Tuesday, September 18, 2007

The Coming Storm / Pimco on UK

After Ben Bernanke and the Fed have saved the US it is time to move to the UK (sarcasm off)....Myles Bradshaw from Pimco has an excellent take on the UK. He is very bullish on UK gilts. The conclusion is that he is not very optimistic on the UK economy. Key to his outlook is that the housing market has some very tough times ahead...... If you want to read about my view on the UK (including housing, commercial real estate, BOE, Northern Rock, pound etc ) click here . If Pimco is bullish on bonds i would be the super bull....... ;-)

Nachdem Bernanke und die Fed die Krise in den USA ja gestern anscheinend beendet haben ist es Zeit sich mehr denn je dem nächsten Patienten zuzuwenden.....(Sarkasmus) Myles Bradshaw von Pimco hat hier eine gute Übersicht über das momentane Bild in UK zusammengezimmert. Er ist ziemlich bullish was UK Staatsanleihen angeht. Kann nur bedeuten das er für die Wirtschaft eher pessimistisch ist. Dreh und Angelpunkt seiner Analyse ist der britische Immobilienmarkt der weltweit seinesgleichen sucht. Um meine bisherigen Meinungen zu UK (private und gewerbliche Immobilien, Northern Rock, Boe, Pfund etc) klickt bitte hier. Wenn man Pimco als Anleihebullen bezeichnet dürfte ich als der Superbulle durchgehen....... :-)

The Coming Storm / Myles Bradshaw
....Looking forward, monetary policy will tighten for consumers even if the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) leaves rates unchanged. Firstly, mortgage rates are set to rise as consumers refinance out of their 2005 2-year fixed-rate deals. Secondly, consumers will be hit by a widening in mortgage spreads as banks pass on the higher funding costs from the recent crisis in wholesale money markets. Unfortunately, this will all occur at a time when income growth is weak and debt-servicing costs are at the highest levels since the last recession.


The party is over

Mortgage Rates on the Rise
According to the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML) data, fixed-rate mortgage lending doubled to an estimated £230 billion in the four quarters from July 2005 as households took advantage of the August 2005 rate cut to lock in low mortgage costs. At the end of 2006, fixed-rate mortgages accounted for about 45% of the £1 trillion stock of outstanding mortgages, up from 25% in 2003. This locking in of low mortgage rates has lengthened the time it takes for MPC interest-rate increases to affect the consumer. By May 2007, base rates had increased by 100bp but the effective mortgage rate had only risen by 37bp.

The next twelve months will probably see most of these fixed-rate deals mature and interest rates for a majority of households rise. CML data already shows that 2-year, 75% Loan-to-Value (LTV) mortgage rates averaged 4.67% in July 2005 compared to 6.1% in July 2007. The inverted shape of the yield curve means there is little incentive to switch into a floating-rate mortgage now; the average CML base rate tracker rate was 6.27% in July.
But fixed-mortgage rates will probably rise further still, irrespective of whether the MPC raises rates again. Fixed-rate mortgages tend to track wholesale interest rates in the bond market with a lag of two to three months. The mortgage rate presented to the consumer in July has usually been fixed in the bond market by the mortgage lender in April or May. Since April, 2-year sterling swap rates have increased by about 40bp. Households may be able to achieve lower interest rates by paying higher arrangement fees to mortgage lenders or by signing up to discount mortgages that penalize the borrower with lock-ins after the discounts expire. But the bottom line is that come October, 2-year fixed-rate deals could be some 175bp higher than they were two years ago; slightly more than the increase in base rates over that period. Monetary policy is not impotent; it is just taking longer to work.

