Are house price rises a good thing?

by parla 12. July 2009 14:42

 

Are house price rises a good thing?

Over the past few weeks there have been a number of positiveindicators that the housing marketing is staging a recovery, or at the veryleast prices have stopped falling.

This may come as some as welcome news for the bewildered Britishbuilding sector and the countless pig like estate agents and greedy home ownerswho are dying to go back to the price rise bubble of the past 10 years.  However is this what we need in the UK.  Should out economy be so dependent on the residentialconstruction industry?

May 2009: 243.8 
(January 1995:100)

Average 
price:

£152,497

http://www1.landregistry.gov.uk/common/images/2003/spacer.gif

Monthly 
change:

-0.2%

http://www1.landregistry.gov.uk/common/images/2003/spacer.gif

Annual 
change:

-15.9%

The resultsof the 2008 ASHE show that median weekly pay for full-time employees in the UKgrew by 4.6 per cent in the year to April 2008 to reach £479. Median earningsof full-time male employees was £521 per week in April 2008; for women themedian was £412.

It was the availability of cheap credit and lacks controlsof many of our financial institutions that got us into this mess.  This resulted in the average house price risingto 180,000 at its peak, whilst the average income roughly tracked retailinflation at a steady 2-5% pa over the last ten years.

"As a society we need to decide that if we want to live in a four bedroom house with a x5 parked on the drive it should be a question of how much money i can earn, not how much credit I can access." 

The government of the day seemed unwilling to say in publicwhat many of us industry insiders knew which was this housing bubble is unsustainable.  Instead what we got were ever more ridiculousschemes being announced to help first time buyer got on to the housing ladderand the banks lining up to oblige with ever more risky lending practise.

But enough of the past..

Looking to the future do we want house prices to rise?  Contrary to the current evidence, we at www.UKhousing.compredict that the worst in not yet over, and that government has constructed an artificialstabilising mechanism which has successfully halted the downward spiral.  If anyone is old enough to remember blackWednesday you'll now that governments can not buck the market, and that whenthe housing market supports are removed we will see an accelerated increase inrepossession.

What do you think?

 

 

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Credit Crunch

Houses for sale UK: price down - buying up

by metafocus 11. February 2009 16:46

It was more doom and gloom from the Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors this week with news that house prices had continued to fall. The number of surveyors reports a decrease in prices was 76%, up from 74% in the previous month. However, the same surveyors also noted that the numbers of buyers had increase by 16%. I first read this story with a feeling of trepidation as this inevitably means more bad news for the property market, but it later made me think that if things were that bad no-one would be buying at all! 

January in particular has been reported to be a very positive month for property, especially in London of all places. This increased buying could actually stimulate the market and generate a recovery. I read an article here that supported this and even showed that First Time Buyers actually increased in the beginning of 2009. If the property was actually in such a state, then the first time buyers would definitely be the ones who would not be in the mood to buy property. However, seen as this cannot get any lower and we have maybe reached the bottom of this recession, the road to recovery is definitely on the horizon and this might be encouraging people to take advantage of the current market. 

This isn't the sign that we are definitely on the road to recovery as we need to make finance easier to obtain. This does mean that some things could be made easier for some people and the thought of selling your house doesn't have to be locked to current state of the market. If you're looking for a houses for sale uk, buy now and contribute towards the recovery.

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Private House Sales

Interest Rates Cuts to Save the UK Housing Market?

by metafocus 15. January 2009 17:27

In an attempt to solve the long term recession forecast, the Bank of England has cut official interest rates by half a percent to 1.5 percent...the lowest level in its 315-year history. So what will come of this?

Its hard to ignore the effects of the global credit crisis at the moment, house prices are falling, consumer spending has decreased and major retaillers have collapsed under the pressure. It seems that no-one is immune from this, as we saw the demise of Woolworths recently after nearly 100 of trading. The future might appear bleak but as with the previous recession of the early 1990s, we might see a light at the end of the tunnel. 

There is no doubt that the bank of England is under pressure as this latest cut moved them closer to the limits of monetary policy with a 0% interest rate. Now there is increasing pressure to avoid deflation and solve the effects of a weakening sterling whilst at the same time do everything it can to slow the impact of the recession. A big effect of this has been concentrated on house prices in the UK. Property no longer is the stable market that it was as the Housing makret has suffered its worst year on record falling by up to 16%. A similar pattern has been seen in the Service Sector, which makes up 75% of the UKs economy, where the fall was at a record pace in 2008 according to a survey by the Bank of England (BOE). 

On a more uplifting not, the BOE have given a warning about lending to houses and business is set to fall at the beginning of this year and consequently leading to more businesses going under and another fall in house prices. Whilst we are trying to protect our ecnonmy and increase people's confidence in the economy and securing jobs, can we really see when this will stabalise?

Yet we must look to the positive effects of the interest rate cuts and how this can jump start the depressed economy. With the co-operation of banks and other lenders to pass on the cuts we could see a positive effect. This will take a bit of time but the effects can be just what we need. The more support that is on offer from Banks and the Government alike, we must see any proposed changes as a step in the right direction. At least the Government and Bank of England are actually being proactive and creating solutions...however debatable they are!

 

Are you suffering from the effects of the failing property market? If you are looking for help and advice on selling your home then UKHousing.com can provide you with an answer. UKHousing.com provides people with the means to sell their house privately and without estate fee. We have a extensive portfolio of houses for sale UK all by the owner. Visit www.UKHousing.com and see how you can save money on your House Sale. 



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Credit Crunch | Private House Sales

The lord giveth and the lord taketh away...or no golden ticket for Charlie

by metafocus 9. January 2009 17:17

As a first time buyer I want to know when god.. jehovah, allah, yahwe or the universe is going to give me  a break! 

I’ve been in the home owning wilderness for the past five years and being treated like a leper by the home owning democracy, for being too poor to join their club, despite earning more than the national average wage. I was also sadened by a Guardian Article on first time buyers and the cost of deposits.

Picture the scene...Me and my significant other at dinner parties and so desperately wanting to be able to say, “yeah...my house as gone up by 10k last month alone..” and “..gemma and I are thinking of upsizing soon...

I felt like Charlie of Charlie and the chocolate factory fame. Pressing my face against the shop window, looking longingly at magical creations of houses for sale UK on display but knowing that I could only hope to imagine the taste of what lay within, as no matter how much I hoped, the chocolate treasures would remain out of reach.

Well, with the recent falls in house prices I  could see my dream becoming a reality.. Once again I am Charlie… The Americans with their woeful oversight of their financial institutions have given me the bar of chocolate that I’ve been waiting for...

Tentatively, I ease the wrapper away from it contents and see something foreign.. It’s the ticket.. I find myself clawing at the wrapper, unble to control my fingers, my mind racing unable to comprehend or accept the possibility that I’ve may have found the ticket.  Yes I have the golden ticket!

I can now join the club.

The only problem is, when I present my golden ticket at the gates of the chocolate factory to a guard, let’s call him Mr Banker, (rumours are that he’s not very good at his job  and I hear he over indulges from time to time), he tells me that this golden ticket is no longer valid because of Mortgage rationing.

Now I'm only 8 years old and have no idea what that is… So I’m back outside the shop looking in… (again). 

But come on...didn’t we give you guys bucket loads of money not long ago?.  The decent thing to do would be to some a little back. 

I’m advocating responsible lending not, punitive lending. 

If I were a cynic I’d say that banks really don’t want to lend any money because they need to pay the government back the money that was lent, so they can get back to paying incompetent staff mega bonuses...but that’s if I were a cynic.

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Credit Crunch

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