WASHINGTON, Sept 26 (Reuters) – U.S. consumer confidence dropped to a four-month low in September, weighed down by persistent worries about higher prices and rising fears of a recession, though households remained generally upbeat about the labor market.
The second straight monthly decline in confidence reported by the Conference Board on Tuesday also reflected higher interest rates and concerns about the political environment.
The nation faces a potentially disruptive shutdown of the federal government on Saturday amid political wrangling. Confidence fell across all age groups, and was most pronounced among consumers with annual incomes of $50,000 or more.
“Inflation is slowing, but prices are still higher than they were before the pandemic and this is taking a toll on consumer confidence,” said Christopher Rupkey, chief economist at
FWDBONDS in New York.
The Conference Board said its consumer confidence index dropped to 103.0 this month, the lowest reading since May, from an upwardly revised 108.7 in August. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the index easing to 105.5 from the previously reported 106.1. Consumers’ perceptions of the likelihood of a recession over the next year ticked back up.
A sharp decrease in the expectations measure accounted for the decline in confidence, which economists partially attributed to the looming government shutdown, with Congress so far failing to pass any spending bills to fund federal agency programs in the fiscal year starting on Oct. 1.
Hundreds of thousands of federal workers will be furloughed and a wide range of services, from economic data releases to nutrition benefits, suspended beginning on Sunday.
“Consumers also expressed concerns about the political situation and higher interest rates,” said Dana Peterson, chief economist at The Conference Board in Washington.
The cutoff date for the preliminary survey was Sept. 18. Millions of Americans will also start repaying their student loans in October and most have run down their pandemic savings.
The survey showed consumers increasingly concerned about their family finances.
The Federal Reserve last week left its benchmark overnight interest rate unchanged at the 5.25%-5.50% range. The U.S. central bank, however, stiffened its hawkish stance, projecting another rate hike by year end and monetary policy staying significantly tighter through 2024 than previously expected.
The Fed has hiked the policy rate by 525 basis points since March 2022.
Though consumers continued to fret over the higher cost of living, their inflation expectations over the next year remained stable and they showed no intentions of drastically pulling back on purchases of motor vehicles and other big-ticket items like television sets and refrigerators over the next six months.
Fewer, however, expected to buy a house, with the rate on the popular 30-year fixed-mortgage the highest in more than 22 years and home prices reaccelerating.
Consumers’ 12-month inflation expectations were unchanged at 5.7% for the third straight month.
Consumer spending remains underpinned by a tight labor market, which is keeping wage growth elevated.
The survey’s so-called labor market differential, derived from data on respondents’ views on whether jobs are plentiful or hard to get, widened to 27.3 this month compared to 26.7 in August. This measure correlates to the unemployment rate in the Labor Department’s closely followed employment report.
Stocks on Wall Street fell. The dollar rose against a basket of currencies. U.S. Treasury prices were lower.
HOUSE PRICES ACCELERATE
A separate from the Commerce Department showed new home sales plunged 8.7% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 675,000 units in August after racing to a 17-month high in July.
Economists had forecast new home sales, which account for a small share of U.S. home sales, falling to a rate of 700,000 units. New home sales are counted at the signing of a contract, making them a leading indicator of the housing market. They, however, can be volatile on a month-to-month basis. Sales increased 5.8% on a year-on-year basis in August.
Though new home sales remain supported by a dearth of previously owned homes on the market, the resurgence in mortgage rates is reducing affordability for prospective home buyers.
The rate on the 30-year fixed mortgage vaulted above 7% in August and climbed to an average of 7.19% last week, the highest since July 2001, according to data from mortgage finance agency Freddie Mac. Mortgage rates are rising in tandem with U.S. Treasury yields, which have surged on worries that soaring oil prices could hamper the Fed’s fight against inflation.
“While we expect higher rates to hurt new home sales, we think they will be more resilient than existing home sales as builders seem willing to scale up their use of incentives to motivate sales,” said Nancy Vanden Houten, lead U.S. economist at Oxford Economics in New York.
A third report from the Federal Housing Finance Agency showed annual home price growth quickened for a second straight month in July, largely reflecting the tight supply in the market for previously owned homes. House prices jumped 4.6% on a year-over-year basis in July after rising 3.2% in June. Prices shot up 0.8% month-on-month after advancing 0.4% in June.
