And if it does who
will be the winners and losers?
Those Mid Sussex people wanting property values to drop would be those 30
or 40 something’s, sitting on a sizeable amount of equity and hoping to trade
up (because the percentage drop of your
current ‘cheaper’ property will be much less than the same percentage drop of
the more expensive property – and
trading up is all about the difference). If you have children planning to
buy their first home or you are a 20 something wanting to buy your first home –
you want them to drop. Also, landlords looking to add to their portfolio will
want to bag a bargain (or two) and they would love a drop!
Yet, if you have recently bought a Mid Sussex property with a gigantic
mortgage, you’ll want Mid Sussex property values to rise. If you are
retired and are preparing to downsize, you will also want Mid Sussex property
values to rise (because you will have more cash left over after the move). Also,
if you, a landlord looking to sell your portfolio or a Mid Sussex home owner,
who has remortgaged to raise money for other projects (meaning you have very
little equity), you will want Mid Sussex property values to rise to enable you
to put a bigger deposit down on the next purchase.
So, before I discuss
my thoughts on the future, it’s important to look at the past; the last
property crash, caused by the Global Financial Crisis, was between Q3 2007 and
Q3 2009 when property values in Mid Sussex dropped 14.09%.
So what is happening now?
The
simple fact is people in the UK are moving less (and hence buying and selling
less). Estate agents up and down the land are blaming “Brexit” for this but the reality is that the problems in the British
housing market are a lot greater than Brexit!
There is a direct link between how people feel
about the property market (sentiment) and the actual performance of the
property market. However, the question of
whether people’s sentiment moves as a result of changes in the property market,
or whether changes in the property market drive sentiment is a question that
baffles most economists – you see if someone feels assured about their
financial situation (job, money etc.) and the future of property, they are more
likely to feel assured to spend their hard-earned earnings on property and buy
and if you think about it vice versa. So, I believe Brexit isn’t the issue
- it’s just the “go to” excuse people are using. Humans don’t like
uncertainty, and Brexit itself is causing uncertainty – it is, after all, the great
unknown.
So, is it the
flux of global politics?
Politics are causing hesitation in
the posh £5m+ markets of Mayfair and other high value Monopoly board pieces –
but certainly not in Mid Sussex (I don’t think Mid Sussex is too high up on the
house buying list of all these Saudi Prince’s and Russian Oligarchs). The
issues are much closer to home.
So, coming back to reality, one the biggest driving factors in the current state of play in housing market has been the part Buy To let landlords have played in the last 15 years. Making money as buy to let landlord in these golden years was as easy as falling off a log, but not anymore! Landlords had been getting off quite lightly when it came to their tax position, but with Osborne changing the taxation rules on buy to let things have become a little more difficult for landlords.
And what of Mid
Sussex first time buyers? For the last 30 years, buy to let investors have constantly had more purchasing
power than first time buyers, as they were older and more established, together
with their tax breaks. Yet, now as many amateur landlords are having second
thoughts in staying in buy to let, this has given first time buyers a chance to
get on to the property ladder.
What will happen to Mid Sussex property values? The simple
fact is we don’t have the conditions that caused the crash in 2007 (i.e. sub-prime lending in the US, causing
banks not to lend to each other, thus stalling the global economy as a whole).
Assuming everyone is sensible on the Brexit negotiations, the biggest issue is
interest rates. As long as interest
rates remain comparatively low (and don’t get me wrong – I think we could stand
Bank of England base interest rates at 1.5% to 2.5% and still be OK, then the thought
of a massive property market crash still looks improbable.
Yet correspondingly, I cannot see Mid Sussex property values rising
quickly either.
The
double-digit growth years in property values between 1999 and 2004 are well
gone. A lot of that growth was caused by an explosion of buy to let landlords
buying property to accommodate the influx of EU migrants in those years. Mark Carney at the Bank of England can’t make
interest rates any lower, so it’s difficult to envisage how credit conditions
can get any easier!
Balance of probabilities; Mid Sussex property values will hover
either side of inflation over the next five years, but if we did have another
crash, what exactly would that mean to Mid Sussex homeowners - if they dropped
by the same percentage amount, as they did in the last crash?
If Mid Sussex property prices dropped today by the same percentage as
they did locally in the Global Financial Crisis back in 2007/9 we would only be
returning to the property values being achieved in June 2015 and nobody was
complaining about those!
Therefore, looking at the number of people who
have bought homes in the area since June 2015, that would affect approximately only
17% of local home owners and landlords and only a small percentage would
actually lose - because you only lose money if they decide to move (and come to think of it, some of those
sellers would fall into the category mentioned above that would relish a price
drop!). So, really not many people would lose out.
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