1
Aug
A Giant Leap
On the 40th Anniversary of the moon landing our
Associate, Nick Churton of Mayfair Office thinks that taking a
"Giant Leap" in today's property market may be a very good step
indeed.
Forty years ago three brave men risked their lives to make a
giant leap for mankind. The Apollo X1 mission to put a man on the
moon, and go where no man had gone before, held the planet in
thrall. It was the end of the ‘60s and Britain had swung for
almost a decade. But, as a counterpoint to the successful moon
landing, back on earth the wheels were coming off. The decade-long
free spending party had come to an end.
So, no change there then - particularly as none of us really
knows now what is going to happen next, any more than we did in the
early ‘70s. But life and economics appear to have come full
circle.
The property market is certainly going where it has never gone
before. We are in un-chartered territory with the market very
finely balanced indeed. On one hand it could remain on its present
- albeit shallow - upward trajectory. On the other we could
experience the double bounce or ‘W’ shaped recession,
about which some economists and media commentators seem keen to
remind us.
From a property market point of view there seems little doubt
that although there is a large question mark hanging over where the
market may go next, either way, now seems a good time for home
movers. If the recovery continues, the rate of increase in property
values should ultimately rise. So now would be a very good time to
buy. Were the market to slip back and values slide then it would be
a smart move to sell. Moving home always features profit and loss -
the financial advantage of selling almost always cancels out the
disadvantage of buying, or vice versa depending on the market.
The first six months of this year have defied most market
predictions. Activity has been high, and in some places demand has
even exceeded supply. That was not in the script, but is a welcome
sign of tentative market recovery. So too is the news from the
house builders that they are seeing their best sales results in
three years.
Buying property in this market may seem to some like a giant
leap into the unknown: not quite like risking one’s life and
flying to the moon for the first time, but a bold step
nevertheless. However, when weighed against some of the good signs
of recovery then the bold move now may very well prove to be the
shrewd one.