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Foundations laid for a housing recovery

Figures from the UK's mortgage lenders suggest the worst may be over. Richard Northedge reports

It's time to start practising chatting about house prices again, as figures showing UK property inflation heading quickly towards double digits will be announced this week. The remarkable recovery in property values will see the annual change in prices turn from an 18 per cent fall to a 10 per cent increase in less than a year.

Halifax, the country's biggest mortgage lender, calculates prices are currently 4.7 per cent lower than in October 2008 but it expects that to turn into a double-digit increase by next April. Rival Nationwide building society recorded a year-on-year increase of nearly 2 per cent last month after consistently recording annual decreases in house prices every month since March 2008. But figures from the society to be published on Tuesday will mark the start of a rapid rise in the rate over the next few months.

The duo will publish their house price indices this week, both forecasting a 10 per cent annual increase by February or sooner .

News of the housing inflation rate turning suddenly from a large negative figure to a positive increase that will rise steeply may give a further fillip to the property market ahead of the general election. However, estate agents and lenders are warning that the recovery could be followed by a new, short-term dip in prices.

The sharp change in direction of the property market means that while the latest slump was deeper than the fall in prices during the 1990s, it has been much shorter.

House prices fell for more than six years from 1989 to 1995 and took another 21 months to rise by 10 per cent. By contrast, the latest slump lasted just 19 months; according to Nationwide, the 10 per cent recovery should be achieved in less than a year.

However, while prices fell by only 13 per cent during the long 1990s slump, the market crashed by 23 per cent between the start of the credit crunch in July 2007 and last February, when prices bottomed.

As recently as April, the Halifax recorded the annual fall at 17.7 per cent, but low interest rates and a shortage of homes for sale have helped fuel a sharp upturn. Chartered surveyor Michael Day of Integra Property Services says: "This shortage of supply remains a key issue and has helped fuel the positive direction seen on house prices in recent months."

An increase in homes for sale is expected to ease the upward pressure on prices, though. Yolande Barnes, the head of research at Savills estate agency, forecasts prices could retreat again by up to 6.6 per cent by the middle of 2010. "We'll see a big bounce off the bottom by March next year but we think that by June the market will be showing small falls," she says.

The public remains conservative on the prospects for prices too, even though the market is rising. Although Nationwide's regular consumer confidence survey has shown a steady improvement in expectations for house prices over the past year, about 60 per cent or people still say prices will be unchanged in six months' time and the average forecast is for just a 1 per cent rise by next spring.

The building society's chief economist, Martin Gahbauer, says: "House price expectations can often be an important short-term driver of house prices and market activity because rising price expectations provide an incentive for potential buyers to bring forward their purchases. Indeed, the sharp drop in prices experienced in 2008 was preceded by a significant drop in consumer expectations for house price inflation."

But he admits that in recent months, actual house price inflation has moved ahead of consumer expectations, and he suggests that could signal a period when prices moderate. The rate of increase has already slowed since the summer: compared with price rises of 1.4 per cent a month then, October's increase was just 0.4 per cent and falls in some coming months are possible.

Even a small increase in the coming months, however, would now take the annual rate to 10 per cent.

Ms Barnes says the market has been driven by cash this year with buyers withdrawing savings and parents again contributing to children's purchases. "Low interest on deposits makes property look attractive," she says. "Cash-driven markets tend to bounce much more and the whole of the mainstream market has been more like the prime market, which is cash driven."

Nationwide believes interest rates will be unchanged throughout 2010 and Mr Gahbauer says: "As a result, mortgage affordability will remain relatively favourable both for new and existing borrowers."

But while politicians will be watching the housing market in the early months of next year to see if it provides a feelgood factor that could influence the general election, the campaign could itself damage a recovery, warn estate agents.

Mr Day says: "There are two major one-off factors that will impact on the market in 2010 – the general election and the World Cup. Both will see periods of slower activity as people get deflected from their normal activities.

"The Tories have said they will scrap home information packs – HIPs – if they are elected and this is likely to add to the usual pre-election market stagnation as potential sellers wait to see what happens before committing themselves."

Ms Barnes agrees. "It's not rational, but people tend to put things off with elections. They postpone their decisions, but the election could be the catalyst for things to change."

The fear of higher taxes and spending cuts affecting jobs in the public sector and at government contractors are factors that could influence buying decisions. But unemployment has risen more slowly than many expected and the Council for Mortgage Lenders this month reduced its forecast for the number of home repossessions from 75,000 to 48,000 during the year.

That contrasts sharply with the last housing slump. The fundamentals of the market were very different then, says Ms Barnes. "There was just not the cash around to drive the market or the rationing of mortgages. In the 1990s it took a long time to unravel. There was an extraordinary amount of household default; interest rates were high and people could not afford to pay the mortgage. This time it's about the availability of credit, not the cost of credit."

