Money saving Tip #1

by Peter James 28. September 2009 09:11

Selling your home via an Estate Agent will cost you thousands of pounds in commission. (For example: Say you pay them 3% for selling a house of £150,000. The estate agents’ fee would cost you £4,500).  Using ukhousing ( a private selling/letting site),you will literally save £1000’s if you sell your home privately.   

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Continuing woes in the housing market

by Peter James 28. September 2009 09:02

Building materials group Wolseley has reported an annual loss because of the continuing woes in the housing market.

The company announced a pre-tax loss for the year to 31 July of £766m ($1.2bn), compared with a profit of £399m last year.

Although some of the losses were due to restructuring cost, (14,000 jobs were shed worldwide to cut costs), the construction industry continues to be has been one of the hardest hit by during the recession.

Hopefully, the next 12 months will see a turn around in the housing market and in of Wolseley.

 

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Credit Crunch

'False dawn' in UK housing market

by Peter James 16. September 2009 13:18


The recent rise in UK house prices is a "false dawn", an economic forecasting group has warned.

The Ernst & Young Item Club says property values will not return to their 2007 peak for at least another five years.

However the latest figures from mortgage lenders show a continued revival in lending to house buyers.

The number of loans granted for house purchase in July this year was 19% higher than in July 2008.

 Turn in the market?

The Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML), which published the figures, said they showed the "first material annual growth" since early 2007, which was just before the UK property market was hit by a sudden downturn due to the onset of the credit crunch.

 

 There are still constraints affecting the lending industry's capacity to fund increased lending 
Paul Samter, CML

"It's tempting to call the turn in the mortgage market at this point, and there is certainly concrete evidence that lending for house purchase is increasing," said the CML's economist Paul Samter.

"But there are still constraints affecting the lending industry's capacity to fund increased lending, as well as less consumer motivation to remortgage for the time being."

The CML said the number of new mortgages granted to house buyers stood at 56,000 in July, up by 24% from June and 19% higher than a year ago.

But the Item club argued that the increase in prices this year was largely due to an "acute shortage of available properties" and "a small number of cash-rich buyers".

"The supply of these funds is limited, which means prices are likely to dip again in the first half of next year," said the forecasters's economist Hetal Mehta.

Differing views

The Item Club is the latest commentator to argue that recent upturn in prices reflects an unusual position in the market that is unlikely to last.

Read the whole story from the BBC here: Taken from the BBC

Tell us what you think. Have you sold your property recently after an extended time on the market?  If so, did you drop the price and by how much? 

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Credit Crunch

It's good not to be HIP

by Peter James 16. September 2009 12:28

 

 Speaking at Conservative Party Conference in Blackpool today,Shadow Housing Minister Grant Shapps said:

"The Government wanted to streamline the home-buying process, making it less bureaucratic and fairer. So what did they do?... They forced HIPS upon us.
They didn’t listen when we said that HIPS are clumsy, ineffective and useless. 

And they had to bypass democracy to force them through Parliament.
The experts ridiculed them, the industry doesn’t want them; the market doesn’t need them; 

and I can announce to you today that the 
next Conservative Government – will scrap them!"


 

My view is that Home Information Packs (HIPs) have not delivered on streamliningany part of the home buying process in England.  However, what theintroduction of HIPs have achieved is to create a new service industry aroundthe housing market (hum... Can you imagine the meeting where that idea was puton the table.  "Although the UK is over reliant on house building andthe housing market, I propose that we build yet another industry around it AND actively encourage people into it"  Sigh...The words Eggs and basket jump to mind. When will we learn! 

 

Now, it true tosay the HIPs in part came out of an EU directive requiring all homes to be  energy rated. The sensible Germans and the rest of Europe interpreted and requiredthat all houses being sold have an Energy Performance  Certificate, but we Brits decided on the fullmonty and introduced HIPs.

 

Here's hoping that the next government kicks HIPs into touch. What we needed was housing legislation  to protect the consumer from things which do affect them during the home buying process, like gazumping,  chain breakers, and the countless stories of untruthful estate agents. 

 

That would be a reform we at UKhousing would welcome and we are trusting the next government todo the right thing and get rid of HIPs and reform the home buying process.

 

 

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Estate Agents | HIPS | housing reform

Prices Rise Again

by Peter James 3. September 2009 15:32

For sale signs

 

Recent house price data from Nationwide, the UK's largestbuilding society, showed the average cost of a home in the UK rose by 1.6%increasing the average price of a home to £160,224. This is the fourthconsecutive month of house prices rises, but with credit still hard to come by,do these recent rises really signal the start of the housing market recovery?

The society said prices were now 3.2% higher than at thebeginning of the year, although they were still 14.4% below their peak inOctober 2007.

Martin Gahbauer, Nationwide's chief economist, said: "Theexceptionally low level of interest rates offers some explanation for why houseprices have not repeated the very sharp falls of 2008." 

The reduction of the Bank of England base rate to just 0.5%meant households who were using around 38% of their take-home pay to servicetheir mortgage debt have seen that figure fall to just 28%, Gahbauersaid. 

The billion pound question we at ukhousing have is when interestrates rise, will we see the dreaded sharp house price falls as the cost ofborrowing increases, or is the bank of England willing to maintain low interest rates low for a few more years (well into the upturn)?

Conversely, if the Bank Of England maintains a low interest ratepolicy, are we inevitably going to see another period of house price inflation,as the wows of the recent past slip into history?

Leave a comment and tell us what you think..

 

 

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Credit Crunch

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