Property Investment News and Analysis from Dominic Farrell.
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View Article  UK interest rate remains at 0.5%
recovery

The Bank of England has held UK interest rates at the record low of 0.5% in a widely-expected move.

It also announced no changes to its programme of pumping newly-created money into the economy - so-called quantitative easing (QE).

In November, the Bank of England said it would inject ...   more »

View Article  Bank split over stimulus package

Bank of England rate-setters were split three ways about the decision taken earlier this month to pump £25bn more into the economy, meeting notes show.

Seven of the nine members of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) voted for the £25bn extension, one voted for a higher amount and one for ...   more »

View Article  Cheap Money may create another property bubble

Great swaths of the world’s residential property market are not just in full recovery mode — they are booming. While the property pages in Britain have focused on a slight pick-up at the top end of the market, partly because of a revival in bankers’ bonuses, there is a full-scale ...   more »

View Article  Decision due on economic stimulus

The Bank of England's rate-setters are due to announce at midday if they want to pump extra cash into the economy.

They have spent £175bn on quantitative easing, which involves printing money to buy assets from banks and other companies to stimulate the economy.

The decision is due alongside their ...   more »

View Article  HBOS overdraft fees criticised

Most customers with an authorised overdraft will pay £1 a day whilst those whose overdrafts are unauthorized will pay £5 per day from 6 December.

HBOS says the change will make its charges simpler for customers.

But Which? says anyone who regularly uses their overdraft facility will see a big ...   more »

View Article  Second monthly rise in prices signals housing is on the long road to revival

House prices have rebounded to levels last seen at the end of 2008 after increasing for the second successive month in August, according to figures out yesterday.

Halifax said average prices rose by 0.8 per cent — the fourth month since the start of 2009 in which the lender has recorded an increase. Recent stabilisation has resulted in prices remaining “largely unchanged” in 2009, bringing the total fall from August 2008 to 10.1 per cent, the lender said.

Martin Ellis, housing economist at Halifax, said: “Demand for housing has increased since the start of the year, due to better affordability and low interest rates. This, together with low levels of property availability for sale, has boosted house prices over the last few months.”

In what is increasingly coming to be regarded as a long-term upward trend rather than a blip, estate agents said that property prices were rising faster in some parts of the country than the Halifax figures suggest.

Peter Rollings, managing director of Marsh & Parsons, the estate agent, said: “The increase in house prices nationally comes as no surprise and in pockets of the country — most notably in London — prices are rising faster than these numbers indicate.

“The underlying problem is a lack of supply of properties on the market,” Mr Rollings added. “Some homeowners lack confidence and are reluctant to take on a bigger mortgage and the cost of moving, while others are restricted by difficulties in obtaining a larger mortgage.”

Evidence that the housing market is still suffering the consequences of a severe correction remains widespread.

Nicholas Leeming, director of PropertyFinder.com, said: “The recession is almost certainly over and the latest good news on the housing market shows the recovery there is real, not a false start. But it’s also quite clear the economy and the housing market are still in intensive care and will need strong support from low interest rates and additional money supply for some months to come.”

Some commentators expect that there may be a diminished performance, and even a return to slight house price falls next year, if the Bank of England increases interest rates.

David Smith, senior partner at Carter Jonas, the chartered surveyors, explained: “Higher interest rates, when they do come, will result in fewer buyers, which will reduce demand and once again apply downward pressure on prices. The combination of increased supply and reduced demand could catch a lot of people out in 2010.”

Meanwhile Redrow, the house-builder, announced its “worst ever” annual results yesterday, a loss of £140.8 million in the 12 months to June. Although this was an improvement on the £193.9 million loss suffered a year earlier, Steve Morgan, the chairman, said: “It is intensely disappointing to me to have to report the worst set of trading results in the company’s history. I am determined to ensure that this will not be repeated and, along with the rest of the management team, am clearly focused on steering the business back to delivering the sort of robust performance that it has delivered in the past.”

Like other housebuilders, the group intends to shift its focus away from apartments, which have fared badly in the past two years, towards more traditional family housing. It will introduce a new range of homes with an historical architectural theme in an effort to re-establish the brand. However, analysts warned that an equity raising at the company was still on the cards.

