24 September 2009

Is Car Advertising Deliberately Dodgy - Seat Ibiza?

Cheap Seat Ibiza Sports Coupe £138
I am increasingly frustrated with car advertising. That's whether I'm intending to buy or lease. My latest frustrating experience concerns a SEAT Ibiza Sports Coupe. This was advertised at a lease price of £138 plus VAT per month.

When I contacted the company, the colour I wanted was an extra £12 per month. £12 per month equates to 8.7% of the original price. So after considerating that the colour didn't matter that much I asked the salesman for any colour that could be supplied at the £138 price being advertised. Sadly, the salesman was unable to locate any car for that price. Meanwhile, as I make this posting, the car is still being advertised at £138 per month on both the company's website and through Google Adwords. The website even has a labe of "in stock" next to price. Apparently, as I've found out, no stock exists at the price quoted.

23 September 2009

Liberals Mansion Tax Blunder

The Liberal Democrats have blundered their way to election disaster with the announcement of a "mansion tax" on houses worth more than £1 million. Poor old Vince Cable, once seen as a voice of economic sanity, is now the target of a sustained assault by the middle class media.

Vince thought he had a vote winner. Tax the rich and make them pay for the tax cuts of the poor was his spin on the announcement. This has gone horribly wrong as many of the Lib-Dem marginal seats are in the south east, where £1 million houses are not so rare.

According to Vince just 1% of housing stock, approximately 200,000 properties come into the million plus class. He argued for a 0.5% tax on the value of these, raising £5,000 per household. However, voters remember the poll tax and the difficulties of collecting that. A mansion tax will be a nightmare. Simply, if you own a £1.2 million house, split it into two and have two £600,000 houses. In addition, the sorts of people who own £1 million plus houses are also good at organising their affairs in order to minimise their tax liabilities. Imagine the battles between town halls and their wealthier residents.

Lastly, Vince's approach attacks people's aspirations. I don't own a £1 million house - yet. But I would certainly like one. If I work hard enough, having paid tax on the money I use to buy one, why should I then pay another £5,000 a year to live in it?

See also: Vince Cable's Dangerous Thinking.

14 September 2009

House Price Rise is a False Dawn

The Ernst and Young ITEM club have produced an economic report that claims that the current bouyancy in the UK housing market is a false dawn. The club forecasts that prices will soon start to fall again and that they wont return to the peak price levels of 2007 until 2014.

Recent price rises, seen since the spring, have been driven by a shortage of properties. At some point the immediate shortage will be over and the underlying recessionary conditions will put a dampener on the ability of buyers to raise bids.

At current mortgage interest rates, home buying is currently more affordable than at any time in the previous 7 years. HSBC recently a 1.99% mortgage product for those buyers who can afford a 40% deposit.