Bank of England turns gloomier as base rate rises to 1.75%. How will the housing market respond?

Economists question the Bank’s latest forecasts while the direction of travel for mortgage costs is less open to debate.
Written By:
Tom Bill, Knight Frank
3 minutes to read

Alongside the biggest rate hike in 27 years, the Bank of England last week predicted the UK would enter a recession later this year and not emerge from it until 2024.

It was an even more pessimistic forecast than the one it made in May and understandably prompted a wide range of reactions.

Irrespective of its accuracy, the risk for the housing market is that the prediction itself could dampen sentiment.

So, how might buyers and sellers respond to this latest set of numbers?The first thing to consider is whether the Bank of England should even be making such forecasts, said Savvas Savouri, chief economist at asset manager Toscafund.

“The Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) is the body created specifically to provide economic forecasts, so this feels like a case of mission creep for the Bank of England,” he said. “Plus, the OBR has a much better track record.”

The OBR’s next set of forecasts will be published in the autumn.

Underlying most of the reaction was a feeling the Bank is over-compensating for doing too little too late to tame inflation, which it now expects to peak at over 13% later this year.

Gerard Lyons, chief economic strategist at wealth manager Netwealth, said the downbeat message showed the “Bank of England is suffering from a self-inflicted credibility gap”. The tone contrasted with the more reassuring message in the face of a similar outlook delivered by the Federal Reserve in the US, he added.


And what of the substance of the forecast?

“I can’t see a meaningful sector of the economy that is going to lay off workers,” said Savouri. “I looked at the Bank’s numbers and asked myself if I am missing something, and the answer is I’m missing nothing.”

The Bank of England itself said uncertainty around the outlook is exceptionally high, and the UK’s economic performance could be very different depending on the trajectory of energy prices. Any further stimulus measures by the new government after September have also understandably not been included in the assumptions.

In short, the Bank’s latest predictions will undoubtedly cause some hesitation in the housing market but the extent to which its prophecies come true will be the real acid test.

There was also little consensus on what the Bank would do next on rates. Some economists warned it wouldn’t be the last rise of 50 basis points while others forecast cuts next year.

For anyone wondering what the latest rise means for mortgage costs, the answer is less open to debate than the Bank’s forecasts. The average cost of a five-year fixed-rate mortgage (75% LTV) has already risen to 3.45% from 1.28% last September and the only way is up after 13 years of ultra-low borrowing costs.

Further increases will dampen demand but there is unlikely to be a cliff-edge moment for the housing market.

Mortgage offers typically last for six months and most people are on fixed-rate deals still, which means the impact on demand will be more gradual.

For the second time in three months, it is worth remembering that watching what the Bank of England does rather than what it says could prove to be more useful for buyers and sellers.

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