What the king & queen of buy-to-let can tell us about UK house prices

By MoneyWeek Editor John Stepek Mar 09, 2010

John Stepek

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Fergus and Judith Wilson, a couple of maths teachers from Kent, became the unlikely pin-ups of the buy-to-let industry during the property boom years.

In an interview at the weekend with The Guardian, the pair discussed their decision to retire. Retiring seems a bit of a premature description. They still have to offload their properties – all 700-odd – before they're free of the landlord business.

We'll ignore that for the moment. The Wilsons' story is fascinating for all sorts of reasons. But what's most useful to us is what their tale tells us about the crash of 2008, and about how the property market managed to rebound so strongly last year.

Most importantly, it shows why any respite for the market can only be temporary...

How the Bank of England saved the Wilsons - and stuffed savers

Buy-to-let is "absolutely dead and will never return," according to Fergus and Judith Wilson in an interview in the Guardian. 2008 wasn't a great year for the Wilsons. By October, more than one in ten of their 700 or so homes in Kent was being lived in by tenants who were unable to pay the whole rent. And with banks pulling out of the buy-to-let lending business as fast as they could – this was a whole year after the run on Northern Rock – they were having a nightmare refinancing their debts.

"We were going to be, to put it bluntly, stuffed," Fergus tells Patrick Collinson in the Guardian. So what saved them? The Bank of England. When interest rates were slashed to 0.5%, their loans mostly reverted to base-rate trackers. So their interest payment bills dived.

You can argue the toss about the morality of all this – actually, scratch that, you can't. It's a travesty. It's a complete betrayal of the capitalist system and anyone who foolishly thought that this was how the game was played.

The Wilsons took what was unarguably a stupid risk. They built a huge portfolio of houses focused in one small area of the country. If the Bank of England hadn't bailed them out (and note that many of their home loans were with a unit of Bradford & Bingley, and so are now owned by the taxpayer), they'd have likely gone bust.

The banks would have had to have a fire-sale of their houses, and first-time buyers in Ashford could have had a field day. Instead, the Wilsons are still trying to flog their homes at £180,000 a pop, and first-time buyers are still living in rental properties. And the Bank of England is subsidising landlords' profits.

The Wilsons are of course, just the tip of the iceberg. There are plenty of other over-stretched borrowers who have remained in business only thanks to low rates and the tolerance of lenders who know that they'd be stuffed too if asset prices fell sharply.

Who will buy their houses?

But how long can this last? The Wilsons are now trying to sell their portfolio, piece by piece. But who will buy their homes? Not other buy-to-let landlords – the costs would be too high, particularly given the level of competition in the area. Not first-time buyers – to get a 25% deposit together on a £180,000 'starter' home, they'd need to fork out £45,000 upfront (not to mention the £1,800 stamp duty). And a two-bed in Ashford is hardly the sort of trophy asset that a rich, European buyer is going to snap up.


Special FREE report from MoneyWeek magazine: When will house prices bottom out - and how will you know?

  • Why UK property prices are going to fall 50%
  • When it will be time to get back in and buy up half price property

If the Wilsons want to sell their portfolio, it needs to be attractive to first-time buyers. So either banks have to lighten up on their lending criteria – hard to imagine, when base rates are at rock bottom anyway – or prices have to fall. And the more supply that comes on to the market, the more likely that is.

In fact, the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (Rics) reported this morning that in February, the number of homes coming onto the market outstripped the number of new buyer enquiries for the second month in a row. This represents the "first sustained shift towards supply for two years", said Rics.

Meanwhile, a net balance of 17% of agents said prices had risen over the past three months. That's a lot lower than the 31% who reported rises in January. And sales per agent fell by nearly 5%, to 17.6 in February. Before the crunch, the number of sales averaged 25.

What will happen if the cost of lending rises?

But you could argue that nobody's being forced to sell. That's as maybe. But what happens if lending costs go up? Let's go back to the Wilsons. According to Collinson, "once the base rate goes above 3.5%, the cost of servicing their debt will begin to exceed the rental income." Judith's response? "Interest rates are not going to rise quickly. If they do, then the whole country is bust."

But we wouldn't be so confident. Kate Barker, a member of the Bank of England's interest-rate-setting Monetary Policy Committee, is starting to worry about inflation. "It is not easy to reconcile a large negative output gap with recent upward surprises on inflation," she said recently. To explain, the 'negative output gap' just means that there seems to be plenty of spare capacity in the economy, which should normally swamp any inflationary pressures. The fact that this isn't happening suggests that the Bank might have got its sums wrong.

