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Edinburgh property market is built of stern stuff

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Published Date: 15 April 2008
As the credit crunch hits many first-time buyers, Business Editor Michael Blackley, examines what it means for new developments.
IF you build it, the saying goes, they will come. It's an adage that has held true for decades in the Edinburgh property market, where developers have seen new flats fly off their books long before they have been completed.

Yet in recent weeks, t
here are signs that things are changing. The latest property price figures gave a clear sign that the market is slowing down, to its slowest rate in 13 years.

It is areas with large numbers of two-bedroom flats, including Stockbridge, Marchmont and Bruntsfied, that have been hardest hit by the downturn, according to figures compiled by the Edinburgh Solicitors Property Centre.

It is no coincidence that developers have aggressively targeted that part of the market in recent years, building thousands of smaller flats. That approach is now seeing new-build flats sell more slowly, and sales become sluggish in the "second-hand" market for two-bedroom flats.

The problem at the moment is that first-time buyers can't take advantage of the slowdown in price rises because, thanks to the recent financial crunch, they can't get the credit they need.

That is starting to cause difficulties for the developers who have so many new flats in the pipeline.

The reduced demand is a direct result of the dreaded credit crunch. While in the past, lenders would happily throw their money at buyers, now they are being that bit more fussy.

As of last week, you can no longer get a 100 per cent mortgage from any of the big lenders. So if you're buying a property at the average Edinburgh price of £210,123, you now need at least five per cent – or £10,506 – up front. Add to that stamp duty tax and fees and you need to stump up a decent sum at the outset to buy your own home.

For many buyers, that is a new idea, and something that is not instantly possible. Instead, they are looking to rent and that increased demand is, ironically, seeing the cost of renting a home in the Capital soar. Letting agent DJ Alexander said the average cost of renting a two-bedroom flat has shot up from £675 in December up to £800 now. And it believes that could go up by another 30 per cent before the end of the year. So, there is good news for the housing market in general, if not for first-time buyers. The growing demand for rented flats shows there are still large numbers of people looking for properties in the Capital. The thing is that more and more of them can't afford to buy.

Should that trend continue then the booming profits to be had in buy-to-let are sure to keep the Edinburgh property market buoyant.

THE golden lining for would-be buyers is that the current strict lending rules on who can get a mortgage are not likely to remain forever. In terms of housing, Edinburgh is still booming. Latest projections show the Lothians will need at least 70,000 new homes over the coming decades.

City-based Miller Group last week posted its first drop in profits in 13 years, which it blamed on the credit crunch.

But finance director John Richards insisted the figures would not result in a knee-jerk reaction. He said that family homes are doing better than flats in Edinburgh, and the property market in Scotland is its strongest in the UK. "There is definitely the capacity to do more here," he said. "Home ownership in Scotland is slightly behind the UK average and I see that gap narrowing as we go forward."

Part of the problem, of course, is that developers need more land to become available. The majority of land used for housing in Edinburgh in recent years has been brownfield. But the supply of such land is limited and there are now calls to open up other pockets – including the greenbelt.

Miller is in talks with Edinburgh City Council and Midlothian Council about the release of a huge expanse of land at Danderhall that would see up to 5000 homes being built.

That level of development is a sure sign that Miller has confidence in the market – and wants to build more.

Despite the current lull, it is hard to find any fears about the long-term health of Edinburgh's property market. The house building programme, seen as an essential part of the city's economic growth, will continue regardless.

The current slowdown in the market is likely to be just that, a temporary applying of the brakes. In the meantime, the housebuilders will continue to go full steam ahead.





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  • Last Updated: 15 April 2008 11:55 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Mortgage and property news
 
1

Johnnie Wilkinson,

Edinburgh 15/04/2008 12:38:53
So if you're buying a property at the average Edinburgh price of £210,123, you now need at least five per cent – or £10,506 – up front.

And even after putting that deposit down, that still leaves just under £200,000 left to borrow. Doesn't seem realistic to me when you take into account average wages on offer in Edinburgh.

2

Liz,

Edinburgh 15/04/2008 12:48:46
Well it is reassuring to know that property prices in Edinburgh are aparently immune to global economic events. That or this is yet another bull excrement story from the Evening News that is there purely to try to convince people that we are in some way special.

