First-time
house buyers: to buy or not to buy that is the question.
Released on
= July 14, 2005, 7:48 am
Press Release
Author = Richard Green
Industry = Financial
Press Release
Summary = First-time buyers are continuing to suffer from house
prices rises. While incomes are not increasing as fast as property
prices, first-time
buyers are forced to take longer saving for a mortgage.
Press Release
Body = Buying your first house is always a difficult time. There
are
so many important decisions to make, and problems to be solved,
which combine to make it one of the most stressful events that will
occur in most people’s lives.
Some of the
most obvious problems include the need to:
* find a suitable house to purchase
* plough through complicated financial information
* choose an appropriate mortgage that will cover the cost of the
house and is within your own strict budgets
* save up enough money (usually whilst still renting another property)
to cover a
mortgage deposit
* deal with unfamiliar legal fees, surveys and other costs
* make a realistic offer on your prospective new home
* waiting to see if the offer is accepted
* complete the purchase
* move and get settled in the new house, with whatever decorating/rebuilding
is
required
Given these
factors, it is perhaps not surprising that first-time buyers can
be the
first to get spooked by changes in the housing market.
First-time buyers
(FTBs) make up an extremely important sector of the house buying
market, and many analysts view them as the life blood of the whole
housing market. Without them a housing slowdown or even collapse
of the system is inevitable. Recent reductions in the number of
FTBs purchasing houses, with Scotland achieving its lowest annual
total for nine years, and the increasing struggles experienced by
FTBs trying to get onto the first rung of the property ladder will
have serious knock-on effects, which are already being experienced
around much of the country.
National Savings
and Investments (NS&I) Senior Savings Strategist Dax Harkins
said: "Despite a recent cooling house market, house prices
have continued to outstrip both savings rates and incomes over the
last year which means potential first-time buyers need to start
saving sooner and harder to get into the market."
Whilst house
prices continue to increase at a faster rate than people’s
incomes
there will be fewer people able to afford a house. In
a recent study NS&I found that the average length of time required
by FTBs, to save for a 5% mortgage deposit, ranged from five years
in East Anglia, to three years, nine months in Scotland, with the
average being four years and nine months, this is nine months longer
than a year ago. The average age of first-time buyers also has increased,
going from 37 from 31 three years ago. The property website Rightmove
has warned that the housing market could remain static for several
years whilst it waits for the incomes of FTBs to catch up with the
housing prices. Miles Shipside, commercial director of Rightmove,
said "As many sellers are refusing to part with gains they
have made, buyers are forced to make up the affordability gap…The
reality is it will take seven years of static house prices and wage
inflation to bridge this affordability gap.” Marjorie Townsend,
head of Edinburgh-based Lindsays Residential, says: "It was
recently reported that an average home in Edinburgh costs seven
times the income of the majority of nurses. This is a shocking statistic.”
With over one in six FTBs turning to relatives and more high street
lenders offering 100% mortgages, or even 102% from Lloyds TSB and
Scottish Widows, to help buyers get onto the property ladder, some
may be able to squeeze onto the first rung, but end up with long-term
crippling debt in the process, fuelling the continued house prices
inflation.
Various banks
have come up with innovative methods to help facilitate the ability
of FTBs to purchase a house which, whilst not addressing the real
problem of house prices, will allow more people to own their own
home.
A guarantor
mortgage can increase the amount that can be borrowed, as long as
the borrower’s parents have enough income to cover all their
own debts, plus their
child's mortgage each month; however the parent will not have to
make any payments themselves unless their child’s mortgage
goes into arrears.
An offset mortgage
could mean that money from a parent’s savings account can
be
offset against their child’s mortgage. Although the parent
would not receive
interest on their savings, the reduction in the amount to be paid
by their child
could make a big difference, and they would not incur tax on the
amount either.
A ‘Professionals’
mortgage is a possibility for certain workers, which allows them
to borrow more than their initially low-pay career would usually
make them eligible
for, on the understanding that their future pay will increase rapidly
as they become
high earners.
Whilst some
may urge for caution to prevent the possibility of building up
financially crippling levels of debt, others see a need for buyers
to act fast.
Marjorie Townsend, of Lindsays Residential, believes: “The
best advice for
first-time buyers is to move quickly …There really is nothing
to be gained by
waiting for a competitive closing date, which will drive the price
up. There arelots of sellers out there who are eager to sell and
whose particular circumstances
may require a quick transaction."
Overall it seems
that the situation for FTBs will continue to prove difficult unless
a major change occurs that bridges the gap between income and house
prices for those in most need. Recent government initiatives such
as the Shared Equity scheme, that allows part ownership of property,
may go some way to enabling some FTBs to start out, but Ed Davey
MP, the Liberal Democrat housing spokesman, believes the policy
could make housing even more expensive, "It seems to be looking
at the demand side which could stoke house price inflation and make
the problem of affordable housing even worse." Until the issue
of supply and demand is addressed, there will continue to be problems.
According to the Barker Review, which was published in April, up
to 140,000 new homes need to be built each year in the UK if supply
is to keep up with demand. Even if new homes are built at this rate,
the time taken to stabilise the market will mean further delays
for prospective new buyers who want to own property.
Further information
Moneynet mortgage comparisons (http://www.moneynet.co.uk/mortgages/index.shtml)
Full NS&I research (http://www.nsandi.com/press-room/press-releases/pr2004127.jsp)
House price reports
(http://www.rightmove.co.uk/template/publicsite%2Caboutus%2CRTPRArchive.vm)
Released by
http://www.bigmouthmedia.com
Web Site = http://www.moneynet.co.uk
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