Britain's economy looks more vulnerable than most

We're still not completely decided on whether inflation or deflation is the greatest threat – we'll be getting a panel of experts in next month to try to hammer out the debate once and for all. But it's fair to say that if one economy looks more vulnerable than almost any other at the moment, it's Britain's. My colleague David Stevenson has already pointed out that if inflation continues to be a problem, the Bank may have no choice but to raise rates, regardless of what it believes the long-term outlook is.

And as James Ferguson pointed out in a recent MoneyWeek magazine cover story (Don't be fooled - house prices will fall again), if interest rates don't rise, it'll only be because the economy is heading for a double-dip recession. That would mean higher unemployment, and more forced sales. (If you're not already a subscriber, claim your first three issues free here.)

One way or another, British house prices are going to fall. The Wilsons had better flog those houses fast.

Our recommended article for today

Emerging markets - the alternative safe haven

Traditional 'safe-haven' investments are failing, says Bengt Saelensminde. Every class of asset is rising and falling as one. But one little-known emerging market fund could provide a safe alternative to the West's volatility, while producing inflation-busting returns.

Comments (32)

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  • 1. Mr Barker

    (09 March 2010, 11:30AM)  Complain about this comment

    I have been confused and amazed at the ability of property to maintain its value over the last year. Property in terms of affordability for normal earners seems to be so out of reach both in cost and deposit requirements. House prices literally appear to be defying gravity. I suspect that the government understands the "gravity" of this situation, but has decided that it is far better for mortgage providers to remain solvent than for house prices to return to values that allow ordinary people to afford them without taking on life crippling mortgage loans. I can't imagine that there is any more wizardry or convincing spin left to hold off house price declines much longer. The vested interest of the wealthy few must not dominate the vested interest of the many.

  • 2. Tim

    (09 March 2010, 11:42AM)  Complain about this comment

    I totally agree with Mr Barker. Great article.

  • 3. Bob Roberts

    (09 March 2010, 12:00PM)  Complain about this comment

    How much longer can it go on for though - my savings are being eaten into by inflation to the point that it is not worthwhile saving.... but stocks, gold, property all look as if they too are in a bubble defying fundamentals and investing in them is simply too risky... that means that the greedy and the feckless of the past 10 years are now being bailed out by the prudent savers... criminal...

    When you say there is a risk of interest rates rising sooner than expected when might that be - in 3 months, in 6 months, at the end of the year, 2011, 2012.... all too vague... Increasingly looking at property in the US now where I can afford to buy a nice home in a good area and get on with my life instead of waiting to buy here.

    As a prudent saver I feel I am being punished to save the greedy and feel so betrayed by my country.

  • 4. Peter Kellow

    (09 March 2010, 12:15PM)  Complain about this comment

    The Bank of England did not act to save the likes of the Wilsons – that was just collateral benefit. It acted to save Big Finance. Once that job is done, with an election out of the way, some people and companies will gain but most will lose. It will be purely collateral.

  • 5. KentPerson

    (09 March 2010, 12:21PM)  Complain about this comment

    Excellent article. Forget the property industry's spin. The matter boils down to one simple thing: when the average person cannot afford to buy the average h0me, the asking price is too high. End of story.

  • 6. Michael Ross

    (09 March 2010, 01:13PM)  Complain about this comment

    A good article about the housing market - yes - but it also reflects the British obsession with house purchase (good) as opposed to rental (bad).

    What the Wilsons did was to build a business out of meeting the need for well-managed housing for rent. It met a significant need. Arguably not all 'first-time buyers' should be pushed into buying a house, as many are, by the lack of decent rental accommodation.

    Often they are at the stage in life when they should not be forced to tie themselves to a particular property and location.

  • 7. David Barker

    (09 March 2010, 01:53PM)  Complain about this comment

    The Wilsons built a monopoly in the Ashford which has priced out locals from the maket. This is on the back of of lax economic policies, unwise bank lending and a tax subsidy for their interest payments. The business plan was based on house prices risning and low interest rates. The portfolio is now under water as the market is falling. The banks should put them out of their misery and foreclose and sell off at sensible prices.

  • 8. Stu Mitchell

    (09 March 2010, 01:56PM)  Complain about this comment

    Another vote for this article. It's interesting that, for every landlord of BTL, there will be an interest rate level at which they no longer break even. It mentions above that the level is 3.5% for the Wilsons. It will be a different figure depending on the landlord, their portfolio, and their current level of debt.

