Why have house prices soared so high?

This feature is part of our FREE daily Money Morning email. If you’d like to sign up, please click here: sign up for Money Morning.

Apparently house prices could well fall at some point over the  next couple of years.
 

Now regular  MoneyWeek readers will know that we’ve been expecting some sort of  collapse for quite a while – but it’s not just us who are saying it this  time.
 

No lesser  authority than David Miles, Morgan Stanley’s chief UK economist and  former adviser to the Treasury, has reported that ‘a sharp fall in real  house prices is likely at some point in the relatively near  future.’
 

So why does  he believe this?

Miles believes that as much as half of the growth in house prices  since 1996 (up about 187%, according to figures from Halifax) has been  driven by speculation, with only half down to fundamentals, such as the  supply and demand issues that property bulls keep citing.
 

He’s not  sure of exactly when the slump will come, but seems to think it’ll be  pretty soon – “it could yet be one or two years away”.
 

Of course,  Mr Miles’s observation has been received with the usual barrage of  denial from estate agents and property pundits. Even the BBC somewhat  strangely opted to report his prediction for “a substantial fall in real  house prices” with these words: “A former government advisor… says house  prices will soon slow down so much they lag behind general inflation.”  That’s a very relaxed way to describe what in any other market would be  described as a crash.
 

But anyway  – back to Mr Miles. Speculation is certainly one reason for house prices  soaring – but of course, if people didn’t have the means to keep buying  houses, regardless of how expensive they are, prices couldn’t rise any  further. So a trading update from sub-prime lender Kensington Group shed  a particularly well-timed shaft of light on the market  yesterday.
 

The group’s  shares were the biggest losers in the FTSE 350, plunging 100p to 805p,  as it warned that profits would be at the lower end of City forecasts,  while profit growth in 2007 would fall, due to ‘intense’ competition in  the market.
 

Kensington  lends to those with poor credit records, and people who can’t provide  evidence of a steady income history, such as the self employed. So the  customers are already higher risk than those most lenders are dealing  with – so you‘d think that taking a cautious approach to lending to them  would be only sensible.
 

But it  seems that Kensington’s standards are just too high. Chief executive  John Maltby said: ‘We do not lend at high income multiples and our loans  are low compared with the value of houses. What we are facing is  increasing competition and that is what people are responding  to.’
 

In other  words, ‘other lenders are willing to give more money to less  creditworthy people than we are.’
 

Kensington’s problems provide the clearest illustration of just  why the housing market has sustained its growth for so long. In this  market, the lender willing to take the most risk wins – in the short  term. And as the short term is pretty much all investors care about (as  least until everything goes pear-shaped, and they start to ask why no  one was keeping a better eye on who they were lending to), banks and  companies like Kensington have every incentive to relax their borrowing  criteria, and very little reason to worry about what would happen if  house prices, say, fell 40% – as the Financial Services Authority  recently warned banks should be planning for.
 

So what’s  Kensington doing about the competition? Well, Mr Maltby reckons its  ’second charge mortgages’ – those second mortgages constantly advertised  on daytime TV which are often used as ‘consolidation loans’ to pay off  other debts – is the way forward.
 

“This is  higher risk. But it is also higher growth and offers higher margins… we  believe we have good, strong prospects.”
 

But the  trouble is, as James Hamilton of broker Numis told The Independent, that  “this strategy with its super margins is ideal while property prices  rise. The real risk is property price deflation removing the collateral  supporting the loans. Should this happen, the loan impairment charge  would explode.”
 

In other  words, Kensington can be fairly free and easy with lending on second  mortgages while property prices are rising, because if people default  the company can just repossess the house and have at least enough to  cover the loss. But if house prices start to fall, then the company  effectively loses its security – and if a customer defaults, there’s no  chance of covering the losses.
 

So  effectively, buying stock in Kensington is taking a massively leveraged  bet that house prices will keep rising. It’s not a bet that we – nor  David Miles, we suspect – would recommend you take.
 

There’s  more on the UK property market in this week’s issue of Money Week – out  tomorrow. If you’re not yet a subscriber, you can get access to all the  content on the MoneyWeek website and sign up for a three-week free trial  of the magazine, just by clicking here: Sign  up for a three-week free trial of MoneyWeek 
 

Turning to  the stock markets…


Enjoying this article? Why not sign up to receive Money Morning FREE every weekday? Just click here: Money Morning.


In London,  the FTSE 100 ended 42 points lower, at 6,160.  ICI was the main riser, up 9% at 423p, as it sold off  its flavour and fragrance unit for £1.2bn. For a full market report,  see: London  market close  

Elsewhere  in Europe,the Paris CAC-40 closed down 7 points at  5,452, whilst the German DAX-30 was 16 points higher,  at 6,476.
 

On Wall  Street, strong earnings from Dell offset a plunge in  General Motors’ share price as billionaire Kirk  Kerkorian cut his holding in the car maker. The Dow Jones  gained 5 points to 12,326. The Nasdaq rose 11  points to close at 2,465, while the S&P 500 gained  3 to close at 1,406.
 

In Asia,  Japanese markets were closed for a national holiday. Australia’s  S&P/ASX 200 rose 0.4% to 5,469.
 

The price  of crude oil was little changed in New York this  morning, trading at around $59.20 a barrel, whilst Brent Spot was at  $58.70.
 

Spot gold was higher, trading at around $630 an  ounce.
And in London this morning, electrical goods retailer  Kesa said sales at stores open at least a year rose  9.5% in the three months to October 31 due to the popularity of  flat-screen TVs and laptops. 

And our two  recommended articles for today…
 

How  to win big in the ethanol decade
– With the oil  market becoming increasingly volatile, countries are looking for  alternative fuels. So how can investors profit, and which alternatives  look the most promising? Find out, by clicking here: How  to win big in the ethanol decade

How  can you profit from unhealthy eating?
– The world is in the  grip of an obesity epidemic. A billion of us are overweight. But are  there fat profits to be had in the fight against flab? Find out in this  recent cover story (just made available to non-subscribers), by clicking  here: How  can you profit from unhealthy eating?


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *