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End of False Year – New Dawn for 2010 Property Prices?

January 12th, 2010 admin No comments

Will Property Prices be Crisp or Soggy in 2010

Will Property Prices be Crisp or Soggy in 2010

If 2008 was the year of economic and financial collapse then 2009 was the year of the stimulus package.

Economies that were dead on their feet have been brought back to life.

However, it wouldn´t be until 2010 unfolds that we´ll know whether we simply have a zombie like economy or whether there really is a fresh economic start?

2010 is the year in which, even if the UK or US Governments don´t wish it, the markets will require the paying down of Government Debt to begin. It is the year during which government funded projects will be cut back or delayed, reducing spending and bringing the unemployment axe to the public sector.

The public sector in developed European countries is thought to employ directly (or indirectly) at least 50% of the workforce.

For instance, in the UK, around 20% of the workforce are paid directly by the government (ie work in the NHS, Schools or Local Government) but a further 30% work for companies that are dependent on government money (ie government agencies or private businesses that are the recipients of that government money).

The axe is most likely to fall on the private companies working for government – because that is where it can most easily fall. And, fall it will.

Therefore, 2010 will see modest but continuing increases in unemployment in the UK. The savings index is likely to remain strong as people save money to cover the risk of employment, the knowledge of future tax rises due in 2011 and the need or desire to keep paying down debt.

The steady growth of unemployment in the UK and other developed European countries will keep the lid firmly on property price rises.

The best we can hope for is that 2010 is not an exciting year for property, as all exciting property news in 2010 is likely to be bad news.

Commercial Property Time Bomb Under Residential Property Prices

December 12th, 2009 admin No comments

 

Commercial Property Time Bomb?

Commercial Property Time Bomb?

The affect of the commercial property sector – which is linked to the health of companies using warehousing, offices or retail space – on the residential property sector should be negligible.

Sadly, this decoupled effect isn’t going to work in this property recession.

Here’s why:

Residential property values are closely linked to the ability and willingness of banks to lend or issue residential property mortgages (okay, also known as home buyer mortgages).

The growth in prices in the US and UK and other developed western European economies since 2004 has largely been a result of increased credit and not fundamental shifts in demand or capacity to purchase.

Therefore, the role of finance in determining property prices has grown significantly in the past 5 years such that what affects the banks now directly and significantly affects the availability and price of residential mortgages and therefore house prices.

Remember that at the peak in 2007,

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