Assetz Say Unemployment Can't Affect House Prices because of Supply Shortage, What?

by RichardM 17. October 2009 10:23
Graph image

Assetz have done it again. In the company blog they have said that unemployment won't affect house prices.

The government has admitted that private sector unemployment is not going to be as bad as first thought, so "private sector unemployment is not going to affect house prices," they assert in a post on the company blog.

They then go on to explain how the result of the election will decide how many people are left unemployed by government spending cuts, possible putting the total jobless number up to 3.75million.

They don't believe it will be this high, because they say the government will choose other methods of cutting spending, anybody fancy the end of Quangos for example ? Assetz asks.

But even if the government does cut a million jobs, this still won't affect house prices, because private sector recruitment will increase to balance the effect, and also because it won't outweigh the positive effects of significant lack of supply.

Yes, the massive supply shortages are propping up prices, but surely they cannot expect that to keep prices rising forever. What everyone who wants a housing market recovery wants is a massive increase in demand, and in transactions.

For that to happen we need supply to increase so there is a home suitable and affordable for everyone. At any rate if prices keep increasing, and if there is a big increase in demand, more people will be selling their house and this will tip the supply balance. You just cannot have a positive housing market based on what can only be considered a negative keeping price growth positive.

Of course, the biggest negative is the constricted mortgage market, until that changes it is only likely to be weak supply that is capable of pushing prices up.

As we always say, though we love to follow house prices, they really are not all that important. Firstly the national average is very rarely found on any British street or area, and secondly all houses are falling in value so in most cases the money you lose in selling you will gain in buying.

So, why not give it a go while the going's good; sell your house with Zungalow for just £29 per year.

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FT Index Shows UK House Prices Still Rising but Recovery is Vulnerable

by Liam Bailey 9. October 2009 13:37

The Financial Times index, one of the most impartial and arguably most accurate indices of UK house prices recorded a 0.6% increase in house prices in September. UK house prices are now 5.6% lower than they were at this time last year, and at similar levels to August 2006.

The FT index is compiled by Acadametrics, which said that this, the fifth consecutive monthly rise in house prices clearly indicates a recovery, but that things could still turnaround at any minute. Peter Williams, chairman of Acadametrics said:

“Consumer confidence is recovering and there are indications that mortgage supply has stabilised and might increase along with the number of properties coming to market and the transactions that follow. However, all this is delicately balanced. The government and the Bank must continue to make the right calls to avoid disrupting this fragile recovery and it is simply too soon to say the course going forward is set.”

The Acadametrics/FT index is a good one to follow, because it is not based on mortgage approvals like those of Nationwide and Halifax, it is based on actual transactions recorded in the Land Registry, but it is better than the Land Registry index because it continually adds the most recent sales recorded at the Registry, and the index is constantly updated with the changes.

For that reason, we can look at this and say that the Land Registry index for September will show prices rising again after the fall in August. I have been saying since the Land Registry index came out in August that it wasn't a blip, it was the start of the second dip, bla bla bla. Looks like I was wrong.

However, with unemployment still rising, the mortgage market still heavily restricted and supply alone holding up a market in which first time buyers still can't afford to buy, I still think a second dip is inevitable in the short term.

Like this post, Subscribe to our feed. If you want to sell your house while prices are rising, do so with Zungalow for just £29 per year.

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House Prices Continue to Rise Despite Land Registry Recording August Fall

by RichardM 7. October 2009 11:13

The Halifax released the figures from its house price index in September and said that house prices had risen 1.7% on the month leaving them7.4% lower than this time last year. The news came just a few days after Nationwide released their September figures of a 0.9% rise on the month, and the average house price now back to what it was last September. The Land Registry however, recently revealed their figures for August, in which they said house prices had fallen 0.1% on the month, but that the rate of annual decline had slowed.

The Land Registry index only covers England and Wales, but as its prices come from completed sales, whereas the Nationwide and Halifax are based on mortgage approvals, the Land Registry is agreed to be the most accurate.