    Either way, I can imagine inflation will be the key to all of this: if it continues to rise, interest rates will have to be increased. One would imagine that this is also the case if the pound gets weaker: given the balance of trade figures today, we've not made benefit of them being low. IMHO the MPC may well decide to raise soon after the election.

  • 9. David

    (09 March 2010, 02:44PM)  Complain about this comment

    Bob roberts:

    I feel your pain. But it probably helps to know that you're not alone. There are thousands of us who saw the dark clouds on the horizon. The BOE have done a surprisingly impressive job of trying to blow them away, but they're just putting off the inevitable.

    None of this is much comfort when you just want to get on with your life (we all do) but crashes always happen in slow motion and that's particularly true of property crashes. This time next year...?

  • 10. Louie

    (09 March 2010, 03:31PM)  Complain about this comment

    (5) If that was the case then prices wouldn't have been held up during the last year, or ever before for that matter. Prices are what they are because enough people can afford them. This is even truer than before, as self cert mortgages played a big part in allowing people to offer more than they otherwise would. If prices are held up now when lending is so tight, it can only be because prices are affordable to enough people.

    I am one of the 'fortuneate' who has lots of BTLs and I'm benefitting at the expense of savers. Am I feeling guilty? Not a chance. You pays your money and you takes your choice. I bought property, others saved. Its paying off for me at this moment but it may not always be the case. One day when rates are higher saver will be laughing and I may be suffering.

    Besides, when interest rates were 15% in the early 90s I don't remember savers giving a damn about the plight of borrowers. Horses for courses.

  • 11. Bob Roberts

    (09 March 2010, 04:04PM)  Complain about this comment

    David.

    I hear you but the UK is alone of all the housing bubble economies not to have had a massive bust in house prices.

    The price of houses in Eire, Spain and elsewhere have crashed. In the US there have been 50% drops even in sought-after areas and predictions of another 10% to 20%.... yet in my part of the World they have put up asking prices since Christmas by, wait for this, about 15% to 20% - houses that have been for sale for years have put up their asking prices.

    As awful as it sounds I now wish for a Sterling Crisis, I wish for interest rates to rise rapidly and I hope for the public sector to see massive job cuts - and for it all to happen this summer.

    Yes, I know that makes me sound terrible but, like many, I feel I am being punished for now being a spiv or a gambler in a casino of house prices and debt!

  • 12. Phil

    (09 March 2010, 04:08PM)  Complain about this comment

    "The matter boils down to one simple thing: when the average person cannot afford to buy the average h0me, the asking price is too high. End of story. " Rubbish - people on 25k do not buy average 3-bed houses. End of story.

  • 13. Michael

    (09 March 2010, 05:17PM)  Complain about this comment

    There is a fundamental problem with this analysis and that is that BTLers have serviced their debts through periods of much higher interest rates and survived / made a profit. Almost no-one entered the market at the point that BoE lowered rates to 0.5% so any rise now - highly unlikely in the face of the continuing crisis - will still leave landlords with much better margins than they have had in the past. Rates will not rise unilaterally and there are few signs at the moment of tightening in other economic zones - namely the US and Europe so anyone posting here hoping that landlords will be ruined by fiscal tightening looks likely to be disappointed. The couple described in the article have made a whole lot of stupid business decisions - that's whats hitting them in the face now. To extrapolate from this that all other BTLers will be ruined doesn't stand up to any real analysis.

  • 14. Richard

    (09 March 2010, 05:19PM)  Complain about this comment

    I have been reading about the housing market for around six months now as ive managed to save a resonable deposit and i have a decent income for my age (21) i keep reading different things some say prices will stay the same and some say they are going to drop by upto 40% ive help off so far as im excited at the prospect of being able to afford a good sized house if this does happen but can anyone tell me is a 40% drop in house prices realistic?

  • 15. Richard

    (09 March 2010, 05:20PM)  Complain about this comment

    I have been reading about the housing market for around six months now as ive managed to save a resonable deposit and i have a decent income for my age (21) i keep reading different things some say prices will stay the same and some say they are going to drop by upto 40% ive held off so far as im excited at the prospect of being able to afford a good sized house if this does happen but can anyone tell me is a 40% drop in house prices realistic?

  • 16. Louie

    (09 March 2010, 05:43PM)  Complain about this comment

    Richard, not a chance.

    Certainly not in a way that will be meaningful to you. Theres a possibility that house prices become 40% cheaper in real terms over a very long period, for example through sustained inflation where house price rises don't keep pace or gradual long term tightening of finance, etc.

