Eight years ago, in the summer of 2007, hardly anyone had
heard of the term ‘credit crunch’, but now the expression has entered our daily
language and even the Oxford Dictionary.
It took a few months throughout the autumn of 2007, before the crunch
started to hit the Cambridge Property market, but in November / December 2007,
and for the following seventeen months, Cambridge
property values dropped each and every month like the proverbial stone. The Bank
of England soon realised in the late summer of 2008 that the British economy
was stalling under the continued pressure of the Credit Crunch. Therefore,
between October 2008 and March 2009, interest rates dropped six times in six
months from 5% to 0.5% to try and stimulate the British economy.
Thankfully, after a period of stagnation, the Cambridge
property market started to recover slowly in 2011, but really took off strongly
in late 2013 / early 2014 as property prices started to rocket. However, the heat
was taken out of the market in late 2014/early 2015, with the new mortgage
lending rules and some uncertainty, when some people had a dose of pre–election
nerves.
With the Conservatives having been re-elected in May, the Cambridge property market
regained its composure and in fact, there has been some ferocious competition
among mortgage lenders, which has driven mortgage rates to record lows. Whilst
I have no actual figures to back this up, I know an awful lot of long serving
bank managers, mortgage arrangers and people in the finance industry, all of
whom have told me on previous occasions when interest rates rose (1987, 1992,
1997 and 2003), it wasn’t the first rate rise that was the catalyst for many
homeowners and landlords to re-mortgage but the second or third increase. The reason being that it was only by the time
of the third rate rise, it started to
hit the wallet. However, the issue is,
by the time of the second or third rate rise the best fixed rates, were in all
instances, no longer available as they had been pulled by the banks months
before.
But here is the good news for Cambridge homeowners and landlords, over the
last few months a mortgage price war has broken out between lenders, with many
slashing the rates on their deals to the lowest they have ever offered. I read that the well respected UK
financial website Moneyfacts said only a couple of weeks ago, the average two year
fixed rate mortgage has fallen from 3.6% twelve months ago to just under 2.8%.
Interestingly, according to the Council of Mortgage Lenders,
the level of mortgage lending had soared to a seven year high in the UK . So what about Cambridge ?
In Cambridge ,
if you added up everyone’s mortgage, it would total £1.8 billion. Even more interesting is when we look at Cambridge and split it
down into the individual areas of the city,
- CB1 - Cambridge (Central, South),
Teversham £744.9m
- CB2 - Cambridge (West)
£289.9m
- CB3 - Cambridge (North-West), Girton
£186.9m
- CB4 - Cambridge (North)
£508.4m
- CB5 - Cambridge (East) £153.7m
Since 1971, the average interest rate has been 7.93%, making
the current 0.5% very low. So, if
interest rates were to rise by only 2%, according to my research, the 7,491 Cambridge
homeowners, who have a variable rate mortgage would, combined, have to pay an
approximate additional £20,520,000 a year in mortgage payments. That means every Cambridge
homeowner with a variable rate mortgage, will on average have to pay an
additional £2,739 a year or £228 a month in interest payments.
I know over the last couple of posts, I have talked about
mortgages a lot however, I am not a mortgage arranger but a letting / estate
agent and as regular readers know, I always talk about what I consider to be
the most important issues when it comes to the Cambridge Property market and at
the moment, in my humble opinion, this is the most important thing!
Buy to let is all about maximising your investment,
increasing income and reducing costs. I
give advice, opinions, thoughts, concerns, worries, expectations and fears
about the Cambridge Property market in my blog on the Cambridge Property
Blog. If you are interested in the
Cambridge Property Market, you might learn something by visiting the blog.http://cambridgeproperty.blogspot.co.uk/
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