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House Prices Fall By A Tenth

Cliff D'Arcy

By

Cliff D'Arcy

From the Fool blog

How To Bag A Bargain This Christmas

Published in Property & Home on 28 August 2008

The latest survey from Nationwide shows house prices down 10.5% in the past year. But Cliff D'Arcy thinks the worst is yet to come....

Leading mortgage lender Nationwide BS released its latest house-price survey today. Unsurprisingly, its figures were accompanied by a hefty dollop of anxious spin-doctoring!

According to Nationwide, the average price of a UK home fell by 1.9% in August and 10.5% in the past twelve months. However, these figures are seasonally adjusted, and ‘fine tuning’ of this kind is questionable when the housing market is tumbling at its fastest rate in almost two decades. Hence, I prefer to view the underlying data, as shown below:

Average house price, according to Nationwide BS

Month

House

price (£)

Monthly

Change (%)

Aug 07

183,898

N/A

Sep 07

184,723

0.4

Oct 07

186,044

0.7

Nov 07

184,099

-1.0

Dec 07

182,080

-1.1

Jan 08

180,473

-0.9

Feb 08

179,358

-0.6

Mar 08

179,110

-0.1

Apr 08

178,555

-0.3

May 08

173,583

-2.8

Jun 08

172,415

-0.7

Jul 08

169,316

-1.8

Aug 08

164,654

-2.8

As you can see, the average UK property price has dropped from £183,898 a year ago to £164,654 today. This is a fall of £19,244, or just over a tenth (10.5%), matching Nationwide’s year-on-year figure. However, ignoring any seasonal adjustment, prices fell by a hefty 2.8% between July and August. That’s almost half as much again as the 1.9% drop highlighted by Nationwide...

More gloom ahead

Nevertheless, Nationwide warns that the UK housing market has recorded its biggest yearly fall since late 1990. However, although prices have dropped for ten months in a row, modest rises were recorded in September and October 2007. As it seems almost certain that prices will fall this September and October, Nationwide’s headline figure is sure to worsen in the months ahead.

What’s more, these are ‘nominal’ falls which failed to take account of general inflation (the tendency of the price of goods and services to rise over time). Adding in the latest Retail Prices Index (RPI) measure of inflation, currently at 5%, we find ‘real’ (inflation-adjusted) house prices have fallen by 15.4% over the past year.

The incredible vanishing £1,000,000,000,000

To put this 15.4% fall into context, it means that around £1 trillion of housing wealth --almost a sixth of the total -- has evaporated in just twelve months. Ouch!

Furthermore, house prices tend to be ‘sticky’ on the way up and down. In other words, they tend to follow the established trend. Thus, although we may see some modest monthly rises, I would warn against being suckered by these ‘false dawns’. Barring government intervention, I see no reason why prices shouldn’t continue to slip well into 2009 and even beyond.

Of course, the reason for this dramatic turnaround in the housing market can be summed up in two words: credit crunch. A steep drop in the availability of home loans has caused the number of housing sales to plunge by two-thirds. This has caused a surge in the number of properties on estate agents’ books, with over a million homes up for sale. Hence, we are now in a buyers’ market, with sellers forced to lower both their expectations and prices in order to secure a sale.

Then again, there is one piece of good news for hard-pressed homeowners. According to Fool partner Moneyfacts, interest rates on fixed-rate mortgages have started to fall, and are hardly higher than they were this time last year. However, arrangement fees have climbed steeply, so new home loans and remortgages remain dearer than they were a year ago.

How does this affect you?

As I often say, ‘averages invite comparisons’, so the national picture may have little or no bearing on your personal situation. At their heart, housing markets are local, so the current picture may be better or worse in your area than it is at a national level. For example, house prices are holding up fairly well in Scotland (for now), but are plunging in Northern Ireland. Likewise, new-build properties and flats are faring worse than family homes.

For the record, as an ex-home owner who sold to rent three years ago, I stand to benefit from falling house prices. Likewise, three in ten households (30%) are inhabited by tenants, who will benefit from lower prices if they become owner-occupiers in future. Moreover, so will the majority of current homeowners, as I explained in House Prices, Burgers And Buffett.