    And I also believe that house prices are strongly linked to interest rates, so as they rise, this may cause real prices to drop. But what's the real life benefit of 30% higher mortgage rates and 30% low house prices? You're still paying the same mortgage payments. If it makes you feel better to pay less for a house but higher rates of finance then great, but you are not really better off.

    You have to ask yourself that if the Lehmans Brothers collapse and other events of last year didn't cause any major damage to house prices, what kind of event will be required to knock 40% of prices? Would you even have a job?

  • 17. Roy

    (09 March 2010, 05:51PM)  Complain about this comment

    Thank you for highlighting the BoE's decision - to place the burden of bailing out the profligate on the shoulders of the prudent - as what it was: a travesty.

    The only hope for this country going forward seems to be that savers and the productive (those who work to earn money and don't participate in get rich quick schemes) have short memories, and forget that they were the ones who were punished while the foolish were rewarded.

  • 18. Nick

    (09 March 2010, 06:41PM)  Complain about this comment

    You just say 0.5% is a travesty but you do not offer a reason why.

    All you are saying is that demand is driven by cheap freely available credit. The underlying argument is related to the socialization of the credit system. ie High rates are only permissible when credit is freely flowing. Savers are damned as soon as credit is squeezed to stop existing credit agreements from going sour. Thus, the credit system has/is being used to subsidize people who are not entirely credit worthy independent of the interest rate. Easy credit, like government employment, has become the culture and way of life in the UK. Sadly I just don't see this changing any time soon - too many people have vested interests in prolonging the status quo.

    Until the future direction and purpose of the credit markets and the role of banks to allocate investment loans becomes clearer there will be much uncertainty as to what the fair value of land and housing actually is.

  • 19. Cliff D'Arcy

    (09 March 2010, 07:03PM)  Complain about this comment

    Hi John,

    The Wilsons claim that the equity in their portfolio is worth £180m to £225m. This is demonstrably false, as I prove here:

    http://boards.fool.co.uk/Message.asp?mid=11858901

    All the best,

    Cliff

  • 20. Richard

    (09 March 2010, 07:12PM)  Complain about this comment

    Thank you for the response, i understand that interest rates will rise but surley if interest rates rise so much that first time buyers can still not afford to buy property something is going to eventually give, or is that me being naive? I understand demand for housing is so great that prices will not fall that low but when is going to be the best time to buy, while interest rate as still low or wait for the prices of property to fall and hope interest rates remain resonable? Also yes my job is quite safe.

  • 21. Supersonic Blues

    (09 March 2010, 08:25PM)  Complain about this comment

    The real reason house prices haven't fallen is purely a shortage of supply in a sluggish market; the no-longer creditworthy cannot re-finance and are struggling on to the end of their 'deals' and cannot move upwards.

    Furthermore, it would not do Gordy any good if the banks we own started repo'ing, so repos are banned 'til after the election.

    As a confirmed BTL'er, I shall hold back buying 'til after the election; there may be bargains in Ashford, I understand...

  • 22. David

    (09 March 2010, 08:41PM)  Complain about this comment

    Bob,

    You put your case very well, I agree with everything you're saying and I don't think it makes you a bad person - at least I hope not because I harbour the same hopes :) You mention though that the UK is a unique case - and it is, but only in as much as it can mitigate the full force of this thing through historically low interest rates unlike Ireland or Spain. And as for the US, their subprime selling made ours look trivial, and their interest rates have been consistently and substantially higher than ours.

    The other side of the low interest rate coin here in blighty, is the pressure on Sterling and inflation that will make the day of reckoning a matter of time.

    But I realise that none of this is much comfort when property prices continue to defy all logic - houses that haven't sold for a year or more have been going up(!!!!) recently here in Cambridge too!

  • 23. Nick Macbean

    (09 March 2010, 08:56PM)  Complain about this comment

    If anyone can cast a shred of sense on this matter it is Fred Harrison look what he was predicting in 2005 http://www.moneyweek.com/investments/property/bust-will-follow-boom---but-when.aspx

  • 24. Bob Roberts

    (09 March 2010, 09:31PM)  Complain about this comment

    I am just hoping that the BOE is keeping in line with its master Brown and once the election is over some serious decisions will be made - we can't keep on muddling along like we are now... and yet we are still about 2 months away from the election.

    I guess the markets are waiting to see the result on May 7th and will then take action - I suspect that the tax rises and job losses in the second part of the year will be brutal.

    I still think that there are millions in the public sector who are obvlious to the economic mess and hence they believe that they still can raise their asking price on their house every month. Nuts.

