I wanted to delve deeper into what was happening in Thanet instead of reading headlines in the newspapers. Let me start with average incomes.
The average Thanet household income is £560.30 per week, compared to £660.10 in the South East region and £613.10 nationally.
Roll the clock back twenty years to 2002, and the average Thanet household income was £352.70.
I wanted to go into greater detail a few weeks ago; I stated that
mortgage costs for first-time buyers were much lower today (as a percentage of
household income) than in 1989 and 2007. Many of you commented on social media
or sent me messages asking what happened to other household bills.
In 1989, 16% of people’s household income went on
housing (rent or mortgage) compared to 17.5% in 2021.
Food represented 19% of people’s spending in 1989,
compared to 14.4% in 2021.
Also,
gas and electricity were 6% of household income in 1989 compared to 4.81% in
2021.
(although
that was before we saw the recent energy price hikes).
Interestingly, the UK household spent 15% of their monthly income on leisure activities in 2021, compared to 10% in 1989.
Household goods and services (i.e. household appliances, insurance etc.) have risen from 11% in 1989 to 14.9% in 2021.
Before I leave these stats, I had a peek at the
1957 stats (the earliest stats available), and in that year, food represented
33% of the household income and tobacco 6% (today, it's 2.34%).
So, compared to 1989, the big-ticket items of
housing, food and fuel combined have gone down from 41% to 36.7% of the
household income, whilst leisure has increased from 10% to 15%.
The fuel
element of household bills will rise to around 11% to 12% of household income,
and I suspect the leisure budget will be hit the hardest to pay for that. We
are seeing food inflation of around 10% to 15%, meaning that food will go from
its current 14.4% of household income to around 16% to 17%.
It's going
to be tough, especially for those people in rented accommodation who may not earn
near the average wage yet, as they have similar fixed costs for gas,
electricity and food.
Next, let
me look at the inflationary effects on housing costs.
A rise in
the base rate will, in theory, slow inflation by reducing consumer demand. In
the short-term, this increase in the base rate will increase mortgage rates, thus
adding fuel to the fire of the cost-of-living crisis by growing mortgage costs.
Those Thanet
homeowners on tracker or variable rate mortgages will instantly increase their mortgage
payments.
Encouragingly though, just under 17 out of 20
people are on fixed-rate mortgages, the majority on 5-year fixed rate deals, so
their housing costs won’t go up significantly in the short-term.
This will alleviate
some of the interest rate effects, making it more challenging and expensive for
new borrowers like first-time buyers.
However, as
I have explained in previous articles on the Thanet property market, many Thanet
landlords have been sitting on their hands in the last couple of years as
owner-occupiers have outbid each other in buying their next 'forever home'. If
there aren’t going to be so many Thanet first-time buyers, then I suspect we
might see more Thanet landlords coming out of the woodwork and buying again.
This is
especially true as investing in buy-to-let in inflationary times is an
excellent hedge to protecting the buying power of your hard-earned savings
(drop me a message if you want to read that article).
In
conclusion, although the amalgamation of the Thanet house price rises in the
last two years, the increasing interest rate rises, and the continuing cost-of-living
crisis, there is no doubt the momentum in the Thanet housing market will be
slower in the next 12 months compared to the last 24 months. Nevertheless, I
anticipate Thanet house price growth will ease (and, in some months, be
slightly negative). A better bellwether of the state of the Thanet property
market is the number of people moving house (i.e. the transaction levels).
I expect
transaction levels to be lower in the latter part of this year and the first
half of 2023, yet they are most likely to stay close to the long-term average.
The boom is over, yet it shouldn’t be a bust situation.
I wanted to delve deeper into what was happening in Thanet instead of reading headlines in the newspapers. Let me start with average incomes.
The average Thanet household income is £560.30 per week, compared to £660.10 in the South East region and £613.10 nationally.
Roll the clock back twenty years to 2002, and the average Thanet household income was £352.70.
I wanted to go into greater detail a few weeks ago; I stated that mortgage costs for first-time buyers were much lower today (as a percentage of household income) than in 1989 and 2007. Many of you commented on social media or sent me messages asking what happened to other household bills.
In 1989, 16% of people’s household income went on housing (rent or mortgage) compared to 17.5% in 2021.
Food represented 19% of people’s spending in 1989, compared to 14.4% in 2021.
Also,
gas and electricity were 6% of household income in 1989 compared to 4.81% in
2021.
(although
that was before we saw the recent energy price hikes).
Interestingly, the UK household spent 15% of their monthly
income on leisure activities in 2021, compared to 10% in 1989.
Household goods and services (i.e. household appliances, insurance etc.) have risen from 11% in 1989 to 14.9% in 2021.
Before I leave these stats, I had a peek at the
1957 stats (the earliest stats available), and in that year, food represented
33% of the household income and tobacco 6% (today, it's 2.34%).
So, compared to 1989, the big-ticket items of
housing, food and fuel combined have gone down from 41% to 36.7% of the
household income, whilst leisure has increased from 10% to 15%.
The fuel
element of household bills will rise to around 11% to 12% of household income,
and I suspect the leisure budget will be hit the hardest to pay for that. We
are seeing food inflation of around 10% to 15%, meaning that food will go from
its current 14.4% of household income to around 16% to 17%.
It's going
to be tough, especially for those people in rented accommodation who may not earn
near the average wage yet, as they have similar fixed costs for gas,
electricity and food.
Next, let
me look at the inflationary effects on housing costs.
A rise in
the base rate will, in theory, slow inflation by reducing consumer demand. In
the short-term, this increase in the base rate will increase mortgage rates, thus
adding fuel to the fire of the cost-of-living crisis by growing mortgage costs.
Those Thanet
homeowners on tracker or variable rate mortgages will instantly increase their mortgage
payments.
Encouragingly though, just under 17 out of 20
people are on fixed-rate mortgages, the majority on 5-year fixed rate deals, so
their housing costs won’t go up significantly in the short-term.
This will alleviate
some of the interest rate effects, making it more challenging and expensive for
new borrowers like first-time buyers.
However, as
I have explained in previous articles on the Thanet property market, many Thanet
landlords have been sitting on their hands in the last couple of years as
owner-occupiers have outbid each other in buying their next 'forever home'. If
there aren’t going to be so many Thanet first-time buyers, then I suspect we
might see more Thanet landlords coming out of the woodwork and buying again.
This is
especially true as investing in buy-to-let in inflationary times is an
excellent hedge to protecting the buying power of your hard-earned savings
(drop me a message if you want to read that article).
In
conclusion, although the amalgamation of the Thanet house price rises in the
last two years, the increasing interest rate rises, and the continuing cost-of-living
crisis, there is no doubt the momentum in the Thanet housing market will be
slower in the next 12 months compared to the last 24 months. Nevertheless, I
anticipate Thanet house price growth will ease (and, in some months, be
slightly negative). A better bellwether of the state of the Thanet property
market is the number of people moving house (i.e. the transaction levels).
I expect
transaction levels to be lower in the latter part of this year and the first
half of 2023, yet they are most likely to stay close to the long-term average.
The boom is over, yet it shouldn’t be a bust situation.
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