Why a housing crash scares Britain like nothing
else
Warnings of an interest rate shock spell trouble for
millions of households.
Home prices have spiralled dramatically over the past
20 years, and Brits are now saddled with huge mortgage debts |
BY
ANNABELLE DICKSON AND ESTHER WEBBER
SEPTEMBER
28, 2022 11:33 PM
https://www.politico.eu/article/housing-crash-scares-crisis-hit-britain-truss-kwarteng-uk-economy/
LONDON —
Even in the midst of a full-blown financial crisis, so much of British politics
is about home ownership, in the end.
Following
an extraordinary slide in Sterling and panic in the gilt markets in the wake of
Prime Minister Liz Truss’ tax-cutting "mini-budget," the Bank of
England announced emergency measures Wednesday to prop up ailing pension funds
and stabilize the U.K. economy.
But while
markets pore over currency and bond prices and mull the implications for the
complex global financial ecosystem, for a large number of heavily-indebted
Brits, it is a different set of figures that matter most — those related to
house prices, and mortgage interest rates.
“I can't
think of anything worse for Conservative economic competence than to be
responsible for everybody's mortgage bills going up chaotically thanks to a
recklessly-delivered speech,” said Giles Wilkes, a former government adviser
who is now a senior fellow at the Institute for Government and partner at Flint
Global.
Britain is
a nation where land has always mattered. For centuries, only the landowning
classes were permitted to vote, and even over recent decades, lawmakers have
been careful to heed the old adage that an Englishman’s home is his castle. In
the 1950s, Housing Minister Harold Macmillan was catapulted up the Cabinet
ranks and into Downing Street on the back of a successful housebuilding
program. In the 1980s, Margaret Thatcher reaped the electoral rewards of
allowing millions of social housing tenants to buy the homes they were living
in.
But prices
have spiraled dramatically over the past 20 years, and Brits are now saddled
with huge household mortgage debts. According to market data company Statista,
the U.K. topped a Europe-wide list of outstanding residential mortgage lending
at the end of 2021. And this new generation of homeowners has only ever known
the rock-bottom interest rates that were normalized following the 2008
financial crash. For millions of households, the prospect of a sudden hike is
daunting.
“[People]
care desperately about their houses," Wilkes said. "The mortgage
repossession crisis of the early 1990s stained the Tories for years because
that was just brutal, people just not being able to afford the house they
actually live in.”
With the
Bank of England now all but certain to hike rates dramatically in an effort to
tackle rampant inflation, Brits are anxiously checking mortgage agreements and
calculating their household exposure. Dire warnings abound of a collapse in
house prices; of home repossessions; of deep cuts to household spending
triggered by spiraling mortgage bills.
The
mortgage market saw hundreds of products withdrawn overnight on Tuesday in the
expectation of a rate rise, dramatically lowering the choice of rates for those
buying or remortgaging, according to the financial information service
Moneyfacts.
The
political implications of a mortgage crisis could be devastating for the ruling
Conservative Party.
“It's
absolutely toxic, not least because this is very 'core Tory,'" Wilkes
said. "They aspire, and their goal in life is to buy one of these new
houses and get a job and pay their way."
“Many
people will face financial ruin,” added one former Tory MP, who was working in
Westminster at the time of the "Black Wednesday" Sterling crisis of
September 1992.
“If you are
somebody with a mortgage who voted Conservative in 2019, maybe the first time
that you've ever done it — well, you're not going to be voting for the
Conservatives again.”
MPs are
already reporting a steady stream of emails from worried constituents. This in
turn is causing real jitters in parts of the parliamentary party, with one
former Cabinet minister reporting mortgage rates were a “big, big concern” this
week on the messaging groups of Tory MPs.
Home-owning dream
Their fears
may well be founded given the considerable numbers who could be affected by a
sudden and large rate hike.
Of the
estimated 24 million households in England, 15.5 million (65 percent) were
owner-occupiers in 2020-21, according to the government's English Housing
Survey. Of these, 35 percent of households were outright owners, while 30
percent were buying with a mortgage.
UK Finance,
the banking and finance trade body, thinks about 600,000 fixed rate deals were
due to expire in the second half of this year, while 1.8 million are due to
expire in 2023. Last year almost half (45 percent) of those opting for a fixed
rate deal only signed up for two years.
Money-market
predictions that the Bank of England base rate could almost treble to 6 percent
next year would therefore leave millions of people badly exposed.
Neal
Hudson, a housing market analyst and visiting fellow at Henley Business School,
warned such a rise could see mortgage payment affordability hit similar “stress
levels” to those seen ahead of the two most recent housing market downturns, in
the late 1980s and late 2000s.
“There's a
real risk of housing market activity collapsing, and potentially also price
falls, and neither of those are particularly good for the housing market
generally, or for the wider economy,” Hudson said. Capital Economics and Credit
Suisse both estimate house prices could fall by between 10 percent and 15
percent in 2023.
“An awful
lot of our wealth is tied up in the housing market," Hudson added. "And
there's definite links between the housing market and consumer spending, and
generally feelings of wealth."
And as
tends to be the case in this type of crisis, not everyone is going to feel the
pain equally.
Ben Zaranko
from the Institute for Fiscal Studies think tank said the government was
essentially redistributing away from those who have benefited from low interest
rates toward higher earners who will benefit disproportionately from the tax
cuts introduced by Truss' Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng.
There would
be “a shock” coming for “people who earn not an enormous amount, but have been
able to borrow at a lower rate, which supports a better lifestyle — things like
having a nice car and going on holiday,” he predicted.
Robert
Colvile, director of the center-right Centre for Policy Studies think tank,
said the picture will be very different for the significant number of — largely
older — people who now own their homes outright.
“If
interest rates go up and house prices come down, the people who will suffer
very probably are younger people, people who are still paying mortgages, who
are going to have to refinance, who are refinancing on an asset which is worth
less," he said. "You even have the specter of negative equity."
Renters may
not emerge unscathed either, Les Mayhew, a professor of statistics at Bayes
Business School, points out.
Buy-to-let
landlords are set to be hit by rising mortgage rates too, he said, and could
raise their rents substantially in order to stay afloat.
Long time coming
While the
sharp shock is causing alarm, many think this has been a long time coming.
House
prices have been “defying gravity” driven by longer mortgage terms and years of
low borrowing rates, Mayhew, who is also head of global research at the
International Longevity Centre, warned. On the supply side, a lack of
housebuilding and an aging population refusing to downsize have further driven
up prices.
“In the
short term, I would say we are long overdue for a crash. We've now reached this
point where interest rates have gone up higher and you can't have infinitely
long mortgage contracts. There are not many levers or mechanisms left to pull,”
he warned.
“There will
be an adjustment, whether it will be a big one or a small one, it's very hard
to tell,” he said.
Colvile
agrees there is a big difference between house prices simply coming off the
boil and the predictions of prices plummeting.
A 10
percent fall would only take people back to prices in August 2021, he points
out, and the constituency for higher house prices in the U.K. is “pitifully
small,” with opinion polls suggesting most people want prices to come down.
Only one in
five who responded to a YouGov tracker poll said they would be better off if
house prices rose, with a similar number saying they would be better off if
they fell. Almost half of those surveyed said it would make little difference
to them.
But most
agree there are far better ways to deliver affordable homes.
“Obviously
it is a much better thing if house prices go down because we have suddenly
built more houses, than because there is a sudden economic calamity,” Colvile
said.
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