David Smith
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Anybody who wants to get gloomy about Britain’s housing market has only to cast an eye across the Atlantic. The US housing downturn is proving a lengthy one, and shows scant signs of ending.
Last week, figures for new-home sales in America showed a drop of 4.7% in December to an annualised rate of 604,000, the lowest for 13 years. Though monthly figures are volatile, particularly in the weather-affected winter months, the weakness appears to be genuine.
At face value, anybody buying a new home in America can do so at a price 10.4% lower than a year ago. There is a note of caution attached to this – the figures are not adjusted for size and type of property – but nobody doubts prices are still falling. Housebuilders in Britain have had a torrid time on the stock market, but spare a thought for their US counterparts. They are sitting on more than 9½ months’ supply of unsold homes, the most for 26 years.
So, the housing market in America is undoubtedly weak and, for the moment, getting weaker, in spite of aggressive cuts in interest rates by the Federal Reserve, its central bank. There are important differences between the USA and the UK. America, after all, was the home of sub-prime, while the supply of new homes there has been less constrained by planning restrictions.
If you want to be pessimistic, however, you would say that, just as America tends to get new gadgets and Hollywood movie releases before us, so its housing-market pain may be a harbinger of things to come here – in which case, prepare for a long and grinding downturn.
The Bank of England’s figures for mortgage approvals were certainly downbeat: they fell to 73,000 in December, from an already weak 81,000 in November.
A different scenario is provided by the Centre for Economics and Business Research (CEBR), in its latest Consumer and Housing Prospects report. The CEBR has joined those predicting a drop in prices this year. It thinks that by the fourth quarter, the average house price will be £187,900, 2.5% down on the final three months of 2007 and 5.5% below the peak of £198,900 reached last summer. Its forecast is significant in that it has tended to be more upbeat about the market than, for example, Capital Economics. But recent data, including a 0.4% drop in prices recorded by the Land Registry in December, the first such fall since August 2005, have tipped its hand.
Unlike others, however, the CEBR remains bullish about the fundamental state of the housing market. It thinks the downturn, caused as it is by the credit squeeze and temporary strains on household finances, will be short-lived. Prices in 2009 will rise by 3%, it predicts, followed by above-inflation rises in the following two years.
This is the battleground on which housing predictions are being fought out. Will we see a drawn-out US-style decline in market activity and prices, or just a brief period of pain, after which factors such as rising population and a shortage of housing supply will reassert themselves? I am in the latter camp, but for this to happen, sentiment here will have to remain optimistic – unlike in America.
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Japan in the 90s had a population about twice that of the UK on a land mass of comparable size with the most expensive land and property prices in the world.Just like the UK now!
The commentators at the time said that due to the demographics and the shortages prices could never fall.They fell 50%!
Ian Morley, London,
When UK banks own up to the £billion's losses they have on their books, there'll be no more money for mortgages. No money for mortgages means no speculation. No speculation means opps falling prices.. Watch out and enjoy!
Richard, Phoenix, AZ USA
Forecasters in the UK have their head in the sand. The so-called fundamentals of restricted space, increasing population etc. etc. which are meant to underpin house prices in the UK are a mirage - the USA's population has increased by 33% since 1981, Australia has little usable space, Ireland has a similar economy and huge immigration, Spain has had massive economic growth and large immigration - guess what, they are all suffering falling house prices. Is the UK on planet Hope-Over-Experience?
Perhaps also forecasters have failed to notice that static house prices coincided with rip-roating inflation in 1974-76 and 1979-1982, leading to reals falls of 40-50% in value. Just because something is in limited supply doesn't mean it's going to run out!
Dave, Slough,
VIs in the US said house prices could not fall on a national scale...the last time it happened it was the depression.
VIs here said repossessions could not rise as we had planning restrictions, low unemployment and interest rates, high population growth, no land.
According to these parties only a very small part of this has been liquidity driven. Yet now liquidity has dried up prices are falling (all while the so-called pillars are there).
The implication therefore is that the liquidity/speculative element is bigger than they will admit. Indeed, if we look at what VIs forecast at the beginning of the years in 2006 and 2007 (modest price growth), and what actually happened (strong growth), then, given they were looking at the same variables in terms of growth and popn trends (these were in line with their assumptions), is it not implied that the remainder even in their own forecasts must be speculation?
A vicious cycle over 2+ years, as credit now contracts, follows? I think yes.
Raj, London,