persuading people to sign up when other options may be better.

All in all, says Mr Mullins, this is not a "magic bullet" solution. "If you can't pay your mortgage, an IVA won't help. Your lender has a secured charge against your property which an IVA can't get you out of. You may be able to reduce your outgoings through an IVA so you can better concentrate on the mortgage, but in reality it is unlikely to work like that."

Even greater problems can arise for those tempted by sale and rent-back. These schemes promise to pay a proportion of a home's value, normally around 70 per cent, so quick cash is obtained to pay off the mortgage company. At the same time, the seller is offered the chance to remain in the property as a tenant for at least 12 months. But Ms Walker says the CCCS does not recommend sale and rent-back to as it is "completely unregulated".

Even those in the industry acknowledge there are big pitfalls. "For starters, sellers are offered around 70 per cent of what is, in effect, the purchaser's own valuation of the property," says Dougie Lister, chief executive of sale and rent-back firm the UK Housing Alliance. "What's to stop the valuation being under the odds. In addition, most only offer a 12-month agreement, at the end of which they can chuck the tenant out." He adds that his firm offers 10- year tenancies and uses independent valuers.

So what can people in arrears do? The truth is that this is a long slog, and Mr Mullins offers the following tips: "First look at your income – are there any benefits or tax credits you're not claiming? If you have a spare room, rent it out. Then draw up an expenditure budget; you can show this to your lender and, as a last resort, you may want to ask it to extend your mortgage term." However, this will mean more interest will have to be paid. An alternative is to ask for a payment holiday. "This is a temporary halt designed to give the borrower some breathing space to sort out their finances," adds Mr Mullins. But it's completely at the lender's discretion whether they grant a holiday or not."

Unfortunately, no matter how proactive borrowers are, they are at the mercy of their lender. "Attitudes vary markedly," says Ms Walker. Some lenders expect arrears to be paid back – as well as the normal monthly repayments kept up – within a year. Others will allow longer."

And some lenders, she adds, are quicker than others to go for the nuclear option. "We hear of cases where people have only been in arrears for a short period and repossession proceedings are started. But as a rule, around three months is when lenders get very serious."

According to Mr Mullins, lenders that do rush for repossession are likely to get short shift, but only if the borrower acts. "Courts want people to stay in their homes and don't look kindly on lenders that want to repossess after a month or two of arrears. The problem is that fewer than half of people who face repossession turn up for the hearing. The courts allow 85 per cent of people who do turn up to remain in their homes."

Read more here.

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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.

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Property trends: ‘the best sells, the rest sticks’

Owners of poorly maintained homes or those in scruffy neighbourhoods must slash their prices by as much a fifth if they want to find a buyer. But, despite the downturn, grander properties in most upscale locations are still selling for more their original asking price, according to research from Savills conducted for The Times.

The only exception to this ‘the best sells, the rest sticks’ trend, is those properties between £1 million to £2 million in London’s smartest postcodes, favoured by City executives.

Job losses in the Square Mile and Canary Wharf mean that any owner who needs to move quickly must accept a price at least 6 per cent lower than at the height of the boom in 2007.

Simon Edwards of Savills, Hampstead said: “A year ago you could put a house on the market for £1 million and sell it for £1.05 million. Now it would probably make £950,000. That £100,000 difference effectively means a 10 per fall in prices.”

‘Blighted’ homes, those that are unmodernised, or in lower grade locations in all parts of England are changing hands at prices 6 per cent to 20 per cent lower than a year ago.

This would suggest that the market has fallen more sharply than the major property prices indices indicate. Halifax figures out yesterday reported a 3.8 per cent since May 2007.

However, some sectors are relatively immune, with what Savills terms ‘best in class’ homes in all price brackets still buoyant. If you want to dispose of a £2 million-plus property in the Midlands or the North, you should find a ready buyer and expect to pocket more cash than a year ago.

Original article here.

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Housebuilders see £11bn wiped off value in 12 months

The stock market value of British housebuilders has plunged by £11.34 billion in just 12 months and is set to fall further after two investment banks warned today the housing market downturn will descend to levels last seen in the early 1990s.

Barratt Developments emerged as the sector's hardest hit company for the second day, after its share slumped by 26 per cent.

