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Boris
Johnson has attracted both praise and horror in equal measure with a new plan
for 95% mortgages to help beleaguered first time buyers to get on the property
ladder, but would that expose UK taxpayers to too much risk? In this article I
discuss the implications of what that would mean both nationally and locally in
Southampton.
With the Southampton
property market taking off due to the stamp duty holiday introduced in the summer,
Boris Johnson announced at the recent Tory Conference a plan to offer first
time buyers long-term low interest rate 95% mortgages (meaning they would only
need to raise a 5% deposit). Yet when someone borrows more than 75%, the banks
normally take out insurance in case the buyer defaults and the bank lose money
if the property gets repossessed.
When the
economy is good, the risk is low - so the insurance premiums are also low for
the banks – meaning they are happy to lend high percentage loans. Yet, nobody
could deny we are entering a period of uncertainty in the coming 12/18 months,
meaning the insurance premiums for the banks have gone through the roof.
Mortgage companies
have avoided riskier high percentage first time buyer mortgages since the start
of the Coronavirus predicament. At the end of February 2020, there were just
under 400 95% loan-to-value mortgage products accessible for first time buyers,
yet today that figure stands at just 26.
Another
reason for removing the number of 95% mortgages was that the demand for lower
percentage loans exploded after lockdown was lifted, and with many mortgage
staff still working from home, the banks and building societies focused their
attention on getting those (less risky) mortgages sorted first. Therefore, they
removed the higher percentage loans from their books, so they weren’t swamped
with too much work ... so, one must ask, should the Government take on that
risk from mortgage providers in the form of a guarantee from the Government —
sparking concern among economists, as the Government is already burdened with a
high level of debt – does it really need anymore?
Yet taxpayers
have been funding a similar scheme for years. The Help to Buy scheme, which
allows first time buyers to buy a home with a 5% deposit (and the Government
guaranteeing between 20% to 40% of the loan) has been in operation since
2013. Taxpayers are already guaranteeing £16.049bn of loans for 224,133 for
first time buyers, and when we look closer to home locally, since 2013…
818 first
time buyers in Southampton have used the Help to Buy scheme to help buy their
home, relying on the Government to guarantee them on average £42,216
That means in Southampton alone, £34,532,688
is at risk if those Southampton homeowners’ default on those pre-existing Help
to Buy Loans … yet the default rate is quite low.
So, should the Prime Minister be
playing with the housing market? Ought he instead allow open market forces to
be applied to the property market, allowing it to find its own normal and leave
the mortgage providers to decide on mortgages based on risk, because all the
Prime Minister will potentially achieve is a synthetic rise in property values?
Some in fact have argued it would be better to
spend that
public money on delivering affordable rental properties?
However, in the long run isn’t it
better for the country as a whole that British people own their home rather
than rent because the Government will have rent to pay for those tenants when they
retire if they are on the basic (low)
state pension?
Personally, I don’t disagree with the initiative, yet all I am
querying is, what are the Southampton first time buyers going to be able to
buy? The Southampton property market is already quite drawn-out, as
ultra-low interest rates have augmented the gap between the first home and the
second home, the second home to the third and so on and so forth, so is this initiative fashioning a massive demand that will
inflate property prices up the Southampton property ladder still further and ultimately
lead to even more frustration down the line?
However,
could this be the very thing that saves
the
Southampton property market in 2021?
Firstly, with the stamp duty holiday due to finish by the end of
March, there are suspicions the property market will stall. And secondly, the
very popular Help to Buy scheme mentioned above also finishes at the end of
March 2021. This boost instead of fuelling house price inflation could stabilise
the property market.
In fact, the Government are hoping the property market will help
power us out of recession. The early signs are good as the Southampton housing
market has exploded as a result of the stamp duty holiday introduced in the summer.
It certainly needs to as the country’s GDP only grew by 2.1% in August, down
from 6.4% in July, 9.1% in June and 2.7% in May.
As a country, our GDP is still 9.2% below the levels seen
pre-Covid. With the property market doing well, the country remains on course
to leave recession in Q3, yet with the impending triple peril of rising
unemployment (after furlough), further lockdown restrictions and a messy end to
the Brexit transition period does this mean we are potentially in for an
interesting ride?
Only time will tell if ‘Generation Buy’ will help save the
property market, the economy and ultimately Boris? In the meantime, I think it
will be a safe bet that people still need homes to live in … and irrespective
of what happens to the property market, with that simple fact, the winners in
all of this will be Southampton buy to let landlords.
Tell me your thoughts on this …
If you would like to pick my brains on the Southampton Property Market – Just drop me a line on social media or email me @ brian.linehan@belvoir.co.uk you can also call me on 023 8001 8222.
If you are looking for an agent that is well established, professional and communicative, then contact me to find out how we can get the best out of your investment property.
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