All the previous three sentences are misleading.
First, “average” is hard to define. According to nethouseprices.com, in 2010 a semi-detached house in Sheldon, Birmingham sold for £10,000 while another in Harborne changed hands for £470,000. During the same period in London, semis sold for between £130,000 and £10 million (93 other semis went for over £1 million).
Second, as the Nationwide report admits, house prices are still 10% below the peak reached in October 2007. The good news is that they are more affordable now: using the Nationwide’s online database, here is a graph of first-time buyer mortgage costs as a proportion of average take-home pay in the West Midlands (the most typical region in the country):
The bad news is, the graph is affected by record low interest rates; the actual amount borrowed is much higher than it used to be. As late as 1998, new mortgages averaged £60,000; now, according to thisismoney.co.uk (25 February), the average new loan is £140,000 – 5 ½ times the median wage, far above the long-term trend (3 ½ times earnings).
Third, we face a long period of economic difficulty, with the threat of high unemployment. A falling pound could result in higher food and energy costs, and if the UK’s credit rating drops interest rates could rise. Each of these factors could easily depress property prices.
You have to live somewhere, but don’t think of it as a money-maker.
3 comments:
Darn my typing skills.
Couldn't the opposite be true? When the yen was strong in the 1990's, the Japanese bought up much of Hawaii, driving up house prices there.
I meant, for now. Talking to a former adviser colleague recently, he said that when his boss saw what Nigel lawson proposed for the UK budget, he started to buy and sell houses for a couple of years, trading up until he could cash out and own the large and expensive house he's got now. That was riding the inflationary wave. If you can predict the tides of liquidity, you can make a killing.
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