    At the same time there must be millions of hard-working, decent people who have saved, who have been prudent and they, like me, must be feeling very bitter. I imagine none of them will vote for Labour after the 0% interest rates and inflation at about 4%!

  • 25. Louie

    (09 March 2010, 10:08PM)  Complain about this comment

    (20) Well as bizarre as it may seem, prices seem to be holding up, implying that enough people can afford these prices, including FTB's.

    There needs to be a material difference in affordability for prices fall. It won't happen just because lots of people want them to.

    People losing their jobs or getting pay cuts will affect affordability and cause prices to fall, but are you better off? Not really, your income falls by 10% and house prices fall by 10%, you are still spending the same proportion of income on your mortgage.

    You have to ask yourself how prices can fall 30%, but average incomes stay the same? Property in areas that you'd want to live in will always seem relatively expensive. There's little point believing that you will be able to buy your dream home for 3x income if lenders are happy to lend 5xincome. Its a bit like water finding its own level.

  • 26. chris

    (09 March 2010, 10:19PM)  Complain about this comment

    I am an estate agent in central London, we had an amazing year last year from Spring through to the end of 09. Now in 2010 we have started off to a slow year and when we have just entered spring and I would be expecting a flurry of buyers coming into the market, actually it is far slower than last year, prices are higher than 2007 in some cases. Things have slowly started to change, a few more properties are coming to the market with people wanting to get out because of a widely held view that prices will come off toward the end of the year. I think when interest rates rise to protect the sterling and combat inflation, which surely must be around the corner we will have a new phase of the crisis.

  • 27. Ali

    (09 March 2010, 10:52PM)  Complain about this comment

    Hi, I have read this article and have read about these two teachers a few years previously.
    However last week I read an article which stated they have sold their entire portfolio. They had interest from Russian Oligarchs and Oil tycoons and the like!!
    Apparently Mr and Mrs. buy to let have bought farms around the country and are cattle hearding.
    Could someone please confirm?

  • 28. steve

    (10 March 2010, 10:50AM)  Complain about this comment

    The rental market's finished.

    The house sales maket's finished.

    Lets knock the houses down then.

  • 29. Jon Pratt

    (10 March 2010, 10:54AM)  Complain about this comment

    Richard,

    In 2007, there were lots of people like Louie in Ireland saying that prices would not even drop 10%. The reality is that Irish prices have now dropped by 50% and are still falling.

    Louie hopes desperately that prices will not drop, as if they do, it will ruin him.

    The unfortunate reality is that house prices can, and will, fall massively.

  • 30. Supermarine Blues

    (10 March 2010, 06:28PM)  Complain about this comment

    LOL @ Steve's facetious comment.

    Except bizarrely, it HAS actually happened to some new builds in USA.

    Since this govt's mad bureacracy has virtually rendered the entire UK land bank unbuildable post 2013 by virtue of daft eco-regs and planning constraints, the dearth of new properties will take some of the slack out of the system, so it's less likely here.


  • 31. R.Bridges

    (11 March 2010, 10:02AM)  Complain about this comment

    Being an ex-BTL-er I would like to thank Money Week for their past aticles on the property markets. It always amazes me that people invest in one thing an think that's it eg.BTL We bought in the early 90's
    We were warned about the unafordabilityof house prices and the reasons for such eg 5x earnings/105% mortgages in the early 2000's
    The arguments were sound and we sold at or very near to the top.
    The same thing happened in commercial propety 3 years later.
    Sold again.
    Thanks to Money Week we have moved out of sterling assets
    We bought Gold@655USD:Silver@15USD:Oil@55USD:and a small property in the far east,Spain was always too expensive.
    Then we bought into Emerging markets in 2006.
    Lost on fertilizer and support systems for the oil industry.
    Keep reading MW and happy investing at the moment i'm enjoying the ride.

    Rol

  • 32. Devan

    (23 March 2010, 11:17AM)  Complain about this comment

    You can have a negative view on housing though I do not agree at all in London where for overseas buyers like me its been a deal of a lifetime to get on the ladder last year. However the bigger issue is that by reading these articles people can think its better to put their money in cash (or sell property and get cash) and wait for prices to fall and get in. The key is because everyones obsession in the UK is to get on the property ladder, prices dont fall especially in London which is a favorite for overseas buyers like me. Real estate is a real asset and regardless of inflation or deflation it will always hold on a relative inflation adjusted basis and also remember no one lost money in property in last 100 years.

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