28 February 2009

Bankers Pension Row Rumbles On

Six months after being told that the politicians were going to crack down on greedy bankers, the public realise that these same politicians stood by as the bankers helped themselves to more money.

We are gradually finding out that even in failure these superstars of the banking crash were being handed million of £s at the very time the politicians were claiming to be cracking down on city salaries and bonuses. Fred Goodwin of RBS wasn't alone in being heaped with largesse. Fred's £8 million - up to £16 million according to some analysts - pension uplift may be the biggest pension top-up. But out there several more high profile bankers were rewarded with multi-million £ pension pot contributions just to give up their jobs. Jobs that had been done so well that their organisations were driven to record levels of bankruptcy.

The latest character to come to public attention is Peter Cummings. He was head of corporate lending at HBOS. Seems poor Mr. Cummings has to get buy on a pension pot £5.9 million. Now according to reports, much of this pension pot was agreed as a condition of his departure. Who were the idiots that dreamt up such huge rewards for such atrocious performance? Seems the politicians and their civil servants were blinded by the city slickers.

27 February 2009

Kent's Hidden Value as House Prices Slide

High Speed Train for Kent
The Land Registry has published data that confirms that the value of UK housing continues to slide. Land Registry data is based on actual completed transactions and so measures prices slightly behind the Nationwide House Price index, which is based on mortgage approvals. In addition, The Nationwide represents just a sample of UK housing, whilst The Land Registry is a census. Lastly, the Nationwide report used data collected up until the middle of February, whilst the Land Registry's cut-off is 31st January.

Anyhow, according the the report UK house prices fell 15.1% over 12 months, with the average house transaction being £153,753.

At a more current level, I am definitely seeing more "sold" boards in my locality, Kent. Indeed some of these houses have been well above the average as my local postcode has an average transaction value of £450,000. Maybe Kent, and Ashford in particular, is a special case. Compared to the home counties at large, Kent has always represented value for money. Indeed on the basis of drive time and commuting distance from central London, Kent housing represents real value for money.

The environment for Kent house builders is also looking quite positive given the development of its transport links. Last week Ashford International Station saw the reintroduction of its Eurostar Brussels service and an increase in services to Paris. Secondly, and perhaps more importantly, South Eastern Trains have announced the early introduction of the high speed rail service to London St. Pancras. The 36.5 minute service (yes 36.5 minutes) will reduce fstest peak time journey times by 30 minutes. Powered by Japanes Hitachi trains and running on a dedicated high speed line, the new service will mean Ashford is as accessible to the capital as most towns on the M25 belt, whilst it is situated in the lowest densely populated area of the south east. This will make Ashford and the stations connecting to it a magnet for London's highy paid commuters. Prices for homes in the area can only go up - despite the general malaise elsewhere.

26 February 2009

House Prices Fall 17.6%

According to the Nationwide House Price Index, UK house prices have fallen by 17.6% in the 12 months to February. The fall during the month amounted to 1.8%. According to the building society average house is now worth £147,746. This is a fall of £31,612 against a year previously.

The Nationwide data conflicts with some of the anecdote emerging from the housing industry, that there has been an upturn in buyer interest. Much of the data suggests that the market has bottomed out and that for buyers with sufficient funds the market represents great value.

The market for housing market is currently hamstrung by the need to raise a much larger deposit than has traditionally been the case. First time buyers have typically entered the market with a deposit of 5 or 10%. However, finance providers have been reluctant to lend on this basis given the risks presented by negative equity.

A more positive sign is that the UK government-owned Northern Rock is back in the lending market. Prior to its demise as an independent business, Northern Rock was famous for its 125% mortgages. This time round, Northern Rock will require a 10% deposit.

25 February 2009

Irish Police Raid Anglo-Irish Bank


The Irish police yesterday raided the offices of Anglo-Irish Bank. The bank is at the centre of a loans for shares scandal that has rocked the Irish financial establishment.

For the past 15 years Anglo-Irish was the glamour stock amongst the Irish financial sector. The problems at the bank have come on top of the general banking crisis. Ireland, relative to its population, has one of the largest banking sectors in Europe. Parallels have been drawn with Iceland. The problem and have seen the Irish stock market plummet to levels last seen 14 years ago.

02 February 2009

Government Spending on IT Soars

The incompetence of the UK public sector knows no bounds. As the weather forces the UK public sector to close down - whilst the private sector struggles on - The Times reports that the current overspend on government IT projects amounts to more than £18 billion.

Many IT projects - such as the NHS CRM system - are years behind schedule and are so mired in problems that there is little prospect that they will ever be completed. The NHS project is 4 years behind. Another project to manage the dsicredited tax credit system for the HMRC was orginally budgeted at £2.9 billion. Current estimates are that this will now cost £8.5 billion.

Only in the overpaid, over-pensioned, underworked, poorly managed, bloated public sector would such incompetence be allowed to continue. So much for the famous Prince2 project management system.