London house prices fall in September: first time in eight years
High-end London property fell by 3.2%in year
House sales down by over a very large one-third
Global Real Estate Bubble Index see table
Brexit, rising inflation and political uncertainty causing many buyers to back away from market
U.K. housing stock worth record 6.8 trillion, almost 1.5 times value of LSE andmore thanthe value of all the gold in world
Homeowners and property investors shoulddiversify and invest in gold
Editor Mark O’Byrne
In what might be a sign of things to come, London house prices have fallen for the first time in eight years.
London house sales have fallen by a third as years of frenzied biddingcome to a shuddering halt.
The capital remains expensive. Housing still costs 10 times the average salary and only 50% of Londoners own their own homes, the EU average is 70%.
Currently the rest of the UK appears to be benefiting from the lack of affordability and stock in London. Buyers are moving further out of the capital in order to secure their footing on the housing ‘ladder’ no snakes here
Last month U.K. house prices regained their fastest pace since February. AHalifax house price survey showed a 4% price rise in the three months to September compared with the same period last year.
Long-term, a fall in London prices may be an indicator that concerns over Brexit, inflation and political stability are beginning to affect the U.K property market.
This will be a hard landing for a country that is so convinced that putting all one’s eggs in the housing basket is the answer to securing and growing wealth.
‘Global Real Estate Bubble’
Last month,UBS Wealth Managementpublished itsGlobal Real Estate Bubble Index. London came sixth with a score of 1.77. The group concluded that London is still firmly in bubble-territory.
The research found that London house prices have climbed 15% in the last year and 45% since the financial crisis, when adjusted for inflation.
This suggests September’s fall in prices might be a signal that the top of the market is just behind us. This is no surprise when one considers both the known and unknown events on the horizon for the city.
Brexit is the most discussed threat. Foreign buyers are wary of what the future holds and there is anecdotal evidence that EU workers are being offered shorter contracts.Four years ago foreign buyers accounted for 82% of property purchases.
Brexit is the main stymie of political progress in the country.
Conferences, policy announcement and parliamentary discussions are dominated by how this may or may not play out. No-one knows what will happen, prompting many to feel uncomfortable with making major financial decisions.
This could go on for some time.
Meanwhile the Bank of England are tasked with sorting out the economy. They continue to encourage inflation and plan to raise interest rates. Thus devaluing the value of the pounds in our accounts and increasing the cost of borrowing.
It is not surprising, therefore, that it is not just in London that we are looking at the bursting of the property bubble.
Rest of the UK still climbingaccording to some
London, often an indicator for things to come for the rest of the U.K., should be a beacon for the rest of the country’s housing market.
Halifax data shows in September house prices hadtheir fastest annual rise since February. The year-on-year increase jumped a surprisingly large 4%.
Pundits believe this is an indicator that buyers are shrugging off threats of a rate hike by the Bank of England.
Others aren’t so sure. Nationwide’s own home price survey showed more subdued numbers (2%), suggesting there is a slowdown in house prices across the country, particularly in certain regions.
The pace of national price increases has slowed and is downfrom a peak of 10% in early 2016, to 4% today.
Halifax said future demand might be limited by ‘a squeeze on spending power from higher consumer price inflation and the high cost of property.’ However it does not think that future interest rate price rises would affect the market.
Despite concerns over inflation stretching affordability, mortgage approvals remainat an average pace of almost 67,000 a month, little changed from 2016.
The economist Samuel Tombs of Pantheon Macroeconomics told the Guardian that he thought Halifax was way off the mark.
Other surveys show that the pipeline of demand is soft; Rics [the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors] has reported that new buyer inquiries have fallen in six of the last seven months. Real wages still have further to fall over the next six months and mortgage rates will rise soon in response to the increase in banks’ funding costs.
Obsession with home ownership
Last week Prime Minister Teresa May referred to the ‘British Dream’. Judging by Twitter few understood what she meant.
If there is such a thing it has to be the desire to own the roof over your head and then sell it at a ridiculous profit.