Indeed, in a recent BBC News survey, the majority of respondents agreed that lower house prices would be a good thing all round. So, although falling prices might strike fear into the hearts of the UK’s 11.8 million mortgage borrowers, future buyers should welcome them!

More: Find marvellous mortgages via The Fool | I Want A House Price Crash | Bad News For Homeowners And Lenders

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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.

castath 28 Aug 2008, 11:32pm

Hi Cliff, I can’t help myself, I always read your house price articles.

So average house prices are down by 10.5% in a year, 15.5% factoring in inflation, so if I had invested £100k in a savings account at 5% a year ago I would have £105k today compared to only £89.5k if I had invested it in property without taking into account any set up costs, taxes etc.

If the cost to purchase a house increases (ie interest rates, set up costs etc, rise) then to get the cost of the house fall to people with mortgages don’t we need to deduct this from the actual average house price fall.

In the year, someone with £200k sat in investments waiting to invest in a £200k property will have gained more than a first time buyer who wants to borrow 95% of the house value. Or would they?

joewaldron 29 Aug 2008, 9:57am

I think I am right in saying that the "House Price" Index is actually a "Property Price" Index, ie it includes flats. Now we are told that the average price of city centre apartments has dropped by about 40%. Any eejit who bought an off plan flat next to 10,000 other flats with only 25% of them actually occupied deserves to lose money. If this is factored in, I reckon house prices have fallen by about 7 or 8%. Once mortgage rates get a bit more competitive and there is a small drop in base rates things will stabilise and the average house price will probably have fallen by about 12 to 15%. This house price "crash" is just an exercise in reality. Prices will remain static from 2009 for 4 or 5 years. In the same way as the "recession" we are in is just belt tightening, it's not like 10,000 pits have shut down or the steel industry has disappeared overnight like in the Thatcher years is it? We just can't waste money on bigger cars because we can't leverage our borrowing against house prices or stick it on cheap credit. This is no bad thing, and will teach the younger adults that fiscal responsibility is not a dirty phrase.

cheapestskater 29 Aug 2008, 11:12am

OK I know no one has a crystal ball but what's everyone's opinion on how much they will fall by, my punt is that they'll fall by 20% before recovering slowly over a 2 month period.

cheapestskater 29 Aug 2008, 11:12am

Sorry, I meant 2 year period.

manuman 29 Aug 2008, 12:50pm

Hi
Please let's have some more objective reporting?
I rate TMF but given that you're world class analysts, let'c have some accuracy here.
The Nationwide and Halifax indexes are not statistically reliable as they only reflect properties that those respective institutions have lent on. I.e. they include no cash transactions.
The only reliable source is the Land Registry which records every house sale in England & Wales and the ACTUAL consideration. Their index shows that House Prices have fallen by only 2% in the last year!
Furthermore, we have the slowest housing market in 30 years with a higher proportion of forced sales, either by default or choice. Most of us are simply not selling.
LIBOR is now down to 5.75%; the credit squeeze is slowly unwinding; and all we need is the banks to start lending.
If you want to be bracketed with Dr Doom and the hysterical tabloids, carry on.
But most house prices are not falling; indexes are historical; supply is collapsing and, especially if interest rates come down by then we could have the UK market going gangbusters by Easter, simply because of Supply Demand imbalance.
Yours, former major Building Society Treasurer, FD and CEO who lived and managed through the 1990s collapse.

clarcombe 29 Aug 2008, 1:14pm

manuman has a very valid point. The price falls should be based on land registry sales not what the banks say. Put another way, the BS in Nationwide BS should not stand for Building society !!

What's the difference between a housing boom and bust ?
For sure the number of transactions go up as the some of house owners take the gains and move up or down the ladder
But the opposite is true when credit and the market bullishness evaporates. Not everyone sells up. Simply the number of transactions diminish and people stay put. It is not the same as a stock market crash. Only the lower end of the market will suffer as the some of the credit poor lose their properties.

The UK will be the most populous EU country in a few years* and supply is not increasing. Outside interest will keep house prices more or less stable.

