20: Predictions for 2005 - from PropertyInvesting.net
12-23-2004
PropertyInvesting.net
We do hope you have had a successful and prosperous 2004 – a time to pause and reflect on the year. Last Christmas the doom-mongers were predicting a house price crash. Mid January started off very quickly and activity levels increased through the Spring, finally dying down in most areas in mid June – this coinciding with the Governor of the Bank of England’s dire warnings. Since then, many economists have predicted a crash or steep declines, but most sellers have experienced reasonable demand as long as their properties have been realistically priced. So the big question is – what’s going to happen in 2005?
Enclosed are PropertyInvesting.net ‘s predictions for 2005:
House price change (north/midlands of
House price change (south
House price change (
House price change (
House price change (
Inflation CPI : 1.7% by end 2005
Interest rates : 4.5% by end 2005 (dropping from 4.75% in August)
Oil price : $45-52 / bbl
FTSE 100 : 4,750
Dow Jones : 10,700
Manufacturing output: -3% (down)
Retail sales: +3%
Unemployment: unchanged
Birth rate: increasing
Wage inflation: +4.3%
£ / Euro : 0.695
$ / £ : 1.85
The economies in manufacturing dependent UK areas which are exposed to competition from China and India (e.g. Birmingham, Coventry, Sheffield) will not show the robustness over the medium term as service related economic areas (Leeds, London, Plymouth, Southampton, Bristol). This is in part because of the high £ against the $, high
Wage inflation will be a healthy 4.3% meaning people’s disposable incomes will increase ahead of inflation. However, to plug the budget deficit, the Chancellor will have to increase taxes after the election – by the equivalent of some 2-3p on income tax, probably by indirect means. The Chancellor will avoid triggering a house price collapse with taxes on property since he will not want to discourage the building of new affordable homes. The increasing tax burden, higher utility, council tax and oil bills will dampen any feel good factor and mean house prices rising slower than would normally be expected.
The housing market will recover strongly towards the end of January 2005 and be fairly buoyant in the Spring during the election period. The continued mediocre performance of the FTE 100 will encourage more people to enter the buy-to-let market, with an eye on the introduction of tax efficient PIFs for residential property in April 2006. Increasingly, these investors will look overseas for value in emerging countries like
Based on these predictions, a strategy of buying high yield flats in areas of high rental demand close to communications in southern