Barratt, which is now worth just £300 million but has debts of £1.7 billion after its acquistion of Wilson Bowden last year, is expected to seek emergency funding, possibly through a debt-for-equity swap.

Barratt is now worth less than a tenth of its peak stock market value.
Taylor Wimpey, the UK's third largest builder by volume and the result of the combination of Taylor Woodrow and George Wimpey, also plummeted by 20 per cent.

The losses compounded heavy share price falls yesterday, which wiped £400 million of the market value of the builders. Since last June, the housebuilding sector, then worth £15 billion, has seen its shares plunge by 76 per cent.

Shares in Persimmon, the last remaining housebuilder in the FTSE 100, were also down 9 per cent in early trading to 353p, their lowest point for five years. Persimmon faces ejection from the FTSE later today.

Berkeley Group shares also slid 9 per cent to 666p after Goldman Sachs reduced its recommendation on the UK housebuilder to "sell" from "neutral" and dramatically slashed its target price from 819.9p to 582.3p.

Analysts at Merrill Lynch said: "The early 1990s housing market has increasing relevance as a comparator."

They added: "There is growing evidence of consumers how behaving in a manner similar to that seen in the early 1990s, in that concerns over job security and falling house prices are leading to a reluctance to make a house purchase."

Merrill Lynch downgraded six housebuilders in the sector - cutting Barratt Developments, Bellway, Berkeley, Galliford Try and Redrow from "neutral" to "underperform", while Persimmon was moved to "neutral" from "buy", traders said.

There are fears that many housebuilders will be forced to make dramatic writedowns. In the early 1990s, housebuilders wrote down 30 per cent of their value - about £1.3 billion - and many of them needed more than one writedown before their net asset value stabilised.

The sector has been squeezed by banks tightening up on mortgage lending following the credit crunch, hitting the housing market. Many builders have put projects on hold, as willing buyers have dried up, and are laying off staff, while concerns are mounting in the City that many will have to ask shareholders for cash to strengthen their finances.

Housebuilders have also become a target for “short-sellers” who hope to profit from falling share prices. According toresearch from Data Explorers, which monitors short positions in the market, more than 23 per cent of Bovis shares are on loan with “short” investors, followed by 19 per cent for Persimmon and almost 18 per cent for Redrow.

Latest figures from the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors, out yesterday, said agents sold an average of just 17.4 properties each during the three months to the end of May, the lowest figure since it began collecting data in 1978.

Merrill Lynch has turned its focus on unemployment levels saying that they will be critical to determining consumer confidence and housing transaction levels, as was the case in the early 1990s recession. The broker suspects that rising unemployment will put additional pressure on housing transaction volumes.

It believes that there will be 10 per cent fewer house sales than last year and that prices will fall by 10 per cent.

"We believe we have gone beyond the tipping point and are now clearly seeing a UK housing market being squeezed on opposing fronts - by a lack both of willing lenders, as well as willing purchasers," the bank wrote.

It suggests that housebuilders are entering a prolonged period of underperformance, with a downturn likely to persist over the next three years.

"We are inclined to believe that if 1988-89 corresponds to 2007-08, than 1990-91 would correspond to 2009-10," Merrill Lynch said.

After the early 1990s recession, house prices did not start to recover until 1994.

Original Story from Times Business Online.

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Home Improvement costs up by 20%

Wednesday, June 04, 2008

The rising costs of transport and raw materials and a shortage of tradesmen is pushing up the costs of home improvements, according to new figures by RICS’ Building Cost Information Service (BCIS).

BCIS’ updated Property Makeover Price Guide gives homeowners an accurate guide to what they should expect to pay for home improvements. It has found the average cost of improvement work has risen by 20% over the past two years for a number of reasons.

No longer can homeowners pick and choose from the glut of quality EU tradesmen as the number of central and eastern European nationals returning to their native countries is on the rise. With half of the estimated one million British based Poles having already left the UK,competition for labour is pushing up costs.

The upward trend in oil prices is continuing to fuel the rising cost of transport, with forecasters predicting oil to rise to $200 US (£100) per barrel in the next few years, some experts are predicting this to have more impact on economies than the credit crunch crisis.