The resurgence in house prices was seen feeding through to higher inflation, likely giving the Fed cover to maintain its hawkish posture for some time.
“The Fed will see the reacceleration of house prices as a reason to keep interest rates higher for longer,” said Bill Adams, chief economist at Comerica Bank in Dallas. “Renting households are seeing some relief in new lease prices, but since two thirds of Americans are homeowners, the Fed cannot afford to look past house prices’ influence on the cost of living.”
Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Additional reporting by Amina Niasse; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Andrea Ricci
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A sign outside the headquarters of JP Morgan Chase & Co in New York, September 19, 2013. REUTERS/Mike Segar/File Photo Acquire Licensing Rights
NEW YORK, Sept 26 (Reuters) – JPMorgan Chase (JPM.N) reorganized the leadership in its investment bank, promoting a new head in North America to succeed Fernando Rivas, who plans to retire, according to a memo seen by Reuters.
Rivas, who previously ran the financial institutions group, was one of JPMorgan’s lead negotiators in its purchase of failed First Republic Bank in May. He will be replaced by Jay Horine.
The bank also appointed several global heads for industry groups reporting to Jim Casey and Vis Raghavan, its co-heads of global investment banking, effective immediately.
Reporting by Nupur Anand in New York; Editing by Lananh Nguyen and David Gregorio
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Construction sites are photographed in Frankfurt, Germany, July 19, 2023. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach Acquire Licensing Rights
BERLIN, Sept 22 (Reuters) – German housing prices fell by the most since records began in the second quarter as high interest rates and rising materials costs took their toll on the property market in Europe’s largest economy, government data showed on Friday.
Residential property prices fell by 9.9% year-on-year, the steepest decline since the start of data collection in 2000, the federal statistics office said. Prices fell by 1.5% on the quarter, with steeper declines in larger cities than in more sparsely populated areas.
In cities such as Berlin, Hamburg and Munich, apartment prices fell by 9.8% and single and two-family house prices dropped by 12.6% on the year.
For a decade, low interest rates have fuelled a property boom in Europe’s largest real estate investment market. A sharp rise in rates and increasing construction costs have put an end to the run, tipping a string of developers into insolvency as deals froze and prices fell.
Building permits for apartments in Germany declined 31.5% in July from a year earlier, the statistics office disclosed on Monday, as construction prices rose by almost 9% on the year.
Germany aims to build 400,000 apartments a year, but has struggled to meet the goal.
German housing industry association GdW on Friday sounded the alarm over the situation calling for government support for construction companies.
“The construction crisis in Germany is getting worse day by day and is increasingly reaching the middle of society,” GdW, which represents around 3,000 housing companies nationwide, said in a statement.
GdW called for a cut in value added tax (VAT) to 7% from the current level of 19% for affordable rentals and government funding loans with a 1% interest rate to support companies.
The government is scheduled to hold a summit with the industry on Monday to discuss the situation.
GdW and the Haus&Grund owner’s association said they were boycotting the summit as they had too little influence on its agenda.
The German cabinet plans to present an aid package for the industry by the end of month after announcing plans to promote the construction sector, including reducing regulatory and bureaucratic requirements.
Reporting by Riham Alkousaa and Klaus Lauer, editing by Kirsti Knolle and Sharon Singleton
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Vehicles drive among the buildings during the evening rush hour in Beijing’s central business area, China November 21, 2018. REUTERS/Jason Lee/File Photo Acquire Licensing Rights
BEIJING, Sept 20 (Reuters) – China should step up policy support for the economy while promoting reforms to help achieve the annual growth target of around 5%, Yi Gang, former governor of the People’s Bank of China (PBOC), said in remarks published on Wednesday.
China’s factory output and retail sales grew at a faster pace in August, but tumbling property investment threatens to undercut a flurry of support steps that are showing signs of stabilising parts of the wobbly economy.
“We should appropriately increase macroeconomic policy adjustments, effectively support the expansion of domestic demand and promote a virtuous economic cycle,” state media quoted Yi, deputy head of the economic committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), as saying.
That will help China achieve the 2023 growth target of around 5%, Yi said.