There are indications that mortgage availability has improved markedly, with lenders now advancing a greater proportion of property prices. The 42,000 home loans given last month were double the total in October 2008, according to figures calculated by the British Bankers' Association last week, just 6 per cent less than when the market started to weaken two years ago. And the average loan, at £142,000, is 11 per cent higher than a year earlier.

The ending of the relaxation of stamp duty rules next month is not expected to hit the market seriously, however. The Government temporarily lowered the tax threshold in September 2008 to exempt all properties priced below £175,000. The 12-month scheme was extended until the end of the year, after which the 1 per cent tax will again apply to homes costing above £125,000, with the higher-rate stamp duty continuing to be paid on properties above £250,000.

Falling house prices meant that although £175,000 was roughly the price of an average home when the concession was announced, most sales have been tax-free since then. The average property piece fell below £150,000 earlier this year, according to the Nationwide, and is still well below the temporary threshold.

The building society calculates the average price at £162,000 now, but Ms Barnes sees that heading back to almost £200,000 in five years, some 7.5 per cent higher than the peak of two years ago.

After next year's blip she forecasts modest price growth of 2.7 per cent next year but says: "The longer-term prognosis is for a return to price growth in mainstream markets, with the average UK house values expected to rise by 27 per cent over the period 2012 to 2015."

Expert Views

‘The general election and the World Cup will impact on the 2010 market’

Michael Day, Integra Property Service

‘Rising price expectations are an incentive to bring forward purchases’

Martin Gahbauer, Nationwide

‘We’ll see a big bounce by March but by June the market will show small falls’

Yolande Barnes, Savills

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Comments

ROTFL
[info]stevieyorkshire wrote:
Sunday, 29 November 2009 at 04:37 pm (UTC)
This is a serious newspaper is it?
[info]turnbull2000 wrote:
Sunday, 29 November 2009 at 06:51 pm (UTC)
The sooner the newspapers that peddle this digusting "house price inflation good" mantra go bust, the better. A new generation of potential young readers should be resentful of the likes of the Indy, Times and Daily Express, three of the worst peddlers. This article is truly vile.
Future apologies
[info]np57np wrote:
Sunday, 29 November 2009 at 06:58 pm (UTC)
Will this paper apologise in 2 years when prices have dropped through the floor.
The second crunch is building again, and Brown won't have the money to provide a fake economy like now.
Mad
[info]brit1664 wrote:
Sunday, 29 November 2009 at 07:02 pm (UTC)
Sorry but haven't we had a decade of housing fraud, gift deposits, easy credit, high risk gearing by investors. We created a mass housing bubble that has only partially burst only to be csaved by crashing interest rates to nothing.

Well the truth is the housing collapse is far from over and low interest rates just delay the crash to normal levels. Remember housing typically goes up with inflation and to do that you have to invest money in its maintance. To get sustainable price increases above inflation you have to add value. These above inflation price rises you expert talks about are mearly trying to encourage speculation rather than sustainable economics. We saw how we had rapid repossesions with rates at only 5%, now experts predicting foundations for recoverywhen housing is still well above value and rates are so low as our economy tinkers on the abyss is a joke.

International housing bubbles such as the UK, Spain and Dubai are highly vulnerable and resulting in 100's of billions of loses for banks still and in the future.

These foundations are built on quick sand.
hate to agree
[info]dnjc wrote:
Sunday, 29 November 2009 at 07:29 pm (UTC)
i do think the Independent has a track record for being over positive about housing. It is hard to find the facts in this article to back up the bold statements. What a shame the indi does not have better educated writers.
Re: hate to agree
[info]stevieyorkshire wrote:
Sunday, 29 November 2009 at 07:50 pm (UTC)
positive?

Rising house prices are bad news for 50% of the people involved in the transaction. Describing rising prices = good, lower prices = bad is juvenile in the extreme. Without exaggeration, this article is what I would expect of a ten year old child. The lack of economic awareness and the lack of objectivity are astonishing. The writer has chosen to interview representatives of three organisations with a very obvious vested interest in rising prices to back up his thesis, which is built on distorted, ridiculous and puerile arguments.
You are a joke Mr Northedge. Resign.
[info]stevieyorkshire wrote:
Sunday, 29 November 2009 at 07:54 pm (UTC)
Quoted from Sybil13@hpc:

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/money/property_and_mortgages/article6926451.ece

".....On Friday, Nationwide, the UK�s biggest building society, said in its interim results that it expects prices to fall next year....
......Halifax forecasts house prices will be unchanged in 2010. However, Martin Ellis, its chief economist, said that �clearly there is ... risk [of house prices falls], for example, if we do not emerge from recession�. ......"