Revenue from sales more than halved from £650.1 million last year to £301.8 million this year, as the average price of a Redrow home fell from £156,900 to £137,400 and the number of properties sold declined from 3,925 to 2,113.

Mr Morgan, who founded the company 35 years ago, said that he intends to start buying sites again, adding that the company had made a mistake by purchasing “very little” land in 2005.

He hopes to have acquired 12 new plots by the end of the year but acknowledged that there were very few opportunities to buy in the present market.

Source: The Times

View Article  London prime property prices have risen for the 5th month in a row, a new index has revealed.

London prime property prices have risen for the 5th month in a row, a new index has revealed.

According to the Knight Frank Prime Central London Residential Index, sales volumes are up 90% compared to January 2008, and Houses continue to outperform flats.

Liam Bailey, head of residential research, Knight ...

   more »
View Article  HSBC launches 1.99% mortgage deal

The HSBC bank is trying to gain an even larger share of the mortgage market by launching a new deal at just 1.99% for borrowers with a 40% deposit.

The low rate lasts for two years and is set at a 1.95% discount to the bank's standard variable rate of ...   more »

View Article  first direct reduces arrangement fees on offset mortgages

first direct, part of HSBC, has today cut the arrangement fees on its fixed rate offset mortgages.

On the 2 and 3 year fixed rate offset mortgages with 75% LTV, the arrangement fee is being reduced from £499 to £199.

On the 2 year fixed rate offset mortgage with 65% ...   more »

View Article  Nationwide cuts mortgage rates

Britain's biggest mutual cuts interest rates by up to 0.5 percentage points for borrowers with hefty deposits

Homeowners will benefit from the first drop in mortgage rates in months after Nationwide announced that it is cutting the cost of its most popular deals tomorrow.

Britain's biggest building society is reducing ...   more »

View Article  Mortgage approvals hit 15 month high

Mortgage approvals by UK banks hit a 15 month high in June, fuelling hopes of a property market recovery, according to the British Bankers’ Association.

A total of 35,235 mortgages were approved for house purchase last month, bettering May’s number of 31,919. Approvals were up by 65 per cent compared ...   more »

View Article  Bank holds base rate at 0.5%

The Bank of England has held base rate at 0.5% for the fourth month in a row, while continuing with its £125bn programme of quantitative easing.

Purchases of £112bn have been made under this facility since its use for monetary policy purposes was first announced after the Monetary Policy Committee’s ...   more »

View Article  Nationwide offers 125% mortgages

Nationwide says 'negative equity' mortgage will only be available in special circumstances

Mortgages allowing people to borrow up to 125% of a property's value are making a surprise comeback after Nationwide launched a deal aimed at homeowners trapped in negative equity who are keen to move house.

Britain's biggest building ...   more »

View Article  Protection scheme hits Nationwide

Nationwide, the UK's biggest building society, said profits had been hit by its "unfair" level of contribution to a savings protection scheme.

Pre-tax profits fell by 69% to £212m for the year to 4 April.

It said the £241m it had to pay into the Financial Services Compensation Scheme - ...   more »

View Article  Bank sees slow economic recovery

The Bank of England says that the UK economic recovery is likely to be slow and protracted.

The Bank has cut its growth forecast over the next two years and raised its estimate for inflation since February.

It appears to be gloomier than the government, which has forecast a decline ...   more »

View Article  Nationwide axes mortgage promise

The UK's biggest building society, the Nationwide, will no longer promise new borrowers that it will peg its variable rate mortgages to the Bank rate.

Existing customers on the Nationwide's variable rate home loan, called BMR, are guaranteed to pay no more than 2% above the Bank rate, currently at ...   more »

View Article  Borrowers flock to Northern Rock

The nationalised Northern Rock bank has reported an upsurge in potential mortgage customers.

The number of new mortgage applications rose by 70% between February and March.

The bank said its deals had become more competitive, even before it embarks on its plan to lend an extra £14bn in the next ...   more »