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UK Property Crash Is Under Way

Cliff D'Arcy

By

Cliff D'Arcy

From the Fool blog

How To Bag A Bargain This Christmas

Published in Property and Home on 11 June 2008

The UK property market is in a bad way. Just take a look at the huge falls among housing-related firms...

After a few months of falling house prices, the UK property downturn is already seriously damaging our wealth.

If you don't believe me, just ask the private shareholders of former building society Bradford & Bingley. These tortured owners have seen the share price of the UK's biggest buy-to-let lender fall from a high of 536p in 2006 to just 69p today (in the early afternoon of 11 June). In other words, the value of their windfall shares has fallen to just an eighth of its peak, down 87%. Disaster!

However, one swallow does not a summer make, so let's see how other major property-dependent firms have fared...

1.    It's been brutal for bank shareholders

As you can see from the table below, the owners of Britain's eight listed banks have lost tens of billions of pounds as share prices have plunged (sorted by share-price fall):

Bank

2006-08

high (p)

Current

price (p)

Change

Fall in

value (£bn)

Bradford & Bingley

536

69

-87%

2.9

HBOS

1167

296

-75%

33.3

Alliance & Leicester

1248

338

-73%

3.8

Royal Bank of Scotland

675

226

-67%

45.9

Barclays

790

316

-60%

31.1

Lloyds TSB

614

346

-44%

15.4

HSBC

1028

837

-19%

23.6

Standard Chartered

1960

1617

-18%

5.0

Total

160.9

Source: Company REFS

To a greater or lesser degree, all of the above banks have suffered from their exposure to toxic US subprime mortgages. Nevertheless, my table clearly shows that the banks with the greatest appetite for UK mortgages have suffered most. Thanks to an ongoing credit crunch, the mortgage market is in meltdown, so this comes as no surprise.

At one end of the scale, we have global giant HSBC and Asian bank Standard Chartered, whose shares are down less than a fifth from their peak. At the other end, we have specialist lender Bradford & Bingley, HBOS (the UK's largest mortgage lender) and aggressive lender Alliance & Leicester. Shareholders of these building societies-turned-banks have suffered severe losses, with shares standing at a fraction of their former highs.

By my reckoning, the banks' plunging share prices have destroyed £161 billion of shareholder wealth. The largest losses have been suffered by the shareholders of two banks with Scottish links: HBOS (down £33 billion) and RBS (down £46 billion). What's more, because four of the above banks were once building societies (plus Barclays, which bought the Woolwich), this pain is shared by millions of private shareholders.

Indeed, I never thought I'd see Asian bank Standard Chartered worth twice as much as HBOS, the UK's largest mortgage lender. Likewise, it's incredible that Goliath HSBC is now worth more than its seven rivals put together. So, if any bank rescues are required, HSBC must be the white knight. We live in interesting times!

2.    Housebuilders and construction firms are sinking

As you'd expect, things look even more gruesome at the ‘bricks and mortar' end of the stock market. With new-home sales slumping to a thirty-year low, here's a snapshot of the carnage in the housing and construction sector (sorted by share-price fall):

Company

2006-08

high (p)

Current

price (p)

Change

Fall in

value (£bn)

Barratt Developments

1289

67

-95%

4.5

Taylor Wimpey

519

54

-90%

5.5

Redrow

727

145

-80%

1.2

Persimmon

1543

370

-76%

4.6

Bellway

1690

438

-74%

1.9

Bovis Homes

1204

313

-74%

1.5

Berkeley Group Holdings

1938

679

-65%

2.3

Total

21.5

Source: Company REFS

With the sale of new homes down seven-tenths (70%) in some areas, it's no wonder that two housing firms have joined the "Minus 90% Club". However, if the ‘nuclear winter' in the mortgage market continues, more firms will be nursing losses of 90%+. Indeed, the value of Persimmon, the only housing firm in the FTSE 100, has dived so far (down £4.6 billion) that it is set to lose its place in the blue-chip index. Thus, it will be relegated to the FTSE 250 later this month.

Substantial falls in the value of land and properties would inflict further serious damage on these firms. Builders could be forced to make huge write-offs on the value of their portfolios which in turn could lead to them breaching their banking covenants. Then we might see emergency share issues so that the firms could shore up their balance sheets.

Finally, how bad will it get if the housing downturn continues for the two years which most economists predict? What if the slump lasts five years, as the last housing crash did? I fear that many of the above firms would struggle to survive without begging for emergency cash from investors. Indeed, there's a good chance that some may go to the wall or end up in the hands of their bankers.

In summary, these are bad times, but I fear the worst is yet to come...

Footnote: Alliance & Leicester and Persimmon will be relegated from the FTSE 100 to the FTSE 250 on June 23rd. Redrow will drop from the FTSE 250 into the FTSE SmallCap index.

More: Use the Fool to find magnificent mortgages! | The Ups And Downs Of Renting | Times Get Tough For Landlords

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Comments

The opinions expressed here are those of the individual writers and are not representative of The Motley Fool. If you spot any comments that are unsuitable hit the flag to alert our moderators.

RansomStark 11 Jun 2008, 5:10pm

Be good to see an article after the FTSE100 rejig outlining which shares have confirmed fallen out of the FSTE100 and which have taken their place etc.

