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Guardian UK: Recession fears grow as house buyers vanish

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marmar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-09-08 08:03 PM
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Guardian UK: Recession fears grow as house buyers vanish
UK economy: Recession fears grow as house buyers vanish
City expects three rises in interest rates within months to curb inflation
Larry Elliott, economics editor The Guardian, Tuesday June 10 2008


Britain's estate agents warn today that a collapse in activity in the housing market could spread to the rest of the UK economy amid signs that rising inflationary pressure will force the Bank of England to increase the cost of borrowing this year.

The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) says the downturn in the property market - nine out of 10 estate agents are reporting falling prices - was likely to spill over into weaker high street spending and job losses for construction workers.

RICS data released today shows the number of transactions per estate agent - 17.4 over the past three months - is the lowest since 1978 and a drop of almost a third on a year ago. Two of Britain's leading lenders, Halifax and Nationwide, have reported in the past two weeks house prices falling sharply as tighter borrowing conditions curbed demand for property.

The monthly snapshot of the housing market from the RICS follows the release of official government data yesterday showing a sharp increase in the cost of goods leaving factory gates in the UK manufacturing sector - an early warning sign of higher inflation in the shops.

British industry had suffered a sharper increase in fuel and raw material costs since the start of 2007 than it saw in the previous two decades combined, and the threat of an inflationary spiral left the City convinced that increases in bank rate were more likely than cuts this year.

The RICS data shows that the balance of estate agents reporting falling prices has decreased slightly (92.9% in May against 94.7% in April), but that business has dried up. A RICS spokesman, Jeremy Leaf, said: "While demand remains weak and housing transactions continue to evaporate, there is a very real danger to the wider economy. The property industry will not be the only casualty in the fallout from the credit crunch, with the high street and purveyors of a range of household goods, including furniture and white goods also feeling the pinch. Construction workers, such as plumbers and bricklayers, will start to see employment opportunities dry up as the pace of housing transactions continues to abate." ......(more)

The complete piece is at: http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2008/jun/10/economics.houseprices




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ThomWV Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-09-08 08:13 PM
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1. I recall seeing that there are very serious problems in Spain and France as well.
Bubble go pop!
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