Changed Conditions for Mortgage Lenders
But this is only half the story. Over the past few years, competition in the mortgage market has driven down the spread between consumer mortgage rates and wholesale interest rates – which indicate mortgage lenders’ funding costs – to unsustainable levels. Chart 2 shows how fixed-rate mortgages tend to track wholesale rates, and how mortgage spreads have narrowed sharply over the past two years. These spreads are now set to widen.
Firstly, the sharp rise in LIBOR rates that occurred in August will increase mortgage lenders’ funding costs. The recent change in credit investors’ risk appetite in the current market turbulence means that banks’ balance sheets have been saddled with large amounts of loans from private equity leveraged buy-outs and lines of contingent credit that have been called. The recent stress in global money market rates – where overnight Sterling rates rose by as much as 70bp to a high of 6.5% – reflects banks’ increased need for cash to finance these unexpected new loans. Overnight rates have now settled down, partly due to large liquidity injections by the U.S. Fed and the European Central Bank (ECB), but one- to six-month money market rates have not. Three-month Sterling LIBOR rates rose over 60bp in August, despite the fact that interest rate expectations fell. While LIBOR rates may fall over the coming weeks, they are unlikely to quickly return to July levels unless central banks cut rates. The net result is that monetary policy has been effectively tightened over August despite the MPC leaving rates unchanged. Secondly, the growth of the residential mortgage-backed securitisation (RMBS) market has enabled many mortgage lenders to sell repackaged mortgages to investors. This has reduced lenders’ exposure to borrowers’ credit risk and encouraged business models that focus on high volumes and low margins. But investors’ appetite for asset-backed securities like RMBS has been dampened by the recent turmoil in credit markets. More importantly, the cost of securitising these assets has increased (see Chart 3). The spreads over LIBOR on U.K. residential mortgage-backed securities have gone back to early 2004 levels, when fixed-rate mortgage spreads were about 0.3% higher. Many mortgage lenders will come under pressure to raise margins and reduce volumes. This does not bode well for the consumer.
Higher Income Share for Debt Servicing
But it is not just the spread on mortgage rates that has fallen over the past few years. Lending standards have also declined due to the easing in credit availability. As a result, homebuyers have been able to borrow more money relative to their income while debt-servicing costs are now taking a larger share of consumers’ income. The CML data show that average Loan-to-Income ratios have increased to 3.16x in June, up from 2.4x in 2000. Higher deposits have kept LTV ratios pretty stable at around 80%, so mortgage lenders should be protected if house prices weaken. But increased debt levels have now driven debt-servicing costs as a share of income markedly higher. According to the CML, mortgage interest payments accounted for 17.7% of the average borrower’s income in June, up from 15.4% twelve months ago. This is the highest level since 1992, in spite of the fact that interest rates are about 40% lower than in 1992. Factor in repayment of principal, and debt-servicing costs are within spitting distance of the 1990 high. Chart 4 shows Citigroup’s estimate of total (rather than just mortgages) household debt service relative to disposable income. ...

Lower Retail Sales Looming
On top of this, leading indicators of the housing market have already started to roll over, despite the modest rises in effective mortgage rates to date. The recent Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) survey showed that surveyors’ price expectations fell sharply to the lowest level since summer 2005. Housing activity has been highly correlated with consumption.....The RICS measure of new home buying enquiries has been a great leading indicator of housing activity. It tends to lead mortgage approvals by about three months, which, in turn, lead retail sales by about five months. The RICS measure has fallen sharply since the middle of last year and is only just above the lows of 2005, which preceded a collapse in retail sales growth and led to a surprise interest rate cut in August 2005.

The effects of the rate hikes will start to show over the coming months. Consumers will see higher interest rates as fixed-rate mortgages roll off and as mortgage spreads widen. Tepid income growth and debt-servicing costs near record highs mean consumers have little to cushion them against higher interest rates. Facing this storm, the U.K. economy is likely to slow down and grow below trend.

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6 Comments:

Blogger jmf said...

BOE Says Inflation Risks Have `Probably Receded'

``The upside balance of risks to inflation,'' in their Aug. 8 forecasts ``had probably receded. The outlook was now more uncertain.''

That is the problem when central bankers never leave the "core" world and are living in the "Matrix".....

2:33 AM  
Blogger jmf said...


BOE Reverses Policy, Lends Three-Month Emergency Cash


The Bank of England abandoned its opposition to emergency three-month money auctions and loosened lending standards, a week after Governor Mervyn King said such steps would encourage ``risky behavior.''

``This measure is being taken to alleviate the strains in longer-maturity money markets,'' the bank said in a statement today. The Bank of England said it will accept ``mortgage collateral'' at the auction of 10 billion pounds ($20 billion) in loans next week. It will have a penalty rate of 6.75 percent

4:41 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

So this is what they want the BOE money for Granite (countertops)?


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2007/09/19/cnboe119.xml

5:37 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

So here is what they want to spend BOE money on..

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2007/09/19/cnboe119.xml

And here some reasons why....
http://investing.reuters.co.uk/news/articleinvesting.aspx?type=allBreakingNews&storyID=2007-09-17T173009Z_01_L17431029_RTRIDST_0_NORTHERN-ROCK-ABS-FACTBOX.XML

5:57 AM  
Blogger jmf said...

Granite....

You cannot make this up... :-)

5:57 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Actually the Telegraph story looks wrong. NR just issued the 5bn Granite RMBS and they were well rated, there is no repurchase, and it woud be odd to spend 5bn to get the same from BOE.

6:31 AM  

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