(61m to 75m by 2060*)

Jimeni 29 Aug 2008, 2:18pm

The credit crunch is not unwinding, Yes LIBOR rates are lowering but the lending criteria is what really matters. Banks have changed (for good reason) the multiples that people can borrow. The interest rate is damn near irrelevant if you cant get a mortgage because the lending criteria have changed (IE a MUCH higher deposit and lower multiples of income)

Anyone who thinks this is over is simply ignoring key facts. Talk to any estate agent and find out the facts on the ground, our local agents wont take anything on their books unless you knock 30% off the asking price compared to last year.

You are correct that Nationwide's figures are based on their lending and so not perfect but you are still missing the bigger picture of changing lending criteria and a negative economic outlook.

Jimeni 29 Aug 2008, 2:26pm

also the Land Registry recorded transaction are those completed as much as three months prior to being recorded with it.

So of course its going to be slightly 'behind the curve'

Enzyme76 29 Aug 2008, 6:02pm

Its all a load of rubbish. None of you know what is going to happen.

MCMXCIX 30 Aug 2008, 9:39am

It seems that the message is getting through that prices really are in freefall (whether 2% or 10.5%, the trend is down) which will encourage even those very few FTBs who are in a position to buy to hold their nerve and watch property prices come down to a more realistic level. I think a drop of at least 40% from the peak would be most welcome.

The really big question is - how to stop this from happening again? It's done no favours for those who bought into the bubble (though they had their fun for a time) and no favours for those who refused to buy into the bubble.

Short of nationalising all housing, so that this sort of silliness and all the attendant heartbreak doesn't go on anymore, perhaps we could levy land-use taxes - sharply tiered upwards for a second property, third property etc. with the proceeds going towards social housing construction?

GrahamMiller0 30 Aug 2008, 10:03am

In answer to MCMXCIX, "how to stop it happening again", how about making the Estate Agents buy each property, and they can only sell property they own. That would force the price to be realistic not speculative. It would also eliminate chains.

ggpessimist 30 Aug 2008, 11:44am

What will happen to prices : dont know: my guess a further 15% & gloom till early 2010 Certainty: they will overshoot a reasonable 'bottom' Markets always overreact in both directions.

How to stop a repeat make it impossible for banks to lend more than 90% to homebuyers and ensure borrowers have saved with a lender for at least 6 months. Greed & over hyped media have driven the public to the banks who were all prepared to lend on disgracefully imprudent terms. The government must protect depositors but frankly shareholders of these idiot banks can go hang: the institutional shareholders should have called a halt to this very risky lending 2/3 years ago.

ggpessimist 30 Aug 2008, 11:48am

manumans opinion is interesting and worthy of respect because of his position.
however I suggest he does a tour of building sites in his neighbourhood to see how sales are going.: generally they arent!

bimber 30 Aug 2008, 1:33pm

Nationwide data is not perfectly accurate but the trends in the data will be close to those of the market as a whole. Their data for each category of property is only available quarterly so the latest falls are not included. Since the peak for each category:
Detached: -3.97%
Terraced: -6.21%
Semi-: -4.61%
Flats: -6.26%

If we're going to compare house prices against inflation (the price of a basket of goods) then why not compare it with the price of Euros, Dollars, Gold or Oil too? It's even worse in all those measures as the pound sinks. Even the Governor of the Bank of England and the Chancellor are warning us of a long deep slowdown in the economy, worse than the 70s according to Mr Darling. Robert Kiyosaki, author of the Rich Dad Poor Dad series and a long time property bull, is advocating the "5Gs": Gold, Gas (oil), Ground (land for farming), Grubb (food) and...Guns.

Barrydrake 30 Aug 2008, 10:49pm

Oh are you commenting about landlords because you desire to live in social housing or could there be a bit of the J Boy showing through because some people have 2 properties. In my experience wealth is slow to come and you have to work to get it and keep it. I think most peoples money problems these days are caused by their wanting an abundance of unneccessary luxuries that they can't afford to pay for and resorting to plastic etc. Why should someone else then have to pay for their housing . Perhaps their parents can take them back as I have had to take back my divorcing son.

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