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/8369848.stm

"Nationwide Building Society has reported a big slump in profits and delivered a gloomy forecast for the UK economy and the housing market"
rotten foundations for HPI
[info]mark3939 wrote:
Sunday, 29 November 2009 at 07:55 pm (UTC)
Printing �200bn and 0.5% interest rates is a no brainer why houses are shooting up but this driver is not solid foundations for a recovery its a speculative one and should be reported as such.
Due to the speculative loose money conditions which will remain until at least the general election probably May 2010 its a no brainer another 10% further jump in prices will happen by about that time and may even help labour win the general election.
Whatever the result of the general election these loose money conditions is the driver and if they remain look at Japan its possible they could remain for a long time high prices may remain.
The fundermentals to earnings show further falls are needed and interest rates to normal levels are needed to balance the market.
According to this report HIPs will be scrapped by the conservitives if they win this will probably increase the housing supply to the market and probably lower prices as will higher taxes but if labour win I would expect more probable our AAA credit rating to be correctly downgraded hence higher interest rates and possibly a run on the pound hardly solid foundations.
The Dubai thing or black swan type things are another reason to consider how solid foundation are for a housing recovery as well.
Just my views to be carefull in housing its a two way bet.
Garbage reporting
[info]blu_rogers wrote:
Sunday, 29 November 2009 at 08:53 pm (UTC)
...vested interests in deep poo, getting very desparate.

Minor price slump due to the World Cup...are you serious? We are in a depression with the state on verge of bankruptcy.
Housing
[info]davidbarker1 wrote:
Sunday, 29 November 2009 at 09:26 pm (UTC)
This articel is a complete ramp of the market. It does not mention the recession, affordability and unemployment. The old supply and demand nonsense is trotted out again to justify bubble prices. Expect another 20 to 30% falls.
Nationwide Has Stated House Price Increase ARE NOT SUSTAINABLE
[info]maitri2 wrote:
Monday, 30 November 2009 at 09:06 am (UTC)
Nationwide said recently: "The building society says the slowdown in house price inflation was to be expected, as the rising values seen over the summer were not sustainable in the current climate. In addition, Martin Gahbauer, chief economist at Nationwide, says the pick-up in mortgage approvals for house purchases � which has been helping to bolster property values - has lost some momentum in recent months.

A low level of property up for sale combined with rising demand from buyers has also helped to support values. But as more homeowners look to sell and competition rises, house price increases cannot be sustained. "

And only last week the BBC told us that "Nationwide Gives a Gloomy Forecast" for the UK economy and housing market.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/8369848.stm

Halifax, at least, we know have been valuing property 25 - 40% below peak for both mortgages and remortgaging , and we know lenders are suing surveyors for overvaluing property despite an allowance for 20% error.

The IMF quoted in an article by the BBC Economics editor that: "the typical housing boom lasts six years and sees house prices in real terms go up by about 50%. Downturns last five years, during which time house prices in real terms fall about 24%.

The IMF folk compare that historical picture with what's happened in individual markets so far. They then go back and run more complex models with measures of affordability and other data. The conclusions are broadly the same: prices in the UK, Spain and Denmark all probably have quite a long way further to fall ."

If a typical boom sees prices rise 50% and fall 24% then what can we honestly expect when taking the Nationwide�s figures, the 1997 to 2007 boom saw prices rise by 147 per cent in real terms. Within that, prices rose 76 per cent between 2001 and 2007?

Translation:
[info]itsthemechanic wrote:
Monday, 30 November 2009 at 01:06 pm (UTC)
"Banks spew propaganda to talk up buyer confidence."

You ain't seen nothing yet, folks.
foundations laid for a house price recovery
[info]nazbarr wrote:
Tuesday, 1 December 2009 at 05:30 pm (UTC)
who is house price inflation good for?

1. First time buyer -----definitely No

2. Trading up market --- definitely No

3. People with no intention to move --- No

4. People moving to similar house ------ no difference

5. releasing equity going down market --- slightly Yes

6. selling up and leaving Britain ------- big Yes

7. Buy to rent investors --------- Big Yes

The why the hell does the government think this small minority will vote for them?

Surely if house prices were down to affordable tradition levels of 3.5 x salary, then the market would pick up to normal levels and the economy would benefit once again with all the additional purchasing activities the housing market brings.

This is what will win the election not house price increases!

Nazb
[info]dnmurphy wrote:
Tuesday, 1 December 2009 at 10:54 pm (UTC)
House price inflation was a major factor in the recent mess, now they want it all over again? Are these people nuts? A house should be a home not an investment, and rampant inflation will lead to rampant speculation.

Nationwide Predicts 10% Falls in 2010
[info]maitri2 wrote:
Tuesday, 1 December 2009 at 11:09 pm (UTC)
http://estateagencytimes.co.uk/news/articles/1743/Nationwide-set-gloomy-house-price-forecast-for-2010.html

"The latest house price forecast for 2010 from the Nationwide Building Society, suggests that the UK housing market should prepare for another double dip in house prices next year.

According to the National banks predictions, house prices will decline by another 10 per cent in 2010 and might only return to their 2007-level in 2014. The forecast of the building society was based on the results of a survey carried out among leading estate agents and economists of the United Kingdom."
SO IS IT 10% RISE BY FEBRUARY 2010 OR 10% FALLS ? IT WOULD SEEM NATIONWIDES PREDICTION FOR 2010 IS 10% FALLS !!