In the UK this comes at a serious price, but one which few of us question. Often first-time buyers have to rely on family to help, then be comfortable with a 25-year mortgage and restrict their lifestyles well into middle-age.
Ten years later they have to do it all again as a baby’s on the way, house prices are climbing and they want to climb the proverbial ladder.
Failure to do this is seen as just that a ‘failure’.
To not pursue home ownership in the UK and in Ireland is seen as pretty nuts and irresponsible.
The problem is that in the UK, renting is enough of an incentive to put yourself in such a dire financial situation. It is very different to continental Europe. In the UK and Ireland few leases are long-term and landlords hold the majority of rights. As a result you feel very insecure in your home.
Brits and Irish want to feel financially secure. Ironically they get this security by getting themselves into hundreds of thousands of pounds worth of debt. But the ‘wealth effect’ is so desired and so encouraged by economists, that this level of debt is both expected and accepted.
The British government has encouraged this. For them this is what capitalism is all about. Home ownership and buy-to-let mortgages. But it may run people and perhaps the economy into the ground.
Consider the number of people who subsidise their lives, savings and retirement with the ‘wealth’ they have locked up in their homes. In 2015 older homeowners borrowed 4.2m a day using equity release loans as pensions are no longer covering retirement costs.
We can only expect this to get worse given thelooming pension crisis.
Pensioners will be royally scuppered if they find themselves in negative equity, with no pension to support them. Especially so given a considerable number ofpension funds and investment bonds rely on UK property to generate income.
Government has a lot toanswer for
The country is consistently coming under fire for a lack of housing supply and lack of affordability.
Earlier this week the government announced plans toextend its Help to Buy program to 135,000 buyers. The program offers interest-free loans to homebuyers. This will see an extra 6.7 billion pounds ($8.7 billion) of stimulus into the market.
Yet anotherexample of leaders trying to unnecessarily stoke a market which results in increased inflation and higher debt levels for a country which is already one of the most indebted.
Currently the UK housing stock is worth nearly 7 trillion, more than the companies listed on the London Stock Exchange and more than the value of all the gold in the world.
The World Gold Council estimates that all the gold ever mined totaled 187,200 tonnes in 2017. At a price of US$1,250 per troy ounce, one tonne of gold has a value of approximately US$40.2 million.
Thus today, all the gold in the world is worth some $7.5 trillion dollars or 5.7 trillion pounds and less than the value of the UK housing stock.
The ridiculous valuation of the London property in particular is thanks to the government, banks and real estate businesses peddling the Greater Fool Theory.
The theory applies here as buyers bought property they thought was expensive but believed they would be able to sell it at a higher price, for significant profit to an ‘even greater fool’.
Falling house prices will make a fool out of everyone, whilst (no doubt) the government continue to make housing ‘affordable’.
Time to Buckle Up With Physical Gold
Housing in the UK is a single asset class but it accounts for two-thirds of the country’s wealth.
There is not a level in society whether government, businesses, banks or individuals that does not have skin in this game.
The figures and economic outlook suggest we need to start diversifying.
The government needs to stop being so irresponsible and no longer constantly peddle arguments for home ownership. However it isdifficult politically to sell that story. Especially when all parties have realised the youth vote has major housing concerns and believes they have the right to own property.
Brexit is the main area of concern and no-one wishes to rock the property market any further. Instead homeowners need to consider how they can both protect themselves from falling prices and diversify their investments and wealth.
It is not prudent to have so much wealth caught up in one falling asset. Especially given that it is inevitable that London property will be affected by a number of issues on the horizon including rising interest rates, inflation and Brexit.
Gold is another real asset that millions of investors have placed their faith in over hundreds of years. Like housing, it is tangible. Unlike housing, it does not come with a massive debt burden and it benefits from rising inflation and uncertainties in both political and economic spheres.
