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House prices set to fall 20% as mortgages plummet



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Published Date: 01 July 2008
HOUSE prices could fall more sharply than previously expected after mortgage approvals slumped to a record low.
The Bank of England revealed yesterday that just 42,000 mortgages were approved for purchase in May, 28 per cent down on April and 64 per cent down on the corresponding month last year.

It was the lowest level of approvals since the central bank b
egan reporting the figures in 1993 and the 13th consecutive monthly fall.

Loans approved for house purchases were worth a total £5.8 billion, just over half the average for the previous six months.

Remortgages accounted for nearly two-thirds of all loans approved but were down by 10 per cent month-on-month.

Vicky Redwood, UK economist at Capital Economics, said the data pointed to house price falls of up to 20 per cent this year.

"The latest news on the UK housing market is absolutely dire, with the number of mortgage approvals for new house purchase slumping way below the early 1990s lows. And with fixed mortgage rates still rising, don't expect a recovery in housing market activity any time soon."

Howard Archer, an economist at Global Insight, concurred, saying: "Very low housing market activity seems certain to feed through to further depress already markedly weakening house prices."

Archer added that he expected house prices to lose 24 per cent of their value compared with their peak last August. The Building Societies Association's (BSA) update for May, also published yesterday, echoed the Bank's findings. It said net lending by building societies fell to £125 million, down from £1.3bn in May last year.

"It is important not to read too much into one month's very low figures," commented the BSA's director-general, Adrian Coles. "However, the figures do reflect the considerable adjustment in housing market activity. We expect activity to remain at low levels for some time."

However, the performance of building societies in the savings market remained strong. Mutuals attracted £853m of savings in May, up from £608m for the same month last year and the highest level for May since 2002.

And while sales of retail funds slipped in May, according to the Investment Management Association (IMA), there were signs of a return of confidence in investment funds.

Net retail sales of £653m compared poorly with £1.1bn for May 2007, but represented the second-highest level in the past seven months.

Richard Saunders, chief executive of the IMA, said: "May saw respectable levels of new retail investment, after the recovery in April.

"But sales are still well below the levels of 2007 and investors continue to remain cautious in their choice of asset class."



The full article contains 450 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

Alistair from the New Town,

01/07/2008 04:35:33
What rubbish! When housing prices fall, people stay in their homes and wait it out. It simply does not make sense to sell and trade up if you are in negative equity. Mortgage approval rates are falling because the conditions are really onerous with large deposits and proof of earnings required! Hopefully, we will see the end of this mess that the banks got us into soon. We're seeing a return to careful lending which should stabilise prices at last.
2

Samcafe,

Glasgow 01/07/2008 04:56:27
And as ever we get sweeping 'UK' generalisations just to engender that panic feeling.
3

Evan Owen,

Snowdonia 01/07/2008 07:26:42
And this is only the beginning.
4

Between the lines,

Scotland 01/07/2008 07:53:10
House prices were always going to fall by a minimum of 20%. They will probably fall much further than that, what this article demonstrates is the desperate attempts by the government and the Edinburgh "heads-in-the-sand" establishment to bury the bad news. Wake up guys!
5

Capital Boy,

01/07/2008 11:55:33
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7482115.stm

devastating news for some of the bitter renters in here, read the bit about scotlands house prices and how they ARE more resiliant than down south !!
6

Geed,

Scotland 01/07/2008 12:22:59
@5 Capital Boy.

Yes we are very resilient up here, prices only DROPPED 1.8% in the last quarter in Scotland according to the Nationwide! ugh your point is? On review, it appears to be devistating news for the fearful house owners on here, wouldn't you agree?

For another perspective on the Edinburgh housing market, check this graph out

http://www.upmystreet.com/property-prices/trends/l/Edinburgh.html

This is from RoS, effectively land registry figures on completed sales. You see Edinburgh boomed massively from the start of 2006, more so than Wales and England in the same period. This is why up here we are lagging slightly. Hope you haven't overstretched yourself dear chap?

7

techpunk,

01/07/2008 13:39:43
#6

here are the latest Land Registry figures for London:

http://www.upmystreet.com/property-prices/trends/l/London.html

shows a slight recent recovery. by your thinking, edinburgh should be set for a recovery too?



8

Johnnie Wilkinson,

Edinburgh 01/07/2008 14:16:19
20% fall in Edinburgh as well or just some parts of the UK?
9

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

01/07/2008 14:24:21
I can't tell you how much house prices will fall. Nobody can. However, I watch credit crises the way other people watch football matches, so I can tell you something about what's happening.

This is not the typical 18-year UK housing cycle, such as those which peaked in the 70's and late 80's. This is a credit bubble, the end of a three-generational credit cycle. Thus rather than being driven down by high interest rates and unemployment, housing is being driven down by lack of credit caused by the deleveraging of a 25-year credit bubble.

I can see three similar credit bubbles which also drove up house and land prices: The British Artisan's Mortgages at the start of the 19th century, the Miami Bubble in 1926 and the Japanese credit bubble which peaked in 11989.

The typical real-terms change in value of the main asset after a credit bubble bursts is a fall of two-thirds. In the above bubbles, the top-to-bottom falls were 90%, 70% and 50% to 90% (depending where).

The World Bank says that the credit bubble in the Uk is the largest of any country in history. It's reasonable to suppose we'll be looking at the higher end of the 50% to 90% range of falls before we're through. As for how long. That could vary from around four years to twenty. The Japanese bubble broke in 1989 and it's not clear yet that property prices have stopped falling there.
10

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

01/07/2008 14:28:08
My apologies, the Artisan's Mortgages crisis was of course at the start of the 20th century.
11

big chief toffee teeth,

everywhere 01/07/2008 17:58:39
the people who live in the big citys will do a lot better than the people who commute to work..the price of petrol will make there houses far less desirable than a home in the inner citys..who can afford to have along commute?

 

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