The government should move to boost the weak confidence of private firms and tackle local government debt risks that have hampered local authorities’ ability to support growth, Yi said.
“In the long term, affected by factors such as the slowdown in urbanisation and the population aging, the overall demand for home purchases may fall to a new level,” Yi said.
The central bank should use its structural policy tools to support “rigid and improved housing demand”, he said.
Yi also called for reforms of China’s system on residence permits, or “hukou”, and improve social welfare for millions of migrant workers who had entered cities, which will help boost consumption.
Reporting by Kevin Yao; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama
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STOCKHOLM, Sept 15 (Reuters) – For months, Sweden’s government has sought to play down a property crisis that has throttled confidence in the Nordic state, repeating a simple message: While some companies are in trouble, the country is not.
Now Heimstaden Bostad, a $30 billion property investor with swathes of homes from Stockholm to Berlin, is grappling with a multibillion dollar funding crunch, which has rebounded on one of its owners – the country’s biggest pension fund.
That undoubtedly raises the stakes for Sweden, the European nation hardest hit by a global property rout triggered by the steep rise in interest rates last year that abruptly ended a decade of virtually free money.
Sweden is one of Europe’s wealthiest states and the biggest Nordic economy, but it has an Achilles Heel – a property market where banks have lent more than 4 trillion Swedish crowns ($360 billion) to homeowners. Weighed down by these home loans, Swedes are twice as heavily indebted as Germans or Italians.
Earlier this year, the International Monetary Fund flagged Sweden’s historically high household borrowing coupled with debt-driven commercial property firms and their dependence on local banks as a financial stability risk.
The property crisis accelerated this month when pension fund Alecta, which owns a 38% stake in Heimstaden Bostad, said Sweden’s biggest residential landlord needed cash and it may contribute.
Swedbank estimates the current shortfall for Heimstaden Bostad could be roughly 30 billion crowns ($2.7 billion).
Sweden’s financial regulator launched an inquiry into why and how Alecta had invested $4.5 billion in the property giant, in the first place. Its troubled investment accounts for 4% of its funds.
Christian Dreyer, a spokesperson for Heimstaden, said it had made “good progress covering 2024 bond repayments”, and was “not reliant on immediate capital injection for meeting our obligations”.
But he also signaled that the company was open to other support.
GOVT GETS READY
As the property crisis widens, Sweden’s government is readying for action while crossing its fingers that it will not be needed.
Earlier this year, Karolina Ekholm, Director General of Sweden’s Debt Office, said the government had a light debt load and could afford to borrow more to intervene, addressing the possibility of giving credit guarantees or subsidised loans.
One person familiar with government thinking said that while the state was willing to help in principle, it was conscious of the potential political backlash of supporting companies which had taken big risks.
Heimstaden’s Dreyer said it was examining a “potential recapitalisation from existing shareholders” and was confident it could “mitigate financial risk” in part through bank financing but expressed openness to other forms of support.
“While we’re not dependent on external support, we could consider suitable governmental programs if available,” Dreyer said.
In public, the government has sought to play down the crisis.
“There are potential problems that we must keep close eyes on,” Financial Markets Minister Niklas Wykman told Reuters, shortly before Heimstaden Bostad’s problems became public. “We know that rain and snow is coming. But we have shelters.”
“The government is ready to act to secure financial stability if there should be any threats or turmoil,” he said, cautioning that the problems of individual firms did not mean the wider sector was in trouble.
Sweden is among the first European countries to find itself struggling as interest rates climb because much of its property debt is short-term, making it a harbinger for the wider region, where the rising cost of money has also rocked Germany.
Roughly half of Swedish homeowners have floating-rate mortgages, meaning rate hikes quickly trigger higher bills for them.
Its developers, meanwhile, often relied on shorter-term loans or bonds that have to be replaced with pricier credit.
Heimstaden Bostad and other companies such as struggling SBB (SBBb.ST) grew quickly, in part by selling cheap short-term Eurobonds, which has since become tougher.
“We’ve seen a crazy housing boom. We’re not seeing a bust – yet,” said David Perez, a Sweden Democrat lawmaker. “If interest rates continue to rise and it’s coupled with unemployment, that’s what we are afraid of.”
