|
Weekly Update - 2 May 2008 |
He huffed and he puffed and he......sent a repossession order!
As a first time home-owner, I am nothing if not tired of picking up
my daily newspaper only to be repeatedly bombarded with truly
terrifying headlines concerning house prices. Among the recently
spotted - ‘House Prices to fall by 33% by 2010’, ‘Home‐owners facing
negative equity’, and ‘House prices post biggest fall since 1993’!
They are often intended to be dramatic (and sales inducing!) and are
usually accompanied with that much clichéd photograph of the same
residential street lined with For Sale signs. It
always leaves me wondering if these newspapers have secret production
designers who have staged a set somewhere or, if the said street does
indeed exist, then I shall very much like to find it one day.
While all this talk of large-scale repossessions, falling house
prices and negative equity might cause you to skip a heart beat or
two, by no means should you allow it to feel like a cardiac arrest.
Only a zen-like state, somewhere in between panic and complacency is
appropriate. I shall aim to outline below some reasons which would aid
in attaining such a state.
There are some obvious differences from the past housing crash of
the 1990’s. The plainest to spot is the disparity between base
interest rates which reached 15% then (and my CIO assures me she lived
off a pound of mince a week!) but are much lower now at 5%. At this
point during my investigation, our resident historian and sage (oh,
and fellow investment manager!) - Peter Sleep, pipes up to mention
that he clearly remembers paying 14% interest rate on his mortgage.
The ensuing history lesson teaches me that tight monetary policy was
installed to battle the uncomfortably high levels of inflation of
above 8%. However, by mid-1992 inflation had tumbled by half but
interest rates were kept artificially high (at 10%) to ensure
Britain’s inclusion in the EMU. This implies that house prices may
have been more depressed during the last crisis than they would have
been without the double digit base rates. I am sure a broad spectrum
of this column’s readers is all too familiar with sky high interest
rates, but for many others this may seem unimaginable. And hopefully
that shall remain the case for many a time to come! Interest rates are
seen as doubtful to repeat history and will likely remain low as
inflation is currently at a manageable 2.5%, though price pressures
remain to the upside. The Bank of England is finding it hard to
manoeuvre on rates as it faces more urgent calls to stabilise the
housing market.
The 1990’s also saw a clear recession unfortunately timed with an
unaffordable housing market. Recession right now seems at arm’s length
and more troublesome to our neighbours across the pond. What we are
facing is a credit crunch. With regards to that, the Bank of England
has this week tried to reassure us that the credit markets have gone
too far in their correction and “overstate the losses that will
ultimately be felt by the financial system and the economy as a
whole”. To what extent this is true remains to be seen but the
overriding message seems to be ‘worry not!’
Distress levels are also currently lower than the last crash and
repossessions are still some way from earlier peaks of 345,000 homes
during a five year period of 1990-95. The number of unemployed has
also fallen from 3 million during the height of the previous housing
crisis to 843,000 now and is the lowest since the 1970’s. Although
house prices are falling, average earnings are rising and averaged
nearly 4% in 2007. For those of you that fall in the ‘above average’
category, housing remains very affordable.
It is also worth remembering that house prices are cyclical. We
have evidenced years of increasing asset prices on everything from
stocks and shares to oil and gold. Over the past decade low interest
rates, easier lending criteria and a shortage of homes have
contributed to a trebling in house prices. What we are seeing now is a
much needed correction. So if you are as tired as I am of reading
about it on your morning commute, now may perhaps be the best time to
pick up a novel!
***
And finally... Globalisation may have been taken a step
too far this week where Indians are concerned. American style burger
bars, café culture and MTV have been a big hit but its cheer leaders
have caused quite the controversy at the Indian Premier League - the
newly launched cricket tournament based on the TwentyTwenty format.
Conservative Indians have objected to their skimpy outfits and have
been asked to
cover up. Presumably they have now been handed a transparent wet sari
as seen in many a Bollywood movie! Also a big shout out to my as yet
undefeated home team – the Chennai Kings!
Have a good weekend,
Aparna Ram
Research Analyst
This article represents a personal and lighthearted
view from Director, Justin Urquhart Stewart of Seven Investment
Management Limited, and is based on current financial news and events
around the world. Its content should not be used for investment
purposes and you should contact an independent financial adviser
before making any investment or financial decision. Seven Investment
Management Limited is authorised and regulated by the Financial
Services Authority. Member of the London Stock Exchange. Head office:
23 Austin Friars, London EC2N 2QP. Telephone 020 7760 8777. Registered
in England and Wales number 4092911. Registered office: 3 More London
Riverside, London SE1 2AQ.
|