However, because the Land Registry is behind the other indices, analysts (which means just about the whole country) are wondering whether the Land Registry's drop in prices was just a blip against the run of rises; 5 consecutive months according to Nationwide, and 3 consecutive according to Halifax.

I was quoted in an article yesterday on Write About Property, i gave the following advice to potential sellers:

"Prices have fallen drastically on UK property there is no question about that. Nor is there any question about the fact that it will likely be 2-5 years before houses regain the value they held in the beginning of 2007.

"However, all houses have fallen in value, so you will save on your next home what you lost on the sale of your old one. But now, if you sell your house to first time buyers, you can take solace in the fact that, yes, you lost money but you did so voluntarily to help a first time buyer get onto the property ladder."

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Nationwide index for September, House Prices Back up to 2008 Levels

by RichardM 3. October 2009 15:08

Nationwide issued its house price index for September yesterday. It showed that house prices rose on average 0.9% between August and September. The tri-monthly measure, which is less volatile and widely regarded as the more accurate short term indicator rose from a growth of 3.3% in the 3 months ending August, to a growth of 3.8% in the 3 months ending September.

This is the fifth monthly rise recorded by the Nationwide, and the lender now has the average UK house price at the same as it was in September last year -- before the catastrophic collapse of Lehman Brothers.

None the less, this still does not signal the end of the crisis, because -- as even Nationwide acknowledge -- transactions are still far too low to support such growth, leaving it based solely on the drastic shortage of housing supply.

Martin Gahbauer, Nationwide's chief economist said:

"The further increase in house prices is very much consistent with improvements in a broad range of economic and financial indicators over the last few months, all of which suggest that the most intense phase of the recession and financial crisis has probably passed. However, given that the housing market still faces considerable headwinds in the form of high unemployment, restrictive credit conditions and an impending withdrawal of the stamp duty holiday, it would be surprising to see house prices continuing to increase at the very strong rate seen in recent months."

But as we continue to say, house prices make no difference to people who want to sell their house, because you will save what you lose on the house you buy, which will also have lost value. Sell your house with Zungalow for just £29 per year.

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UK House Prices, Where will they Stop Nobody Knows

by RichardM 26. September 2009 10:00

You may have read my comments that I made on Write About Property yesterday, on predicting the future of UK house prices.

In it, I agreed with the author of the post Liam Bailey's opinion, that UK house prices still haven't stopped falling, there is still too many things capable of pulling prices down: constricted mortgage market, unemployment and foreclosures are the big three, but there is also vendor realism and negative equity affecting thousands.

When I was talking to Liam he told me about a new article he is planning to write, based on a survey of landlords about their forecasts for UK house prices. So far, of the responses he has received so far, many of the UK's buy to let landlords think that house prices have some way to fall yet, with forecasts ranging from next Easter to 2014 for when the recovery will start.

Of course if you listen to the industry bulls the recovery is well underway. As Liam covered, the major indices certainly support this view; all of them are showing house prices rising on a monthly basis for most of this year, and according to Nationwide prices are now just 2.1% lower than they were a year ago.

Here at Zungalow, we don't really care what house prices do because it should never stop people from selling their house. This is because -- as we have pointed out in previous posts -- all house prices are falling. So, while your house will sell for less, you can buy your next house for less as well, and end up coming out of the deal exactly the same financially.

Zungalow allows you to sell your house for £29 per year, at that price can you afford not to give it a go with Zungalow.

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Assetz Say CBI Forecast of 9,8% Fall is Wrong, but Maybe not by as Much as they Think

by Liam Bailey 24. September 2009 22:32

Property investment consultancy Assetz have slammed the forecast that UK house prices would fall 9.8% by the end of this year made by the Confederation of British Industry.

Stuart Law, chief executive of Assetz, said: "The CBI’s house price forecast is illogical and cannot possibly be based on justifiable calculations.

"All the major house price indices are now showing consistent month-on-month growth and Assetz House Price Watch, which is based upon the UK’s main five indices, is now showing that house prices are over 1.5% higher than in January this year.

