I was
having a lazy Saturday morning, reading through the newspapers at my favourite
coffee shop in Burgess Hill. I find the
most interesting bits are their commentaries on the British Housing
Market. Some talk about property prices,
whilst others discuss the younger generation grappling to get a foot-hold on
the property ladder with difficulties of saving up for the deposit. Others feature articles about the severe lack
of new homes being built (which is especially true in Mid Sussex!). A group of people that don’t often get any
column inches however are those existing homeowners who can’t move!
To
answer that, we need to go back 50 years. Inflation was high in the late
1960’s, 70’s and early 80’s. To combat
this, the Government raised interest rates to a high level in a bid to lower
inflation. Higher interest rates meant
the householder’s monthly mortgage payments were higher, meaning mortgages took
a large proportion of the homeowner’s household budget. However, this wasn’t
all bad news since inflation tends to erode mortgage debt in ‘real spending
power terms’. Consequently, as wages
grew (to keep up with inflation), this allowed home owners to get even bigger
mortgages. At the same time their
mortgage debt was decreasing, therefore allowing them to move up the property
ladder quicker.
Roll
the clock on to the late 1990’s and the early Noughties, and things had
changed. UK interest rates tumbled as UK
inflation dropped. Lower interest rates
and low inflation, especially in the five years 2000 to 2005, meant we saw
double digit growth in the value of UK property. This inevitably meant all the home owner’s equity
grew significantly, meaning people could continue to move up the property
ladder (even without the effects of inflation).
This
snowball effect of significant numbers moving house continued into the mid
noughties (2004 to 2007), as Banks and Building Society’s slackened their lending
criteria. You may remember the 125% loan
to value Northern Rock Mortgages. This meant home movers could borrow even more
to move up the property ladder.
So,
now it’s 2017 and things have changed yet again!
You
would think that with ultra-low interest rates at 0.25% (a 320-year low) the
number of people moving would be booming – wouldn’t you? However, this has not been the case. Less people are moving because:
(1) Low
wage growth of 1.1% per annum
(2) The
tougher mortgage rules since 2014
(3) Sporadic
property price growth in the last few years
(4) High
property values comparative to salaries (I talked about this a couple of months
ago).
In 2007, 3,454 properties sold in the Mid Sussex
District Council area and last year, in 2016 only 2,779 properties sold – a
drop of 19.54%.
Therefore,
we have just over 675 less households moving in the Mid Sussex Council area
each year. Now of that number, it is
recognised throughout the property industry around fourth fifths of them are
homeowners with a mortgage. That means there are around 554 mortgaged
households a year (fourth fifths of the figure of 675) in the Mid Sussex
council area that would have moved 10 years ago, but won’t this year.
The
reason they can’t/won’t move can be split down into different categories,
explained in a recent report by the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML). So, of
those estimated 554 annual Mid Sussex non-movers, based on that CML report.
1. There are around 199 households a year
that aren’t moving due to a fall in the number of mortgaged owner occupiers
(i.e. demographics).
2. I then estimate another 77 households a
year are of the older generation mortgaged owner occupiers. As they are
increasingly getting older, older people don’t tend to move, regardless of what
is happening to the property market (i.e. lifestyle).
3. Then, I estimate 33 households of our Mid
Sussex annual non-movers will mirror the rising number of high equity owner
occupiers, who previously would have moved with a mortgage but now move as cash
buyers (i.e. high house price growth).
4. Finally, and the majority of people that
would have moved (but can’t). I believe there are 244 Mid Sussex mortgaged
homeowners that are unable to move because of the financing of the new mortgage
or keeping within the new rules of mortgage affordability that came into play
in 2014.
Whilst
the first three points above (demographics, lifestyle and high price growth) is
something beyond the Government or Bank of England control. However could there be some influence exerted
to help, it is the fourth point where something could be done, as it is the
people and households in that final 4th point (the non-movers because of
financing the new mortgage and keeping within the new rules of mortgage
affordability?)
If Mid Sussex property values were lower; this would decrease
the size of each step up the property ladder.
This would mean the opportunity cost of increasing their mortgage would
reduce (i.e. opportunity cost = the step up in their mortgage payments between
their existing and future new mortgage) and they would be able to move to more
upmarket properties.
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