Global demand for raw materials remains at an all time high, with emerging giants like China and India showing no signs of a slowdown, commodity prices will remain high for years to come. This is no more evident than in the various trades where the cost of materials have pushed up the overall costs. Roofing costs have risen by 26%, plumbing and electric work by 22% and painting has risen by 17%, all outstripping inflation over the past two years.

BCIS Executive Director, Joe Martin, said: “The downturn in housing is forcing some homeowners to become more creative in meeting their needs. Many are choosing to stay put and renovate or extend in order to upgrade their property. This can be a wise strategy as home improvements add value to a property, and people will be well placed to take advantage of this uplift in value when the market shrugs off the current slump.

"Given that the cost of home improvements rose by 20% over the past two years compared with only eight percent in average wage growth, many homeowners are opting to act now rather than paying more further down the track."

Relevant Links:
www.bcis.co.uk

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Fall in house prices 'welcomed'

Friday, May 16, 2008

More people want house prices to fall than to rise, BBC research has found.

That is the surprise finding of the first poll to test the assumption that house price falls are unpopular and therefore politically damaging.

Barely a fifth of people want house prices to rise - fewer than the number of people who want them to fall.

The poll of 1,005 people, commissioned by the BBC, found that only 22% said they wanted prices to go up while 28% said they wanted house prices to fall.

The poll, carried out by ICM, canvassed people over a three-day period from 25 to 27 April.

'Crashproof'

Nearly half of the people who responded, or 46%, said they wanted them to stay the same. The findings cast doubt on whether the political and economic damage done by falling prices is as serious as has been feared.

The poll was commissioned after makers of the BBC2 TV series The Truth About Property came across a surprisingly large number of people who wanted house prices to drop.

The first part of the series investigates the extent to which Britain's homeowners are "crashproof" - meaning they could withstand or even benefit from price falls.

What people in Cambridge think about house prices
Price falls bring economic benefits not just to first-time buyers but to any homeowner who wants to trade up to a larger or more valuable property.

The price of the place they are selling may fall. But, all else being equal, the more valuable property they want to buy will fall by a larger amount - meaning they have to borrow less to "climb" the property ladder.

Confidence knocked?

Economists are concerned that if prices fall too quickly it may knock consumer confidence, already at its lowest for 15 years, leading to reduced spending that could worsen the current economic slowdown.

But another finding for the programme questions whether it is house price falls that have damaged consumer confidence - as opposed to other factors such as food, fuel and mortgage payments.

Respondents were asked if a fall in house prices of more than 10% would make them more likely to cut back on household spending such as clothes, leisure and groceries.

More than 60% of people said it would either make no difference or would make them likely to spend more.

Only a minority - 38% - said it would make them more likely to cut back.

Nearly a third of homeowners have no mortgage on their homes - meaning no risk of negative equity.

And the programme reveals to what extent house prices would have to fall to put the average borrower in negative equity.

The Truth About Property is broadcast on Monday, 12 May and Tuesday, 13 May at 2000 on BBC Two.

For more info see the original BBC article.

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UK house market by numbers

Sunday, May 11, 2008

With so much media speculation about a housing slump and the dreaded credit crunch, we thought it might be useful to do a feature with just plain simple facts. With that in mind here's an overview of the current state of play in the UK housing market:

Average Cost: £218,594
Detached: £342,895
Semi-detached: £197,833
Terraced: £174,208
Flat: £201,424
Change in last quarter: -1.65%
Change in last year: +3.7%
Sales: 167,050

Figures courtesy of the BBC.

For more data on the mortgage market, see the results of a new Times survey, published this week.

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Scotland house market defies price downturn

Sunday, May 04, 2008

Knight Frank report says average prices rose 13% over the past year; compared to 5% British average.

THE Scottish housing market is set to defy the credit crunch and will continue to outperform the rest of the UK, according to a new report.

High rates of employment in the financial sector and sustained demand among young professionals for mid-priced city centre homes should mean that Scotland will escape “relatively unscathed” from the turbulence in the global financial markets, according to the study by estate agents Knight Frank.

The firm's analysis of house prices over the past year has revealed that they rose by 13% in Scotland, the biggest increase outside Greater London. Across the UK, the average price rise was 5.2%. The cost of new homes in Scotland rose by 20%.