"It would be virtually impossible for house prices to fall by almost 10% in the three months to the end of December and it is hard to imagine how the CBI arrived at this figure, which implies a greater rate of fall than was witnessed even in the state of panic last year.

"More worrying is the fact that this prediction is clearly at odds with the CBI’s own view in their release that the economy as a whole is gradually improving. Random sound bites such as these are unhelpful in this sensitive market which is beginning to find its feet."

Assetz are a bit wrong in their own facts. Yes, all the main indices are currently showing month-on-month and even tri-monthly growth, but there is not only 3 months left. The three most current indices, namely Halifax, Nationwide and the Financial Times are up to the end of August, giving them 4 more monthly releases to end the year. The indices of the Land Registry and the (government) Department of Communities and Local Government, are only up to the end of July, giving them 5 monthly releases to go.

Falls of 2% or more now when -- as Assetz rightly pointed out -- the economy is showing signs of recovery, look highly unlikely. But even though the economic outlook is a lot brighter, unemployment is still rising, foreclosures are still happening, and we aren't out of the woods yet. In fact, house prices are only rising because of big rises in 11% of the country were supply of quality homes is extremely short, prices are still falling everywhere else. If foreclosures should mass or something else should cause supply to increase in those areas, then house price falls will restart anew and 1.6% per month could happen, though even I have to admit it is unlikely.

Liam Bailey is a well known commentator on global property markets, and the director of SEO copywriting services company Write About Property.

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UK House Prices Continue to Rise in August

by RichardM 12. September 2009 14:00

In August, the average UK house price was £112 higher than in December 2008, meaning that house prices have now regained anything the lost in the falls of the first quarter, according to the latest release of the Halifax house price index.

The average price of a UK house was 0.8% higher in August than in July. This was the second consecutive monthly rise recorded by the Halifax, and the fourth rise in the last 8 months. The rise brought the tri-monthly measure (widely regarded as the more-accurate because it is less volatile) to a rise of 1.7%, and the annual measure to a fall of 10.1% -- the lowest since July 2008.

"Demand for housing has increased since the start of the year due to better affordability and low interest rates. This, together with low levels of property available for sale, has boosted house prices over the last few months," said Halifax housing economist Martin Ellis.

With every month that house prices continue to rise, confidence builds and more and more people are willing to put their voice behind this being the start of a slow and painful recovery in UK house prices.

Whether it is or not; find out how you can do just as well in a down market as you can during boom times.

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UK House Prices Don't Matter, You Can Do Well in Any Market with the Right Attitude

by RichardM 9. September 2009 21:31

The UK housing market has bottomed, price falls have finished, and price growth, though slow will return next year. That is according to a survey of 30 analysts conducted by Reuters, who said that prices will end the year slightly lower than they started it, grow by 0.5% next year, and 2.5% the year after.

The UK is absolutely obsessed by house prices, but it is all much of a much-ness; if you have the right attitude you can do just as well out of the current housing market as you could in 2006.

There are people who are refusing to sell their houses because they won't get the peak price for it, even if they bought the house years before and could still make a profit at a 30% discount on peak, they are sitting on it, depressing and waiting for better days.

The fact of the matter is, house prices are relative. That is to say, all houses are falling in value, so by the time you sell up, remortgage and buy the bigger house your family needs, you will end up paying the same amount in mortgage repayments as you would at the peak in 2007.

Because, while you would have got a lot more for your house then, the bigger house would have been a lot more expensive also, and vice versa, now, the bigger house is a lot cheaper. And the same goes for people who want to downsize; yes, they lose out on the sale, but the smaller house will also be cheaper and they will come away with the same amount (approximately) left over.

So, in answer to the question: is now the time to sell your house? Yes, now is the time to sell your house, because it is no different to any other time.

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UK Housing Market Will Bottom Mid 2011 [Opinion]

by Liam Bailey 5. September 2009 20:46

By Liam Bailey

Right, so let me start at the beginning.

Firstly, I believe that, though the collapse of the global financial infrastructure was the catalyst, that this house price correction is like any other in the fact that it has gone the way it has because homes became overvalued and unaffordable for first time buyers.

