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UK 2009 Property Incentives End – What Now for 2010 Property Prices?

How much will this house cost in 2010?

How much will these houses cost in 2010?

At the end of December 2009, the UK Government withdrew its tax relief on home in the first and second time buyer price bracket (125,000 GBP to 175,000 GBP) and it was accompanied by a reported 0.4% price rise in UK property prices in Dec 2009 by Nationwide and a 2.2% drop recorded by Rightove.

 

Nationwide´s modest rise is slightly down on the 0.5% rise in November whilst rightmove reported a sharper fall of 2.2% against 1.6% in November.

So, the housing market is either weak or weaking.

The question is, to what were he weak prices supported by buyers pull forward their purchases in order to avoid the stamp duty due from 1st of Jan 2010?

Is this the housing equivalent of the cash for clunkers deal for cars?

The answer is probably not. Yes, the volume of property sales in the lower price brackets (below 250,000 GBP) held up well, but it fell sharply in the higher price brackets where sales volumes were much lower and prices softened rather than firmed (as they did in the lower price groups).

2010 is likely to find that sales volumes in the lower price range will fall and prices will soften as Goverment support is withdrawn and the modest effect of home purchases brought forward takes its effect.

However, the real question we need to ask when forecasting short term property prices (ie upto 1 year) is what will happen to interest rates?

We don´t know, but we do know this about 2010

  • Government debt default (perhaps by Greece or Dubai or another hidden gem) is a real possibility that we will live with all year (even if it doesn´t happen)
  • UK and US Governments will come under increased pressure to deal with their debt
  • The dollar may rise as it is seen as a safe haven, which might mean US interest rates lift
  • UK Commercial property refinance needs could derail two major UK banks and create a new banking crisis and forcing UK interest rates higher and derailing UK residential property prices
  • UK Tax hikes will not take affect in 2010 but in 2011, thereby putting further downward pressure in UK property towards the end of 2010.

Okay, we can only conclude that the risk for interest rates is an upward move. Essentially, if something really good happens, then interest rates will rise – in both the UK and US , and if something really bad happens, interest rates will rise.

Therefore, low and stable interest rates are dependent on a very stable and low growth economic scenario.

Therefore, the best that might be hoped for is a modest 3 to 4% increase in property prices, but with the equal risk of a fall of 10 to 15%. Albeit, you can expect the wide divergence in property price indexes to continue.

The result is likely to be somewhere in the middle, but the risk for property prices is clearly on the downside.

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