With interest rates still climbing, analysts such as Marcus Gustavsson of Danske Bank, believe the worst is not yet over.
He reckons that Swedish residential property prices have fallen by roughly 10% and that the property market may only be half way through the rout.
“Until recently Swedes were bidding up the price of homes with funny money,” said Andreas Cervenka, author of “Greedy Sweden”, a book examining inequality driven partly by the housing boom.
“With rising interest rates, that funny money has turned into real money and it is painful.”
($1 = 11.1242 Swedish crowns)
Additional reporting by Simon Johnson and Johan Ahlander in Stockholm, Greta Rosen Fondahn in Gdansk, Chiara Elisei in London; Writing by John O’Donnell; Editing by Hugh Lawson
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Paramilitary police officers stand guard in front of the headquarters of the People’s Bank of China, the central bank (PBOC), in Beijing, China September 30, 2022. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang/File Photo Acquire Licensing Rights
Sept 15 (Reuters) – A look at the day ahead in Asian markets from Jamie McGeever, financial markets columnist.
Asian markets are set to end the week strongly following risk-friendly moves in the U.S. and Europe on Thursday, although a deluge of top-tier economic data from China on Friday could sour the mood at a stroke.
The latest indicators from the region’s largest economy to be released include house prices, fixed asset investment, retail sales, industrial production and unemployment, all for August.
The annual pace of retail sales and industrial production growth is expected to pick up, but fixed asset investment growth is predicted to slow to a new low of 3.3% going back to the 1990s, if pandemic-related distortions in early 2020 are excluded.
The People’s Bank of China insists it will take “appropriate” steps to support the economy, although a growing number of economists are skeptical Beijing will meet its 5% GDP growth target this year and many are cutting their 2024 outlooks.
The PROC on Thursday announced its second 25-basis point cut to banks’ reserve requirement ratio this year. Unsurprisingly, the move stopped the yuan’s recent mini-revival in its tracks, and pressure on the currency on Friday will probably be to the downside again.
China’s deteriorating trade relations with the West, meanwhile, is a darkening cloud that shows no sign of lifting.
Beijing has hit back at a European Commission probe into China’s electric vehicle subsidies as protectionist, warning it would damage economic relations, and analysts have warned that if the probe results in punitive tariffs, Beijing will take retaliatory action.
However, all that could be parked for another day if investors decide to run with Thursday’s bullish momentum.
It was a case of ‘good news is good news’ for Wall Street as investors welcomed hot U.S. retail sales and accelerating producer prices as a sign of economic resilience rather than fret about the hawkish rate implications.
Coupled with falling euro zone bond yields and implied rates after the European Central Bank’s ‘dovish hike’ – perhaps the central bank’s last in the cycle – risk assets got a shot in the arm, paving the way for a positive open in Asia on Friday.
The big three U.S. indexes rose between 0.8% and 1.0%, European stocks had their best day in six months and the MSCI Asia ex-Japan Index had its best day in 10 days on Thursday. The rise in oil to new 2023 highs and another dollar surge failed to dampen investors’ mood.
Another positive portent for Asian markets on Friday: the VIX gauge of implied S&P 500 equity volatility – Wall Street’s so-called ‘fear index’ – registered its lowest close on Thursday since before the pandemic.
Here are key developments that could provide more direction to markets on Friday:
– China ‘data dump’ (August)
– Indonesia trade (August)
– New Zealand manufacturing PMI (August)
By Jamie McGeever; Editing by Josie Kao
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.

The company logo of construction company Redrow is pictured on a flag at a new housing development near Manchester northern England, April 7, 2016. REUTERS/Phil Noble/File Photo Acquire Licensing Rights
Sept 13 (Reuters) – Redrow (RDW.L) on Wednesday said it expected its profit to more than halve in fiscal 2024, after the British homebuilder posted a 4% decline in annual earnings that was ahead of estimates as the country’s housing sector battles a pronounced slowdown.
The latest warning from a British housebuilder comes as concerns about Britain’s economy and rising interest rates, which have pushed up mortgage borrowing and dampened buyer demand, have dented housebuilders’ profits and build targets.
Recent measures of Britain’s property market have shown house prices falling at the fastest pace since 2009, and a decline in mortgage loan demand.
