Housing market and negative equity
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Home owners who bought at the tail-end of the property boom face another four years of negative equity before they recover what they paid, new figures reveal today.
David Orr, chief executive of the National Housing Federation, said:
“Even though price rises look sluggish for the next few years, affordability is not improving for many low-to-middle income households as banks continue to restrict their mortgage lending and house prices remain historically expensive in relation to salaries. There’s a very real risk that an entire generation will be locked out of the housing market for the foreseeable future and people will increasingly look to buy or rent an affordable home instead.”

There is some good micro and macro analysis offered in the FT today on the housing market here, how the shortage of supply of new housing and older properties put onto the market will push up prices in the long-term but the shortage of bank lending for mortgages will hold back prices in short term.

First time buyers in particular are finding it hard to get a foothold onto the market despite recent price falls. Many are too busy svaing up for a hefty deposit and, in these troubled times, gathering up sufficient savings is no easy task.
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