I have been doing some research on the current attitude of Stoke-on-Trent first-time buyers. First-time buyers are so important for both landlords and homeowners. If first-time buyers aren’t buying, they still need a roof over their heads, so they rent (good news for landlords). If they buy, demand for Stoke-on-Trent property goes up for starter homes and that enables other Stoke-on-Trent homeowners to move up the property ladder.
First-time
buyers are the lifeblood of the property market. They are, however the most
susceptible to interest rate rises and the affordability of mortgages. With
that in mind, let us see what is happening to them…
The average value of a Stoke-on-Trent
property is currently standing at £141,021 and UK interest rates at 0.25%. As
each year goes by, it appears the age of the everlasting mortgage has started
to emerge, prompted by these first-time buyers, eager to get a foot on the
housing ladder. I was reading a report a few days ago where some mortgage
companies confessed that the battle to gain big returns from the property
market has led to mortgages that will take considerably longer than the customary
25 years to pay off.
Over the last few years, it has been commonplace for first-time
buyer mortgages to be 30 and 35 years in length as the ‘Bank of Mum and Dad’
have been helping with the deposit (Beatles Sgt Pepper song - “With a Little
Help from My Friends”). Now, some high street banks are offering
mortgage terms of 40 years. This means first-time buyers could be paying until
their mid 60’s - I can hear that other great track from the same album
"When I'm Sixty-Four" ringing in my ears! So, a 50-year
mortgage does not seem as far-fetched now as it would have been back in the
1970’s. After all life expectancy for a male then was exactly 69 years and today
its 79 years and 5 months!
Over the last ten years, Stoke-on-Trent
property prices have continued to rise more than wages, therefore, first-time
buyers are looking for bigger loans. If this development continues, the only
way repayments can remain reasonable is by increasing the term of the loan.
However, some commenters
have said there are worries the mortgage companies are lending money over such
a long term, they threaten leaving some first-time buyers with a generation of
debt if the house price bubble bursts. Interestingly, when I looked at what had
happened to average property values in Stoke-on-Trent over the last 50 years,
there have been bubbles. First-time buyers should take heart, since as a county
we have always recovered from it a few years later.
What if interest rates rise?
Well looking at historic UK interest rates, the current rate of 0.25% is at a 300-year
low. Mortgages will never be cheaper. I would however, seriously consider
fixing the rate to cushion any future potential interest rate rises (since they
can only go in one direction when they do change). If Stoke-on-Trent first-time
buyers see buying a home as a long-term decision, based on the last 50 years,
they should be just fine!
Before I go, a final thought for property buyers in Sweden,
the land of Volvo and Abba. As Swedish property prices are so high, Swedish
Regulators announced last year limits on the length of Swedish mortgage terms.
They don’t bother with 50-year mortgages (On and On and On – Abba).
Now I will leave you in peace as I listen to the 1980’s Madness
song ‘Our House’. My apologies to all the Beatles and Abba fans in Stoke-on-Trent
- a bit of light hearted fun albeit on serious topic.
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