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Housing slump may hit less hard in Scotland but it will still be a blow to buyers

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Published Date: 23 May 2008
STORIES reporting how the credit crunch is likely to affect the Scottish housing market currently all tend to say the same thing.
The headline on one such story in The Scotsman yesterday was typical: Scots to escape worst as UK house prices set to fall 7 per cent.

In other words, while there may be house price woe south of the Border, we will be all right up here.

I'd li
ke to think that will be true, but I fear it won't be. My fears were reinforced by a housing conference in Edinburgh yesterday, organised by Shelter, the charity that campaigns on housing matters affecting poor people.

Here's something of what I heard.

First, this particular downturn in the housing market is unlike any that we have experienced before.

As Steve Wilcox, professor of housing policy at York University explained, most housing market crises are caused by general economic problems.

A recession affecting the wider economy, such as the one Britain experienced in the early 1990s causes unemployment and uncertainty. That in turn causes people to draw back from spending money on moving house, reducing the number of buyers and causing prices to fall.

But this particular downturn is quite different. It stems directly from the housing market itself, admittedly in America, but it is nonetheless primarily a housing finance problem. The credit crunch now afflicting the entire economy means that the supply of mortgage finance has greatly reduced and what is available is more expensive. And that, Wilcox pointed out, is a problem everywhere, whether you are trying to get a mortgage in Benbecula or Berkhamstead.

Why then, should Scotland escape this problem? The most commonly advanced answer is that house prices here have not risen as sharply as they have done down south. This doesn't seem a very convincing response. Even though Scotland's house-price bubble has expanded to a lesser degree than elsewhere, it is still a bubble. And fewer buyers means prices will fall.

Second, the housing market has changed quite dramatically since the last price downturn. The new element, according to Gwilym Pryce, professor of urban economics and social statistics at Glasgow University, is that buying a house is no longer solely about obtaining somewhere to live, but also about making an investment.

Since the early 1990s, many people bought houses in order to rent them out. In most cases, the rent received covered the mortgage cost and the landlord was more interested in the long-term capital gain. Some 40,000 buy-to-let mortgages were taken out in 2006 and buy-to-let landlords now control a third of all rented property in Britain.

But now that these investments are turning cold, what's going to happen to them? The majority of buy-to-let landlords own only a handful of properties. Even if a only a minority decide to sell, that will put a lot of extra property on to a market which already has a lot more houses for sale in it than it did a year ago. That can only depress prices further. And, I am assured, there are thousands of bought-for-let homes in Scotland.

You may think that falling house prices means that those people who have been frozen out of the market because of high prices will now stand a chance of being able to buy. Think again. The problem now, remember, is not a lack of houses, but a lack of mortgages for purchases. And the people who have been unable to buy mainly have low incomes. Bluntly, they are subprime and therefore riskier prospects for lenders. Banks are well aware of that, so, where a year ago they might have lent such a purchaser 95 per cent of the property cost, now they will only lend 80 per cent. And, of course, most of these would-be buyers cannot afford that size of deposit.

The Scottish Government has pledged to increase the rate of new house-building and to tackle the affordability problem. But private housebuilders and housing associations both told the conference they were reducing building activity and that what they do build will be more expensive. Housing is clearly going to become a big political problem.

• Comments, compliments, criticisms, all welcomed at: pjones@ednet.co.uk.





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  • Last Updated: 22 May 2008 9:30 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

The ghost of Harry Lauder,

Edinburgh 23/05/2008 08:20:26
Good on Peter Jones for being one of the few media commentators to look behind the spin issued by lenders, surveyors and property centres. There is far too much wishful thinking in the private part of the property business. The market fundamentals north and south of the border are exactly the same: and there aren't any passport checks on housing market problems.
2

Liz,

Edinburgh 23/05/2008 09:57:51
I am in shock.
How have the Scotsman allowed an article like this to be published!?
I could almost suggest that it appears to be an honest assesment of the housing problems we are encountering. Unlike the usual 'adverts' for property companies we usually get.

Not a single word of VI spin and no quotes from stupid (soon to be out of a job) letting agents telling us that Edinburgh/Scotland is special.

Thank you Mr Jones
3

Liz,

Edinburgh 23/05/2008 10:07:33
Though thinking about it, this article has hardly made the front page has it.

If it had been some muppet from the ESPC telling us how prices were going to go up X-million% this year and Edinburgh was a unique market it would probably have been front page news....
4

Capital Boy,

23/05/2008 11:37:54
not a home owner then 2+3 ? bitter tenant perhaps??
5

Liz,

Edinburgh 23/05/2008 11:57:32
#4
Sorry, you are wrong in your presumptions (I have a house and it is all mine - no mortgage :)).
One day you will wake up to the fact that high house prices few people any real good and at the end of the day a drop in prices would actually be the best thing that could happen to many 'owners', as it could allow them to 'move up the ladder' much easier than with rapidly increasing prices.

What I would like to see though is a bit more honesty about the situation. Usually this papers property section is filled with guff spouted from the ESPC and others about how special Edinburgh is. For once this article is an honest assesment of the situation and you might do well to consider your situation for the coming difficulties.
6

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

23/05/2008 14:02:58
"The problem now, remember, is not a lack of houses, but a lack of mortgages for purchases."

Exactly so. So many commentators have gotten it wrong by identifying this as a housing bubble rather than a credit bubble.

"this particular downturn in the housing market is unlike any that we have experienced before."

Indeed. Credit bubbles end differently from housing bubbles. The prior mass-availability of credit gradually dries up until credit is neither offered nor, as people as sickened by its effects, sought. A normal housing bubble ends in a 20% to 30% fall in prices. A normal credit bubble ends in a 50% to 90% fall in prices.

For examples see The South Seas Bubble 1720 (stock prices nearly wiped out); the British mortgage bubble of 1911 (house prices down 90%); the Wall Street bubble 1925-1929 (stocks down 89%); or the Japanese credit bubble 1989-present( stocks down 80%, house prices down 50% to 90%).

7

ccc,

23/05/2008 14:46:43
Have to say I am shocked. Good article.

Addresses the main points that are so often overlooked - except on the comments section of this site :)

 

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