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synergy777
17-09-2007, 04:40 PM
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml;jsessionid=YZCZ04CFDOWP5QFIQMGCFGGAVCBQ UIV0?xml=/money/2007/09/17/cngrspan117.xml

Alan Greenspan warns of UK house prices drop

Alan Greenspan warns of UK house prices drop
By Edmund Conway, Economics Editor
Last Updated: 2:44pm BST 17/09/2007



Britain's housing market is heading for a painful correction, according to the world's most renowned economist and central banker.


Alan Greenspan, the former head of America's central bank, the Federal Reserve, issues the prediction in an exclusive interview with The Daily Telegraph today.


Alan Greenspan warned recent increases in house prices were unsustainable
He warns of "difficulties" ahead for UK home owners, as rising interest rates bring house price growth to a shuddering halt.

The warning comes only days after the Bank of England was forced to bail out the mortgage lender Northern Rock, amid the escalating credit crunch in the City and markets around the world.

Mr Greenspan, the central banker for a number of United States presidents from Ronald Reagan to George W Bush, also says that Britain's economy is even more exposed to the financial turmoil than that of the US.

In a wide-ranging interview he also warns that:

• Inflation will pick up dramatically over the coming years, as much as doubling from its recent lows.

• Interest rates may have to hit double figures in the coming years to keep price rises at their current low levels.

• Britain must overhaul its flagging education system or risk being left behind by other vibrant economies around the world.

However, Mr Greenspan provides some reassurance about Britain's prospects in the coming decades, saying it will be one of the best-performing Western economies, thanks to the Thatcherite reforms of the 1980s and the strength of the City.

advertisementThe UK "may be one of the most competitive economies in the world", he adds. However, it is Mr Greenspan's warning on housing and interest rates that will cause most consternation.

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The 81-year-old economist, an adviser to Gordon Brown, said that recent increases in house prices - particularly those in London and the South East - were unsustainable.

"There are going to be some difficulties," he says. "Can [the boom] last No. You're already beginning to see the mortgage rates are moving; a lot of the two-year fixes are beginning to unwind, and the teaser rates are going," he adds, referring to mortgages where rates jump after an introductory period.

He says that banks are already being forced to write off billions of pounds of debt.

"It's going to turn, it's got to turn," he says.

Mr Greenspan also warns that Britain is more vulnerable to the effects of the credit crunch than the US.

"Britain is more exposed than we are - in the sense that you have a good deal more adjustable-rate mortgages," he says, referring to the standard variable rate loans that many households have chosen over fixed-rate deals.

The Bank of England has raised interest rates five times in the past year to their current 5.75 per cent.

However, the instability in money markets has meant that the effective rate paid by millions of families - the so-called standard variable rate - has actually risen to heights it last hit when the Bank rate was a full percentage point higher at 6.75 per cent.

"In Britain the housing [market] hasn't turned yet, and the consumer households are more subject to interest rate changes than in the United States," he adds.

His warning comes with the UK banking system in a state of crisis.

Worried customers have withdrawn £2bn from their accounts with Northern Rock since Friday, when it emerged that the high street bank has had to arrange an emergency loan from the Bank of England to prevent it from collapsing.

There are also growing signs that after a decade of almost uninterrupted growth the housing market is slowing dramatically. Rightmove and the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors have reported a sudden dive in prices.

Although he expects the housing market to take a turn for the worse, Mr Greenspan says the UK economy is well placed to deal with shocks, because the reforms following the miners' strikes in the 1980s made it a more flexible place to do business.

"You [in the UK] haven't even had a taint of a recession for an extremely long period of time – and a goodly part of that is the flexibility that came out of the crush between Scargill and Thatcher," he says.

"That was the defining moment, and to their credit Blair and Brown did not endeavour to unwind it. They recognised that there was something fundamentally good for British labour in having a flexible economy.

"It's like tough love, as we call it. It's unhappy-making, but in the end it works."

synergy777
17-09-2007, 05:39 PM
Panic of 1873 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Panic of 1873 was a severe nationwide economic depression in the United States that lasted until 1877. It was precipitated by the bankruptcy of the Philadelphia banking firm Jay Cooke and Company on September 18, 1873 along with the meltdown on May 9, 1873, of the Vienna Stock Exchange in Austria. It was one of a series of economic crises in the 19th and early 20th centuries.

Long Depression - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Long Depression (1873–1896) (23 years) affected much of the world from the early 1870s until the mid-1890s and was contemporary with the Second Industrial Revolution. At the time it was regarded as the Great Depression, until the more severe Great Depression occurred in the 1930s. It was most notable in Western Europe and North America, but this is in part because reliable data from the period is most readily available in those parts of the world. The United Kingdom is often considered to have been the hardest hit by the Long Depression, and during this period it lost much of its large industrial lead over the economies of Continental Europe. The Depression is usually believed to have ended by 1897. The global economy grew at an impressive rate from that year to the start of World War I.

edelweiss pirate
17-09-2007, 06:16 PM
So the chumps get mortgages then get stiffed with the interest rate rises..


How come the mugs haven't worked that shit out yet

If people had a brain and didn't allow themselves to get blackmailed by the system we could actually dictate our own terms.

Mortgage actually means ' death pawn'..

I reckon there's a clue there.

Learn French you clods, or at least the etymology of that one fatal word:

Mort-gage.

Riding high on the evolutionary bell-curve is a lonely experience.

synergy777
17-09-2007, 07:46 PM
you know what people laughed at me, i was telling about the crash soon i will be their landlord, lol crisis is opportunity.