While the credit crunch caused by subprime lending in America will dampen the market, the report predicts that prices in Scotland will continue to rise this year, bucking the trend across the rest of the UK.

Knight Frank's Scottish residential review predicts average house price inflation of 1% in Scotland, while prices elsewhere are expected to fall by an average of 3%.

“In Scotland the market is not as volatile as the rest of the UK, it doesn't have the same boom and bust culture,” said Liam Bailey, Knight Frank's head of residential research, who compiled the report.

“You don't tend to get the kind of speculation you get in the rest of the UK and that makes Scotland a healthier market.

“At best price growth will be 2-3% for this year and sales volumes will be down about 20%, but it's not a crisis.”

Bailey said a number of factors would protect the Scottish housing market from the downturn predicted for the rest of the UK.

These include the greater availability of social housing, fewer owner-occupiers, the strength of the financial sector - where the number of people employed directly has increased by over a third over the past seven years to more than 113,000 - and higher levels of employment.

The proportion of people of working age in employment rose in Scotland to 76.5% last year, 2% above the UK rate.

Gwilym Price, professor of urban economics and social statistics at Glasgow University and chairman of the Scottish Housing Economics and Finance Network, is in agreement with the report's findings: “The credit crunch is very new territory and difficult to anticipate but I don't think we will see a house price crash in Scotland,” he said.

Original article posted on TimesOnline

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How to buy a bargain home in a slowdown

Taking the temperature of the property market can be a tricky but when estate agents talk of a buyers' market those hoping to bag a good deal should listen up.

With agents dropping prices, auctioneers setting lower reserves and a slump in property confidence taking hold, buyers are now firmly in the driving seat

Experts agree the heat has gone from the property market, after two robust years of price rises following the mini-slowdown of 2005.

The National Association of Estate Agents reported just five homes per agent were sold on average in December 2007, compared to eight per agent in December 2006.

Putting a positive spin on the slowdown, it said: 'For those choosing to enter the market now, there is plenty of opportunity.'

However, if buyers can purchase without over reaching themselves and are willing to accept their asset may dip in value, the upcoming months represent an opportunity to test a soft market and perhaps bag a bargain home.

Full article continues at thisismoney.com

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Will housing crush the UK economy?

RECENT DAYS have witnessed some extraordinary developments, most of them from the Bank of England. Time was when months would go by without a peep from the Old Lady. Now it has become a news-generating machine that Max Clifford would be proud of.

Development one was Mervyn King’s attack on the City’s reward culture, which many will applaud, though some would say a bit of performance-related incentive is a good thing. The governor’s salary of just under £282,000 — small in relation to many City salaries though with a pension pot of nearly £4m — rises 2% a year, come what may. That gives him an incentive to keep inflation on target but doesn’t reward or punish him beyond that.

Development two was a speech by David “Danny” Blanchflower, one of King’s colleagues on the Bank’s monetary policy committee (MPC). This was, it is safe to say, the most doom-laden speech ever from a UK policymaker, warning that Britain was likely to follow America into recession (whether the US is in recession is still open for debate after first-quarter numbers showed growth), that a fall in house prices of a third in two to three years “does not seem implausible” and the risk of something “horrible” arising from the credit crunch was significant.

Compared with the coded language normally adopted by anybody with anything to do with the Bank, this was a revelation. Blanchflower spends half his time in America and that may explain his gloom, but even there central bankers are a bit more guarded in their language. I am surprised this one got past the censors.

“Developments in the UK are starting to look eerily similar to those in the US six months or so ago,” he said. “There has been no decoupling of the two economies: contagion is in the air. The US sneezed and the UK is rapidly catching its cold.” I’ll return to that.

Development three, hard on the heels of this blood-curdling warning, was the apparent declaration from the Bank that the credit crisis was over and that banks should come out of their shells and start lending again.

This was not quite what its financial stability report was saying: that some gloom in financial markets may have been overdone, in that the scale of losses assumed in US sub-prime assets, a 40% default, looks too pessimistic. Financial markets are assuming many such assets are worth nothing, while on conservative assumptions, and allowing for further falls in American house prices, they are worth something.

Article continues at TimesOnline

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