BREAKING PROPERTY NEWS – 17/10/2022

Daily bite-sized proptech and property news in partnership with Proptech-X.

 

Why buying or owning a home with a mortgage is going to be painful

Jeremy Hunt, the fourth Chancellor in less than a year, will unveil his fiscal plan in two weeks. Regardless of how it is received, interest rates will immediately rise. If Truss is then ousted as Prime Minister, we will be looking at a fifth Chancellor before Christmas and yet more mayhem.

However you cut it up, uncertainty, inflation, war and political instability are always bad for markets, and that includes the housing market.

Each year around 1.2 million homes complete, with a third of these being sold to first-time buyers. Covid and the third last Chancellor Rishi Sunak, with his giveaway SDLT scheme, distorted these completion numbers a little, but each year 400,000 plus homes sell to new buyers.

The Bank of England base rate is 2.25%, and first-time buyers can get a mortgage at 6.0% fixed for two years, but early in November the base rate will go up 100 points, or perhaps 150 points, to 3.25% or 3.75%.

We know this as the Governor of the Bank of England Andrew Bailey has already flagged this, saying: “As things stand today, my guess is that inflationary pressures will require a stronger response than perhaps we thought in August.”

This would increase to a two-year fixed rate of 7.25% to 7.75%, which would lock out potentially 350,000 plus buyers from the housing market. This would decimate the new home builders, and the residential marketplace as first-time buyers underpin the chains when second steppers look to move.

For the seven million people who already have a mortgage, or specifically the 100,000 plus who each month may be coming out of a fixed rate mortgage deal that was under 2%, the new fixed rate deals at 10%, which is five times higher, will be a huge wake-up call.

Having been an agent from the mid-1980s I have seen many boom and bust housing cycles, usually sparked by Chancellors tinkering with taxation ploys around housing, from Lawson in 1988 through to the folly of Rishi Sunak’s giveaways.

In my view, having marketed over 18,000 properties in 30 years, the nation sits on its hands when it has no cash in its pocket, and if your mortgage repayments increase by £600 a month, the last thing you think about is buying another home…you just hunker down.

The knock-on effect is obvious too. In the lettings sector, tenants will be paying higher rents, as landlords hit by increased financing costs pass these costs on. And with many landlords exiting the market, the PRS will be squeezed with a supply problem further compounding a rise in rents.

A lot of it hinges on the fortunes of Liz Truss and the next fortnight. A coup seems most likely, but even if she stays the money markets are going to react negatively to her new austerity Chancellor.

Each week I get to talk to around twenty agencies, some small some large, and during the confusion of the last seven days, some clear patterns are emerging.

First, all agencies are scrambling to get as many sales as possible across the exchange finishing line, typically one-third of their sold subject to contract pipeline gets exchanged every month. But due to the lending turmoil and market uncertainty, getting buyers to do the deal has become far more complex.

Some first-time buyers have just pulled out, waiting to see if house prices will fall, and many chains are seeing renegotiations of sale prices, caused by down-valuations or buyers wanting a ‘discount’ to do the deal.

There has been a flurry of new property coming to the market, with some vendors clearly realising that 2023 will probably be a very sticky market, and thus they are looking to move while they can. Agents also tell me that this new inventory is coming on at strong money, so will not sell quickly.

In fact, with the cost of borrowing rising and homes being listed at super high values, many agents say there is a Mexican standoff as the market decides whether it is a buyer’s or seller’s market. The paucity of instructions has given vendors the whip-hand for most of 2022 until they become a buyer and have to pay full money on their next purchase. Now it seems that buyers may well have the power moving into the last quarter of 2022.

Letting agents are saying that rents are continuing to climb, stock levels of new tenancies are hard to find, and most of the activity is existing landlords reletting their property, with a number of landlords concerned over the section 21 legislation which may or may not be on the cards. Truss is saying section 21 will be repealed, but will she even be prime minister in a few weeks, and if not what might a new prime minister think?

Covid is also factoring into the property world again. With 1 in 35 now contracting Covid, some agents are again locking the door to their branches to minimise risk and facemasks are making a return to some viewings.

The biggest concern that agents are expressing is by far and away the new calm that seems to be enveloping the market. October is typically the month when the housing market starts to seasonally slow, but the fear of many agents is that by January interest rates may have risen so much that the whole market stagnates.

As one agent put it, people always want to move, but if the cost to move becomes too great, only those who have to will actually do so.

The agent went on to say that new enquiries were slowing and there was definitely a feeling that the tap was being turned off. They also said that they thought in 2023 it would take longer to agree on sales as buyers would become pickier, sensitive to the much larger loans that would need to service to buy their next home.

Andrew Stanton

CEO & Founder Proptech-PR. Proptech Real Estate Influencer, Executive Editor of Estate Agent Networking. Leading PR consultancy in Proptech & Real Estate.

You May Also Enjoy

Commercial Agent Talk

Why Exterior Cleaning Matters for Commercial Buildings

First impressions are formed long before anyone walks through the front door. For commercial buildings—be it a warehouse, office, or retail space—the state of the exterior often speaks louder than signage or branding. Cleanliness, order and upkeep all play into how a business is perceived, and exterior cleaning is a fundamental part of building maintenance…
Read More
Breaking News

Government to help SME builders

The Government has announced a package of proposals to directly help small and medium sized builders (SMEs) and they include a ‘Medium’ sized site definition to enable more proportionate planning requirements, streamlined planning for ‘Minor’ sized sites and more targeted support for access to land and finance. Richard Beresford, Chief Executive of the National Federation…
Read More
Estate Agent Talk

Guide to deciphering property surveys

To help buyers navigate the world of property surveys, Cheke & Co has compiled a step-by-step, guide: Why do I need a property survey? Having a professional survey report is crucial to making informed decisions when purchasing a property. Our reports provide you with expert advice to: Make a reasoned and informed decision on whether…
Read More
Breaking News

UK housing market springs back: Busiest May for home sales since the 2021 pandemic boom

Buyers and sellers have sprung into action after Easter, with the number of sales agreed in May the highest in four years Most sellers are also buyers who are seizing the opportunity to agree purchases, enticed by some attractive mortgage deals and the ability to borrow up to 20 per cent more Increased market activity…
Read More
Breaking News

The five MOST searched mortgage questions answered by a property expert

With terms including the word ‘mortgages’ generating over half-a-million Google searches a month (595k) in the UK alone, it’s clear that many prospective homeowners are still confused about how mortgages work, what they’re eligible for, and how to navigate a challenging market. To help provide clarity, Luke Williams, Specialist Property Advisor, at Pure Property Finance,…
Read More
Breaking News

53% of Tenants likely to challenge rent increases, but fair landlords have little to fear, says LRG report

More than half of tenants say they are likely to challenge rent increases under the incoming Renters’ Rights Bill (RRB), according to new research by LRG (Leaders Romans Group). However, the figures also show that nearly half of the tenants surveyed would not look to challenge a rent increase, a reflection, LRG says, of the…
Read More