Will housing oversupply be a disaster

Released on: December 12, 2007, 9:49 am

Press Release Author: Jim watson

Industry: Real Estate

Press Release Summary: Through recent months there have been two somewhat
contrasting claims made about housing supply. The first, made by nearly everybody in
the residential housing market.

Press Release Body: Through recent months there have been two somewhat contrasting
claims made about housing supply. The first, made by nearly everybody in the
residential housing market, is that there simply are not enough homes to meet
demand. Hence the government has set out ambitious plans to build 240,000 new homes
every year and three million by 2020, with 160,000 of these lined up for the Thames
Gateway and other plans including ten new eco-towns and a lot less planning red
tape.

In contrast, where developers have been building lots of homes, such as brownfield
sites in inner cities, there has been the opposite argument: That too many
apartments have been built and this is leading to lower prices and empty properties
as for once supply exceeds demand.

This paradox has implications for the buy-to-let industry, both in terms of the
value of apartments should investors buy into the city living market or the rental
market as a whole, which has been boosted by the decision of many would-be
first-time buyers to rent rather than buy in times of economic uncertainty and high
mortgage salary multiples.

Northern Housing recently reported that the sort of housing being built in Salford
principally includes new apartments. Its figures for the 2,200 homes constructed in
the city since 2006/07 includes 410 homes, with the majority consisting of
apartments in the area just across the Irwell from Manchester City Centre.

The implication was that there was a clear demand for the city living lifestyle
(which would to a lesser extent include other apartments in the Quays area), which
has driven the market in building. Such demand may suggest the claims that city
living is oversupplied are not necessarily true.

However, the organisation noted that the city council still wanted to ensure 20 per
cent of new dwellings were affordable and the new building was not just for
professionals moving from outside. Councillor Derek Antrobus, Salford council\'s lead
member for planning, said: \"Salford has a strong commitment to affordable housing
and is setting guidelines for developers through the affordable homes strategy and
housing guidance document to help first-time buyers and those residents who wish to
remain in the city.\"

Such a commitment, in Salford and elsewhere, might be seen as a huge boost to the
first-time buyer market. But just as the government plans to build three million new
homes by 2020, an economist from the University of Nottingham has questioned the
whole idea, the Daily Mail reports.

Professor Daniel Bernhofen of the Globalisation and Economic Policy Centre has said
the plan could lead to a major deflation of the market as the number of houses could
increase at a time when the market was poised to naturally correct itself.

He said: \"A big-scale initiative to increase the stock of housing requires fine
tuning between the increase in the stock and the predicted demand,\" adding that the
government did not have such detailed information.

\"That\'s why the government should be careful that it\'s not getting confused between
need and demand.\"

Of course, such a claim may not be fulfilled, not least because social trends such
as a drift towards smaller households and immigration may continue between now and
2020. While an increased supply of houses would naturally reduce the demand-push
inflationary factor, it remains in any case to be seen if the government can
successfully deliver on its market pledges.

Professor Bernhofen said the market was capable of correcting itself. If that is
true, it may be that at some stage new housebuilding will be scaled back
accordingly. The same will be the case for apartment building if a clear supply
surplus is emerging. But the experience of Salford of late suggests this is not yet
the case

In today\'s world Property investment is an excellent investment option especially
investment in UK

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