The housing and
mortgage market has shown a noteworthy resilience. There has been a
notable improvement of macro-economic conditions - in July, for example, it was
announced that we are witness to the lowest levels of unemployment for nearly
50 years. Furthermore, despite the UK construction industry building 21%
more new properties than last year, there has still been a
disproportionate increase in demand for housing. Repossessions too are also at an all-time low
at 3,985 for the last Quarter from a high of 29,145 in Q1 2009. All these
things have resulted in property values in Oxford being 6.4% higher
than a year ago according to the Land Registry.
So, what does
all this mean for the homeowners and landlords of Oxford, especially in
relation to property prices moving forward?
One vital bellwether of the property market is the mortgage
market. The UK mortgage market is worth £961,653,701,493 (that’s £961bn) and is
representative of 13,314,512 mortgages
(the UK’s mortgage market is the largest in Europe in terms of amount lent per
year and the total value of outstanding loans).
Uncertainty
causes banks to stop lending – it took a few months throughout the
autumn of 2007, before the credit crunch started to hit the Oxford property
market, but in late 2007, and for the following year and half, Oxford property
values dropped each month causing Oxford property values to drop by 22.9%
Thankfully,
after a period of stagnation, the Oxford property market started to recover in
2011 as certainty returned to the economy and Oxford property values really
took off in 2013. Throughout 2016, we
saw a return to realistic and stable medium-term property price growth, and now
property prices have recovered in Oxford and are now 85.6% higher than they
were in 2009.
During the summer of 2017, with the Conservatives having been re-elected on their slender majority, the Oxford property market has experienced some softening, but now appears set to avoid the negative growth experienced in London. There has been some aggressive competition among mortgage lenders, which has driven mortgage rates down to record lows, which is good news for Oxford homeowners and landlords with the rates on new deals at the lowest they have ever been. For example, last month, HSBC launched a 1.69% five-year fixed mortgage!
Since 1977, the
average Bank of England interest rate has been 6.65%, making the
current rates a of 0.25% very low indeed – in fact it is a 323-year record. Thankfully,
the proportion of borrowers fixing their mortgage rate has gone from 31.52% in
the autumn of 2012 to the current 59.3%. If you haven’t fixed – maybe you
should follow the majority?
In the
Oxford postcodes of OX1 to OX4 & OX33, if you added up everyone’s mortgage,
it would total £2,785,488,264. If Bank
of England rates returned to their trend rate of 6.65% current Oxford borrowers
would have to find £178.3m more to just to keep-up their payments
In my opinion, interest rates can only go one way from their 300-year ultra
0.25% low level. Maybe, just maybe, you
might want to consider taking some advice from a qualified mortgage adviser to
lock-in the historically low rates.
No comments:
Post a Comment