As #1 said compared to average salaries property prices in Edinburgh are unsustainable. Add to that the restrictions in lending that are affecting Scottish buyers as much as those in England and there is only one way for prices to go.
3

11+failed,

the pans 15/04/2008 13:00:00
"it is hard to find any fears about the long-term health of Edinburgh's property market"
Unfortunately, not to coin a phrase, in the long-term we are all dead!
From ESPC, "We currently have 8,195 properties for sale or to let." up another 400 on last week and more than doubled since Dec/Jan.
1 Johnnie Wilkinson,
Yes, a £200k 25 yr mortgage from RBS costs £16k/A to service and that comes out of after tax income.
4

Irn-Bruce,

Edinburgh 15/04/2008 14:51:50
"The reduced demand is a direct result of the dreaded credit crunch."

Or possibly because the supply of 1 and 2 bedroomed flats now exceeds demand?

Could it be that 3, 4 and 5 bedroomed houses are what's needed? Even larger new build flats would be better, as long as they had decent shared gardens ... etc. They'd be perfectly decent family homes (just like the larger traditional tenements).
5

ccc,

15/04/2008 14:52:53
Just when are the EN going to admit that Edinburgh is royally done just like the rest of the UK market ?

"the booming profits to be had in buy-to-let"

The above has ZERO facts behind it apart from the the opinion of a, oh what a surprise, estate agent who specialises in renting properties...

The FACT is that an estate agent who specialises in buy to let actually went bust 2 weeks ago. Wonder why that hasn't got much mention in this story.... ;)

Come on EN just give it a rest. It really is becoming pathetic. As #3 points out, the numbers speak for themselves. :)
6

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

,Newington 15/04/2008 15:06:33
Just as the UK is 18 months behind the US, Scotland is a year behind the rest of the UK, just as it was in 1989.

What the government now understand is that what they thought was "prosperity" was in fact the end of a quarter-century credit bubble - the largest in world history.

They also have the data from Japan on how this is likely to play out. The bubble burst early there, in 1989. They dropped interest rates to zero pretty quickly. Nevertheless, the banks weren't able to make loans and house prices fell by 50% between then and now - just 4 or 5 percent per year plus an extra 1% added by deflation. In the major cities, many house prices fell by 90%.

Finance ministers from Japan have been trying to warn the UK and US to reign in the bubble for at least a decade, but have been ignored as our politicians simply denied there was a bubble.

It's not very surprising that Crash Gordon, today interviewed by Channel Four, looks like a terrified deer caught in the headlights. He knows he'll go down in history as the Prime Minister who was never elected.
7

tomias,

Edinburgh 15/04/2008 16:00:04
All above- the BBC has had this in yesterdays news.
Wake up neaners- to what journalism is all about; AND why then are you on line-you critins!
8

Adso,

15/04/2008 16:07:37
Every day the doomsayers are online providing expert economic analysis on the edinburgh housing market.

Where is this crash that you have all been hoping for for the past (how many) years? How big a crash do you really exepct? Are you all sitting on deposits waiting for the market to sink before you buy?

Rental prices in Edinburgh have been depressed for some time now. They are picking up in tandem with demand for rented property as mortgages are more difficult to get. That sounds like a good opportunity for the buy to let landlord - no? House prices may sink a few % over a year or two in Edinburgh. Over 10, 20 and 30 years property will however pay strong dividends no doubt about it.
9

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

Newington 15/04/2008 17:06:15
Asdo: I think the flaw in that plan is that most immigrants are here to earn money to send home and build a house there. When they recession hits, they'll go wherever the work is, and a lot of those flats will be emptied.