Some people believe that house prices will fall until the average house price is 3.8 times the average salary. I am not one of those people. I believe that this correction will go much the same way as the last correction (late 80s early 90s) and overshoot the long-term averages on the way down.

House prices have been rising for the past few months. The rises are not a true reflection of the market. Short-supply of quality homes in certain areas is causing those properties that are available to be sold for prices similar to those seen at the 2007 peak, and these sales, in a measure of low transaction volumes are enough to distort the overall picture.

Prices are still falling in most places. And they will continue to do so until transaction volumes pick up, so the true question is, when will transaction volumes pick up. There are three hurdles keeping transaction levels down.

  1. The Economy/Unemployment
    Though there have been signs lately that we are past the worst of the recession, unemployment is still rising, and is expected to continue doing so for quite some time yet. Until less people are in fear of their jobs or already jobless there won't be sufficient demand for a revival in transaction volumes.
  2. Mortgage availability:
    Banks are still under pressure to improve their balance sheets which means making more money from fewer loans. To consumers this means poor deals are on offer to anone who has less than a quarter of the house price to put down as a deposit, and the best deals go to those with deposits of 40% or more
  3. Vendor Realism:
    It is a fact that short supply is driving up prices in some areas. But across the UK out of the homes that are for sale, a high percentage of those homes are at prices similar to those seen at peak. Thus, actual saleable stock, that is houses that people will actually buy is short across the country. The correction can't end until the gap between what buyers are willing to pay, and sellers willing to accept closes. This can't happen until more vendors are realistic about the market.
They are three major problems, but for me, the first is the key to recovery in the housing market. But I don't just mean an end to the UK recession and unemployment:

When the global economy has recovered, and stock markets and investments around the world are once again lucrative, when UK consumers are spending and borrowing healthily again, the banks will be making money sufficient that tight mortgage policies are not the only way to improve their balance sheets.

That will take care of number 1, and as a result better mortgages will become available to the masses, which will take care of number 2. This will then result in number 3 resolving itself, because demand will begin to increase and vendors will realise that it is only their price that is preventing the sale.

But as this is a forecast, what you really want to know then is, when do I think the global recovery will happen?

As I said, there are clear signs that the UK is past the worst of the recession, and there are similar signs that the recessionary down-track is passed and we are currently on the way back up, things like: GDP contractions of a lot less than previous quarters, retail sales up (in the EU), Europe's biggest two economies emerging from recession, and more.

I think that the global recovery will be strong in Q3 of next year, and that UK unemployment will also have turned around by this point. It will take time for this to change the attitudes of consumers and the banks, but banks should be more relaxed about their lending, and demand to buy property will start to increase by Q2 2011.

I therefore think that the UK housing market will bottom between quarters 2 and 3 of 2011. Unlike other commentators I think that price growth will be quite brisk in the subsequent few years.

Liam Bailey is a well known property commentator and director of sector specialist SEO copywriting company Write About Property, which provides SEO copywriting services for some of the biggest names in the property industry.

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Now is the Time to Sell Your House -- if you're Quick that is

by RichardM 4. September 2009 17:36

I was interviewed for online property publication Write About Property yesterday, to see whether I thought now was a good time to be selling UK property. The title kinda gives away my answer; Now is the Time to Sell Your House, C'Mon Quick.

I'll tell you what I told them:

If you have a good property in a good area, now is the time to sell, and I mean right now. Short supply is driving up prices and you may even get close to peak value if you can get your property onto the market before supply of like-for-likes increases in your area, before everyone catches on if you like.

So how quickly can you get your property on the market, with Zungalow you can do it in 10 mins. You're thinking, but ah, first you need to get your home information pack. That's true, but Zungalow allows you to put your property on the site to show it off, neither for sale or rent, and for free. Then you will be shopping around not only to find the best price for your HIP, but also the company with the quickest delivery time.

Once you have your HIP, simply pay the £29 up your membership to silver, add pictures and mark your house for sale. Click here to find out how to value your property online for free.

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