GazB 11 Jun 2008, 8:07pm

The crisis in the UK housing market has been caused by the rash governance of former Chancellor and now unelected Prime Minister Gordon Brown, who in my humble opinion, is nothing short of naive and inept. He needs to get out now and allow in someone with an (even rudimentary) understanding of running a successful business. I suppose the one consolation to most of us is that he remains unelectable!

ponym 12 Jun 2008, 12:01am

Hi Cliff,
I don't see Northern Rock in your table, why is it missing?
ponym

theisles 12 Jun 2008, 12:06am

I think all over the Britain, mortgage holders should unite and take out one large legal writ against the way our accounts have been poorly mis-managed by our mortgage providers. Through the banks greed and incompedence in taking on the 'sub prime' market we have been sold down the swanny. Any other buisness would be held accountable..........but not them..............

marikasj 12 Jun 2008, 7:44am

Mmm. Maybe we should bear in mind the banks own financial management skills the next time they they try to sell us an appointment with a financial advisor?

Jbat001 12 Jun 2008, 9:09am

To Marikasj:

Nobody forced all these people who MEW'd massive amounts of equity out of their houses to sign on the dotted line. High house prices have increased the amount of debt that people have had to take on, but that's not the real cause of the problem, only a symptom.

The real evil has been artificially low interest rates, and people spending vast amounts of housing equity to sustain the economy. Mortgage equity withdrawals were running at over 10% of GDP in the 'boom years' of 2002-2006!

The banks may have invented the toxic derivative instruments that brought about the subprime catastrophe, but with insane levels of personal debt, it was a powder keg waiting to go off!

seat1A 12 Jun 2008, 9:44am

Is anyone else thinking what I am thinking.... that perhaps the banking shares like HBOS is looking attractive and worth a punt - put away for a rainy day in 2-3 years time?

Beagle2Mars 12 Jun 2008, 10:38am

seat1A - ahh a true Fool. Banking shares and their generous dividends (reinvested will grow faster) apparently fit well into an ISA.

CunningCliff 12 Jun 2008, 10:59am

Hi ponym,

Northern Rock isn't in my table as it is now in government hands and is therefore no longer an LSE-listed bank.

Hi RansomStark,

Alliance and Leicester, Persimmon, Home Retail Group and Tate & Lyle will all leave the FTSE 100 this month. They will be replaced by electrical equipment maker Invensys, oil services firm Petrofac, electricity company Drax and miner Ferrexpo.

Also, Redrow is demoted from the FTSE 250 into the FTSE SmallCap index. Yikes!

Cliff

Terrapin1 12 Jun 2008, 11:25am

I thought the Fool's ethos was buy and hold-why should anyone worry about the current irrationality? Unless unemployment starts to top 10%, then this is not a time to panic. Most recessions don't last long anyway, the world is awash with money, and markets rise over time, as inflation, innovation and wealth creation continue as always.
Investors would be wise to look at the last few dips of 10% in FTSE.

CapitalistJoker 12 Jun 2008, 4:02pm

To put this into perspective, try putting "dow jones 100 year graph" into Google. One of the resuls is this one: http://www.lowrisk.com/djia100year.htm

The Great depression, where the whole market lost 75% of its value, is barely a blip.

UpHillAllTheWay 12 Jun 2008, 10:56pm

"The Great depression, where the whole market lost 75% of its value, is barely a blip."

I hope you live long enough to look back on these days and see them as merely a blip, but people who lived through the great depression didn't think that way about it at the time. If you could be so astute as to sell everything just before the collapse, then use all your cash to buy again at the bottom, you might make 400% profit. That amount would continue to compound afterwards, so when you looked back at the blip, many years later, you'd be looking back with four times more than you would otherwise have had.

Draw the graph of your money going through the blip then recovering and climbing, then draw the other graph of four times the amount climbing, and see which you like better.

Numberthinker 13 Jun 2008, 9:52am

The curve showing house prices in the UK must be shaped like an inverse letter U. What matters is the gradient over recent months, not the differnce in price over 12 months. Why is the curve never published and why do you avoid it in an article like this one?

sathesaheb 15 Jun 2008, 8:13am

put your money in well managed banks like ICICI bank and citigroup. the people there may be indian no doubt, but they are well educated ( atleast a bachelors ) and know how money works! better than putting your money in a bank where a majority of the staff are only A level educated and dont know the difference between a share and stock!

whitehartlad 16 Jun 2008, 1:14pm

"Finally, how bad will it get if the housing downturn continues for the two years which most economists predict?"
I don't know where you get your info Clff but MOST economists do not predict fall for the next two years. Actually whilst many acknowledge a downturn they most often sit on the fence with regards to how long. Most I have read are predicting it going on possibly into 2009. That is not 2 years and certainly not 5 years as you try to insinuate. Some actually say 'levelling off' in 2008 to early 2009. Please provide evidence of the majority you speak about who predict the market falling for at least another 2 years....well...we are waiting.

Drunsfleet 22 Jun 2008, 11:56pm

I see this article has back to front - the property fiasco has been the last few years - unsustainable home values propped up by huge debts.

Now we are experiencing a market correction, more rational times ahead as properties become more affordable and line in with wage inflation.

House prices will continue to fall, then level out, then rise again beyond current levels? And so the cycle continues!

Whether the housing market is rising or falling there are always winners and losers so why report movements in the housing market in such a one-sided manner?

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