10

parks is colin nish,

cape town 15/04/2008 17:16:27
well said #9
what a load of nonsense.
The estate agent went out of business because they were trying to sell new build property that was over valued and only idiots would invest in. I own 6 properties in east lothian and edinburgh, all rented out and doing well,Property prices are only relevent when you are forced to sell, there will NEVER be a crash in edinburgh or east lothian as it is supply and demand, prices will dip and recover. If you are in for the long term, property is still the safest investment you can make.
I read a story in I think it was the s o s which headlined about a 20% drop in year on year figures if you read deeper yes it had dropped but still went up by 2%.
I'm still waiting to die of aids, bird flu, beef burgers,etc etc etc

11

ccc,

15/04/2008 18:11:37
Some people adding comments are seriously delusional. #9 and 11 :)

Buy to let is 'booming' !!?? If you believe that you are truly brainwashed. Anyone buying into this TODAY will be getting a lot less rent for their property than their mortgage will cost. That is not a good investment. Whichever way you look at it. If however you bought into it years ago you will be doing fine. But that is the past. I prefer to deal in today. :)

Edinburgh sale prices last 4 quarters:

228
222
215
210

Not a crash, but getting there slowly. #9 and # 11 you wonder why those figures haven't been shown in this paper.....

There is a reason. It is called brainwashing. You have been sucked in by it. Well done...........
12

parks is colin nish,

cape town 15/04/2008 18:45:26
#12 nice for you to say i'm delusional and brainwashed and sucked in.
well you say if you buy today you will be getting less rent than a mortgage will cost.
I can tell straight away you know nothing what will a mortgage cost???? which, who, where, why,. well depending what you invest in the property and type your cost will be lower and you will still pick up a decent interest rate if you put 25% down(yes there are still mortgages, idiot). From your figures what's that under a 10% drop in a year.oh dear it doubled in 5 years and you all worry over a blip. bet you don't even have a house.
let me know when it halves then i put down my beer and prawns down and start worring
13

Angry Rob,

Edinburgh 15/04/2008 19:13:29
"Letting agent DJ Alexander said the average cost of renting a two-bedroom flat has shot up from £675 in December up to £800 now. And it believes that could go up by another 30 per cent before the end of the year."

I don't know anyone paying that amount of money to rent a two-bedroom flat. Looking on letting websites shows me that for £800 I could get a pretty nice place - and if I wanted to buy a similar place, it would cost a lot, lot more in mortgage costs.

So if this is the average rental cost, nobody has been updating their prices on the websites. Unless, of course, IT IS A BLATANT LIE!

Don't be fooled into thinking buying is the only option. And don't believe the 'Edinburgh is immune' nonsense.
14

,

15/04/2008 20:59:14
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
15

Harry Hotair,

15/04/2008 23:52:56
Winking at shtrangers will generally be perceived ash a shexual advance and ish unlikely to be appreshiated
16

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

16/04/2008 00:32:14
"there will NEVER be a crash in edinburgh or east lothian as it is supply and demand"

As any economist will tell you: it's supply and "effective" demand, where "effective demand" is either the cash you can pay or the credit you can borrow. There's scant doubt that in a debt-deflation the amount of available credit will be very much constrained.

If it tuns out that when people don't get mortgages, they can instead use cash, then prices will hold. If not, they'll reduce until the available cash again balances supply and demand.

Anyone who doesn't agree with that has to have a different explanation to house prices being bid up over the last quarter century than that more and more credit became available to more and more people - I.E. that everyone was secretly bidding with cash.
17

Vaccav,

Sydney and Edinburgh 17/04/2008 12:56:04
Whilst I don't think Edinburgh is immune to a crash, I think it is less exposed than other locations such as London.

Some are debating above about whether you can / cannot have a profitable buy to let investment. However, it varies a lot from suburb to suburb. My Marchmont property is yielding 4.2%, but my Dalry one is yielding 6.1%. With interest rates of 6.0% to 6.5% available a 100% mortgage can't be paid. However, a small deposit of 10% to 20% will make some suburbs like Dalry a break-even or profitable investment. Of course, all of this is a bit academic because the 'real' profit is the capital gain that is only made if prices are rising.

And, I think at this stage few would predict big rises. Still the buy to let game isn't over as big rental increases are happening this year and next. It only takes a 10% increase in rents for the yield to go from 6.1% to 6.6%. And then you've got a very profitable investment if interest rates are 6% and heading south. And even if there isn't a big capital gain, I'm happy to buy and sit tight for a few years.

So I think the economist's view is that prices could fall but only by a little. Rising rentals and falling interest rates will make buy to let more attractive to investors like me. And i think this puts a floor under how far prices can fall.

 

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