News andCommentary
Gold marks over 1-week high; firm dollar curbs gains (Reuters.com)
South Korea stocks surge, leading Asian market gains (MarketWatch.com)
Germany, China lift world stocks, Spanish worries simmer (Reuters.com)
U.S. Stocks Slip, Dollar Mixed as Gold Advances (Bloomberg.com)
Jewelers Rally on Indian Rule Reversal as Peak Gold Season Looms (Bloomberg.com)
Source: Economyandmarkets.com
Italy Will Default And Create Next Deflationary Crisis (EconomyAndMarkets.com)
The Hated Dollar Resurges. But Why? (WolfStreet.com)
Questions that deniers of monetary metals market rigging won’t answer (Gata.org)
Silver price (InvestingHaven.com)
Donald Trump: Warmonger-in-Chief (Acting-Man.com)
Gold Prices (LBMA AM)
10 Oct: USD 1,289.60, GBP 977.77 & EUR 1,094.61 per ounce
09 Oct: USD 1,282.15, GBP 976.23 & EUR 1,092.01 per ounce
06 Oct: USD 1,268.20, GBP 970.43 & EUR 1,083.93 per ounce
05 Oct: USD 1,278.40, GBP 969.28 & EUR 1,086.51 per ounce
04 Oct: USD 1,275.55, GBP 960.87 & EUR 1,085.11 per ounce
03 Oct: USD 1,270.70, GBP 959.00 & EUR 1,081.87 per ounce
02 Oct: USD 1,273.10, GBP 956.48 & EUR 1,084.55 per ounce
Silver Prices (LBMA)
10 Oct: USD 17.12, GBP 12.98 & EUR 14.53 per ounce
09 Oct: USD 16.92, GBP 12.86 & EUR 14.41 per ounce
06 Oct: USD 16.63, GBP 12.73 & EUR 14.20 per ounce
05 Oct: USD 16.66, GBP 12.64 & EUR 14.19 per ounce
04 Oct: USD 16.83, GBP 12.67 & EUR 14.29 per ounce
03 Oct: USD 16.61, GBP 12.53 & EUR 14.13 per ounce
02 Oct: USD 16.58, GBP 12.46 & EUR 14.12 per ounce
Recent Market Updates
Perth Mint Gold Coins Sales Double In September
Survey shows UK and US Pensions Crisis is Imminent
Gold Investment In Germany Surges Now World’s Largest Gold Buyers
Yahoo Hacking Highlights Cyber Risk and Increasing Importance of Physical Gold
Safe Haven Silver To Outperform Gold In Q4 And In 2018
Russia Gold Rush Sees Record Reserves For Putin Era
China Catalyst To Send Gold Over $10,000 Per Ounce?
Gold Matches S&P 500 Performance In First 3 Quarters; Up 12% 2017 YTD
Gold Standard Resulted In Fewer Catastrophes FT
Financial Advice From Man Who Made $1+ Billion in 1929 Importance Of Being Patient and Sitting
Gold prices to reach $1,400 before the end of the year GoldCore
Commodities King Gartman Says Gold Soon Reach $1,400 As Drums of War Grow Louder
ImportantGuides
For your perusal, below are ourmostpopularguidesin 2017:
EssentialGuideTo Storing Gold In Switzerland
EssentialGuideTo Storing Gold In Singapore
EssentialGuideto Tax Free Gold Sovereigns (UK)
Please share our research with family, friends and colleagues who you think would benefit from being informed by it.
The post London House Prices Are Falling Time to Buckle Up appeared first on GoldCore Gold Bullion Dealer.
Wolfden Resources (TSXV:WLF) has announced that additional deep drill holes in the company's ongoing infill and…
Gold Set to Soar Above $1,300 – Goldman and Bank of America – Growing fiscal…
The finest-known 1792 silver half disme, once in the possession of then-Secretary of State Thomas…
In precious metals futures action Tuesday, gold and palladium climbed for a second straight session…
The finest known 1792 silver Half Disme, once in the possession of then-Secretary of State…
Goldnomics Podcast: Silver Guru – David Morgan – Silver and Gold Will Protect in the…