According to the BBC, Banks and Building Societies are set to raise Mortgage rates by a whacking 14%, from 3.5% to 4%. That will come as yet a further blow to a rapidly falling property market on top of the removal of the Stamp Duty holiday that has been in place. Already, as the property website Propertysnake is showing, even Asking prices for houses are being cut by as much as 50%. Propertysnake monitors changes in asking prices across the country. Its very useful, allowing you to put in a postcode, and see exactly how much prices are falling for actual houses in that area.
With wages frozen, benefits being cut, and rapidly rising inflation cutting into workers' living standards, its now wonder they have no money left to keep the huge property bubble inflated. With rising unemployment, and now sharply rising interest rates, all of the conditions are in place for a repeat of the collapse of the property market that occurred in 1990. But, this bubble is bigger, meaning the collapse will be bigger too.
Before the election, the Tories had promised to introduce a fuel price stabiliser that would cut fuel duty whenever the price of oil rose. Now with diesel prices already over 140p per litre, and headed for 150p, the Tories cannot cut fuel duty much further without risking blowing a hole in their Budget. There are several reasons for the rising price of oil. For one the world is probably at a stage of Peak Oil production, so with demand rising rapidly in China and other developing economies, Supply cannot rise fast enough to meet it. Secondly, as the interview on Fareed Zacharia with Ronen Bergman spelled out today, Israel is planning to launch a strike on Iran some time this year. With a developing Cold War by proxy in the Middle East, as western imperialism lines up behind the Sunni Feudal Monarchies of the Gulf, and their allies, and Russia and China line up behind Iran, Syria, and oppressed Shia populations in the Gulf Monarchies, such an event is likely to spark an extensive regional war at the very least, and something wider at worst. The fact, that clerical-fascist regimes have now come to power in Iraq, Egypt, Tunisia, Libya, and could well come to power in Syria and elsewhere, make the future even more uncertain. Even if the Straits of Hormuz did not get closed, such a conflict would mean that oil production and distribution in the region was severely curtailed. Under such conditions, the current price looks likely to be far from taking full account of the necessary risk premium. A serious dislocation would be likely to send Oil to anything between $200 and $400 a barrel. Thirdly, apart from those factors, the policy of the Bank of England over recent years of printing money has pushed up inflation in general, and by devaluing the pound has had a direct effect on increasing the price of imported oil.



“Investors view the 182 billion euros of bonds tied to Spanish residential-mortgage backed securities as being among the least creditworthy in Europe, trailing securities from the U.K., Netherlands and Italy. The outlook for the collateral is expected to worsen as mortgage arrears rise with increasing unemployment and house prices continue to fall, Moody’s Investors Service said in a report last month.”
As austerity across Europe causes these property prices to collapse, as well as causing economic activity to go back into recession, no amount of money printing by Central Banks will lead to higher borrowing to reflate these bubbles, and consequently, the Banks will go bust in large numbers. All the ECB has done is to buy Sovereign debt in Greece, Italy, Portugal, and Spain some temporary relief, but only at the cost of throwing the burden back on to the Banks.
No comments:
Post a Comment