Mortgage Equity Withdrawal - The Refinancing
Trend
Mortgage Equity Withdrawal is the formal name
for equity refinance, reverse mortgages or simply home loans based on equity
(as the security for the loan).
Mortgage Equity Withdrawal rose to 8.7
billion pounds in the second quarter of this year to its highest since
the third quarter last year, official data showed (on Tuesday 4th Oct 2005).
Mortgage Equity Withdrawal is a measure
of the equity Britons have extracted from their homes but which they have
not re-invested in property.
Sharply rising house prices in the last
few years have encouraged a trend where Britons refinance their mortgages
to extract cash which many economists say has helped support spending.
The Bank of England said that Mortgage
Equity Withdrawal was up sharply from 6.437 billion in the first quarter
of this year although it is still well below the 14.5 billion seen one
year ago, when house prices were rising more than 20 percent annually.
The Bank of England has since cut interest
rates by a quarter of 1% to 4.5 percent which could support Mortgage Equity
Withdrawal in coming months, particularly as there are signs that the property
market may be stabilizing after a year of stagnation.
As a percentage of post-tax income, Mortgage
Equity Withdrawal rose to 4.2 percent from 3.2 percent in the first quarter
of the year but is well down on 7.3 percent seen a year ago.
" Mortgage Equity Withdrawal appears to
have found its way into increased holdings of financial assets (equities,
bonds) as much as extra spending," said Geoffrey Dicks, UK economist at
RBS Financial Markets.
"Generally the pick-up in Mortgage Equity
Withdrawal is probably indicative of more `normalization' of the housing
market but while it is saved rather than spent, the policy implications
are not huge."
Official data last month (September) showed
the saving ratio rose to 5 percent in the second quarter of this year from
4.5 percent in Q1 (also of this year).
Separate figures showed UK residential
construction barely grew in September, putting in its weakest monthly performance
since May.
But what does this mean in real terms?
There are several key points in this statement,
these are:
1.People are refinancing their homes because
of increased value
2.People are not necessarily spending
the money on the property
3.People are not necessarily spending
the money in the high street
These three points are important to all
of us, not just the policy makers. Here s why.
Let s consider the first point, people
are refinancing there homes because the equity has grown rapidly.
This statement tells us that the housing
market although not sky rocketing as it was a couple of years ago, is none
the less still rising.
The second point tells us that when people
effectively withdraw this money it is not to improve the home itself, hence
the equity of the property will not grow at a better rate than market rate.
The third point is perhaps most telling,
people are not taking the money and spending it in a hap hazard manner
but are potentially saving it (bonds, shares, bank accounts).
So what do this mean for us?
Well, it s a bit of mixed signals heads
up if you like.
The general population (property owners)
are slipping into ever increasing levels of debt (if you re refinancing
your mortgage or freeing up equity as the agents put it, you
are effectively borrowing money) unless it s a reverse mortgage.
People who are refinancing are not improving
the quality of the property with the money and so if the market takes a
fall their property will devalue as much as the next property (whereas
if they d returned some of the capital into improvements they would at
least be sitting on a lesser slump in value).
Finally, and perhaps the most damming sign
is that people are saving more, this is not a good sign. In a healthy economy
the rate of saving is low, this is primarily because confidence is high
(people aren t worried about the bills or their jobs) but the fact that
more people are now starting to save money rather then spending it means
that the retail sector will be taking a hit, this means that the bottom
end jobs will be in danger, this in turn has a knock on effect in the service
sector and becomes a vicious circle the end result being market
stagnentation .
But what this trend does illustrate quite
simply is that you can potentially get more money back in savings interest
than you pay out in refinancing interest so at the moment the
smart moneys in equity refinance.
Author Paul Foley |