I
often get asked what is going to happen to Ramsgate house prices.
Many things affect house prices, and it comes down to simple
supply and demand.
On the supply side of the equation, in the short-term, the number
of people wanting to sell their property at any one time has a massive effect
on house prices.
In 2007, the number of
properties that came onto the market in Ramsgate jumped drastically. In January
2007, 1,086 properties were available for sale in Ramsgate and by October in
the same year, that had risen to 1,403 properties.
This flooded the Ramsgate market with houses to buy whilst, at the
same time, the banks almost stopped lending money because of the Credit Crunch,
thus causing the house price crash of 2008.
Also, on the supply side of the equation is the total number of
houses in the whole country (irrespective of whether they are on the market or
not). This is an essential factor in house prices, although that has a longer-term
effect. Governments can control the number of properties being built with changes
in planning regulations, incentives for builders and the buyer schemes such as
the Help to Buy plan.
On the demand side of
the equation, property values typically rise if homeowners believe they will be
wealthier in the future.
Typically, that occurs when the whole country’s economy is
performing well as more Brits are in work and salaries are higher. The opposite
is also the case when the economy goes into recession; people tighten their
spending, lose their jobs, and thus, house prices drop. Inflation will affect
British household budgets (because if more of the household budget is going on
increased bills, there is less available for mortgage payments).
Another factor on the demand side for housing is when the
population increases (through people living longer or increasing net migration)
or when the divorce rate increases (making one family household into two
single-person households). As always, rising demand typically means higher
house prices.
One aspect of the demand side of housing that the Government can
control is the taxation of moving home. In the late spring of 2020, the
Government vastly reduced the tax (Stamp Duty) paid to buy a house, saving many
home buyers thousands of pounds.
Also, on the demand
side, property values usually increase if more homebuyers can borrow more money
with a mortgage to buy their home.
The more banks and building societies can offer mortgages, the
more homebuyers can buy their future home, thus raising house prices.
However, the constraint is the amount a home buyer can borrow on a
mortgage.
What someone can borrow depends on what they earn and if they can
afford the monthly mortgage payments. The level of mortgage payments is
dependent on three things.
1.
How much you borrow
2.
The interest rate charged
3.
The length of the mortgage
The lower the interest rates are, the lower the cost of borrowing
to pay for your house is and thus more people can afford to borrow money with a
mortgage to buy a home, meaning house prices tend to go up.
Ramsgate house prices
have risen by 125.94% between 2010 and today, mainly fuelled by low interest
rates.
So, looking at everything above, apart from Stamp Duty and the
incentives for buyers (which historically have made a minimal difference), the
Government in the short-term, irrespective of who the Prime Minister is, makes
little difference directly to house prices.
The most significant
short-term factor which directly affects house prices is interest rates.
However, the Bank of England (not the Government) sets the
interest rate for the UK economy. That means the Government (and Rishi as PM)
cannot directly make any differences in house prices (apart from the points
raised above).
Yet, indirectly, as seen with the Liz Truss / Kwasi Kwarteng Mini-Budget catastrophe only a few weeks ago, what the Prime Minister (and their Government) does can make a massive difference to interest rates and, thus, the property market and house prices.
Since December 2021, the Bank of England has been slowly raising interest rates to combat inflation. Unfortunately, the downside is that it increases the mortgage rates homebuyers must pay if they are on a variable-rate mortgage or coming off a fixed-rate deal secured a few years ago.
As 17 out of 20
homebuyers have a fixed-rate mortgage, when a bank or building society
calculates a 5-year or 10-year fixed-rate deal, they consider what the Bank of
England interest rate is today, but they also consider something equally
important, something called the 'swap rate'.
As Ramsgate homeowners and landlords, it is
vital you should be aware of the swap rates as they are based on what the
global money markets think future UK interest rates will be.
If the swap rate rises, then mortgage lenders will increase their rates on the mortgages they offer, and by doing so, (as discussed previously in this article), increased mortgage rates will affect affordability and, thus, house prices.
So, what affects UK swap rates? Mainly one thing, the price of government debt in the form of gilt yields.
Given the vast increase of planned government debt originally announced in that mini-budget by Truss/Kwarteng, the money markets who would be lending the Government the billions of pounds to fund those tax cuts got worried the Government wouldn’t be able to pay back such a rise in borrowing, so wanted a higher rate of return on the money they were lending the Government.
That return is measured in the 'gilt yield rate', and the gilt yield rate directly drives the 'swap rate.'
That rise in the gilt yield rate/swap rate was the main reason mortgage rates rocketed after the mini-budget and helped in the collapse of Liz Truss's Prime Ministership.
So, what can Ramsgate homeowners expect in the coming weeks and months with gilt/swap rates?
Rishi Sunak’s first job was to re-establish confidence in the money markets for UK plc. During the summer, the 5-year gilt rate rose steadily from 1.6% to 3.5%, in line with the general rise in Bank of England base rates. Yet when the mini-budget was delivered on the 23rd of September 2022, that rose almost straight away to 4.6%.
That meant every mortgage rate jumped in price by 1 to 1.5% almost overnight.
At the time of writing, the 5-year British gilt yield has dropped to 3.5%, and the others have either dropped below their pre-mini-budget rate or were moving in that direction, depending on the gilt type.
The gilt rate (which directly affects the swap rate, which in turn, directly affects mortgage interest rates) could drop further, subject to what Rishi Sunak and his Chancellor Jeremy Hunt have planned in the budget (and supplementary report from the Office for Budget Responsibility) on the 17th of November 2022.
A
drop in the gilt/swap rate is vital for any Ramsgate homebuyer buying a house
or Ramsgate homeowner re-mortgaging to a new mortgage deal. Why? Because...
with the average Ramsgate home worth £296,265
(a rise of 10.91% over the past year), each 1% extra in the mortgage rate would
cost every Ramsgate homeowner an additional £246.88 per month.
So, what does this all mean for Ramsgate house prices, then?
Greater certainty will keep the volume of housing transactions ticking over, yet not inescapably Ramsgate house prices.
In my blog articles on the Ramsgate property market, I believe Ramsgate house prices will be lower in 12 months, and I expect Ramsgate prices to return to where they were in the late spring/early summer of 2021.
And why is that? Unlike the 2008 Credit Crunch house price crash, today, the country has very low levels of unemployment and very well-capitalised banks (because the Bank of England subsequently forced them to keep lots of cash in their banks to cover downturns). Therefore, I don’t anticipate the kind of double-digit house price decreases seen 14 years ago.
If
you would like to pick my brain about the Ramsgate property market, be you a
potential Ramsgate first-time buyer, a Ramsgate homeowner looking at your
options on re-mortgaging or selling, or, in fact, anyone with questions, don't
hesitate to drop me a line. I will gladly share my thoughts and opinions
without cost or obligation.
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