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Housing Equity Withdrawal at a whopping -5.7 billion

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    Housing Equity Withdrawal at a whopping -5.7 billion

    Change in the total value of new home-secured loans that are not used for home purchases or improvements:

    Forecast Actual
    -3.3 billion -5.7 billion

    This means that UK homeowners are taking more money out of their homes than ever before!

    Looks like desperation to me.
    'Orwell's 1984 was supposed to be a warning, not an instruction manual'. -
    Nick Pickles, director of Big Brother Watch.

    #2
    Originally posted by SantaClaus View Post
    Change in the total value of new home-secured loans that are not used for home purchases or improvements:

    Forecast Actual
    -3.3 billion -5.7 billion

    This means that UK homeowners are taking more money out of their homes than ever before!

    Looks like desperation to me.
    I'm no economist (I actually resigned from the economics department as an undergrad) but to me, if the figures are negative, surely that means that people are overall paying back this debt and reducing it?

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by Gonzo View Post
      I'm no economist (I actually resigned from the economics department as an undergrad) but to me, if the figures are negative, surely that means that people are overall paying back this debt and reducing it?
      Correct

      First year in a long long time when there has been a pay down on overall national mortgage debt. Not for lack of trying however, mainly because of the freeze in lending. Its all but enforced as people find it nigh on impossible to remortgage and their equity has been eroded to the tune of at least 10% this year alone.

      Not sure what the first poster is on about.

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by Solidec View Post
        Not sure what the first poster is on about.
        Maybe it is the "double-whammy" on retailers he/she/it is concerned about - we are expecting the people who lose their jobs to stop spending money, but this means that the people that don't lose their jobs have also stopped spending money.

        Comment


          #5
          Ok, sorry I read it wrong! I wish I could change the title from whopping to depressing.

          But, the net result is bad for the pound and the economy
          -----------------------------------------------------------------------
          Source Bank of England (latest release)

          Measures Change in the total value of new home-secured loans that are not used for home purchases or improvements;

          Usual Effect Actual > Forecast = Good for currency;

          Frequency Released quarterly, about 90 days after the quarter ends;

          Next Release Apr 3, 2009

          Also Called Mortgage Equity Withdrawal;
          'Orwell's 1984 was supposed to be a warning, not an instruction manual'. -
          Nick Pickles, director of Big Brother Watch.

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by Gonzo View Post
            Maybe it is the "double-whammy" on retailers he/she/it is concerned about - we are expecting the people who lose their jobs to stop spending money, but this means that the people that don't lose their jobs have also stopped spending money.
            I think it'll be a triple (or more) whammy: retailers go bust, shop staff no longer have money to spend, then the triple: the companies that rent the shops out no longer able to maintain their mortgage payments, and fold, next: the banks that lent the money to these companies also fold.

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by Purple Dalek View Post
              I think it'll be a triple (or more) whammy: retailers go bust, shop staff no longer have money to spend, then the triple: the companies that rent the shops out no longer able to maintain their mortgage payments, and fold, next: the banks that lent the money to these companies also fold.


              Line enough of them up and we could be looking at a new domino toppling world record.

              [whistles monty python's Always Look on the Brightside of Life. Be grateful I'm not trying to sing it!]
              Feist - 1234. One camera, one take, no editing. Superb. How they did it
              Feist - I Feel It All
              Feist - The Bad In Each Other (Later With Jools Holland)

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by PAH View Post
                Line enough of them up and we could be looking at a new domino toppling world record.

                [whistles monty python's Always Look on the Brightside of Life. Be grateful I'm not trying to sing it!]
                I'm looking at there being three major tranches of bailouts before the government finally runs out of money. This next set of bank failures will be the second.

                The sooner we get to the third, the better, because the effort of climbing from the hole created will be harder the bigger the hole the government gets us into.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by Purple Dalek View Post
                  the effort of climbing from the hole created will be harder the bigger the hole the government gets us into.
                  ...and being a Dalek you don't like climbing do you?
                  And what exactly is wrong with an "ad hominem" argument? Dodgy Agent, 16-5-2014

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by Purple Dalek View Post
                    I think it'll be a triple (or more) whammy: retailers go bust, shop staff no longer have money to spend, then the triple: the companies that rent the shops out no longer able to maintain their mortgage payments, and fold, next: the banks that lent the money to these companies also fold.
                    Oooooh cheerful times!!!

                    Merry Xmas to all!!



                    Can you lot not talk about anything remotely upbeat?!
                    The pope is a tard.

                    Comment

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