Data from the Bank of England, which has raised interest rates 14 times since December 2021 in an effort to tame inflation, showed the value of residential mortgages in arrears jumped to the highest level in seven years in the three months to June.
“Whilst the market did partially recover in spring 2023, the further rise in mortgage rates combined with the cost of living crisis means the market remained subdued,” Chairman Richard Akers said in a statement.
Shares in the company slipped 1.7% in early trade.
“Redrow’s FY23 results provide a reassuring statement. The skew in completions and margins for the start of calendar of 2024 implies we may need to wait for the ‘turn’ in earnings reported, but perhaps that we are nearer the turn in expectation,” analysts at Jefferies wrote in a note.
The FTSE 250 firm forecast profit before tax in the range of 180 million pounds to 200 million pounds ($224.2 million to $249.1 million) for fiscal 2024.
The Wales-based builder, which constructs bigger houses than rival housebuilders and sells them to second or third-time movers, posted underlying profit before tax of 395 million pounds for the full-year ended July 2, compared with company-compiled analysts’ consensus estimates of 367 million pounds.
($1 = 0.8028 pounds)
Reporting by Aby Jose Koilparambil in Bengaluru and Suban Abdulla in London; Editing by Rashmi Aich and Christina Fincher
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LONDON, Sept 13 (Reuters Breakingviews) – Where is Wen Jiabao when you need him? China’s former premier is remembered for his decision to unleash a huge state spending plan after the 2008 financial crisis. Today’s leaders wish they could deploy similar fiscal firepower to kickstart their sputtering economy. The options before President Xi Jinping aren’t great. Yet letting some heavily indebted local governments’ investment arms fail would be better than keeping them on pricey life support or counting on an elusive rebound in consumption.
Wen exited the political stage a decade ago but his legacy lives on, for better and, mostly, for worse. His plan to throw 4 trillion yuan ($555 billion), or about 13% of China’s GDP in 2008, at everything from railroads to airports contributed to a debt overhang that’s still haunting Beijing today. In the 15 years since, China’s debt-to-GDP ratio has doubled to a whopping 280%, with the bulk of liabilities held by local government financial vehicles (LGFVs).
Most of these 3,000-plus entities were created by local governments during the 2008 crisis to skirt a central government ban on direct state borrowing. They were then contracted by regional governments to build public infrastructure, from uneconomical leisure parks and roads to slightly more cost-effective highways, subway stations and high-speed bullet trains. Many also developed land for regional governments before it was sold on to residential developers. Today those vehicles are a ticking time bomb that hampers China’s ability to spend its way out of the current economic doldrums. Economists are busy downgrading the country’s full-year growth to below the official goal of around 5%, which was already seen as modest, because an initial recovery following December’s pandemic reopening quickly faded. China is flirting with deflation as the property sector – which accounts for a quarter of GDP – has sunk and pandemic-scarred consumers and businesses hesitate to spend.
Xi’s dilemmas are compounded by his belief that the traditional stimulus playbook of boosting real estate has run its course. He has frowned at house prices that made Shanghai less affordable than New York and made an example of over-leveraged developers that disrupted the market, such as China Evergrande (3333.HK), which is struggling to restructure some $300 billion in liabilities. He has eased home purchase curbs recently to stabilise property sales, but they are still on course to decline around 10% this year, per Gavekal Dragonomics.
That leaves much of the heavy lifting to fiscal spending. Yet LGFVs’ debt stands in the way. These vehicles had already accumulated 80 trillion yuan of liabilities at the end of 2022, according to analysts at Guosheng Securities. Of that, 54 trillion yuan was interest-bearing, mostly owed to Chinese banks.
The bulk of these debts are separated from local governments’ balance sheets, but Beijing’s decade-long efforts to sever the implicit guarantee between local governments and their LGFVs have been largely unsuccessful. A third of LGFVs didn’t generate positive cash flow last year, according to Guosheng. And 60% of them, holding about 32 trillion yuan of outstanding debt, would struggle to pay interest with their own EBITDA, Citi analysts estimated. Yet local officials remain reluctant to let them default on public markets, for fear that such a shock would shut their regions’ funding access and even trigger a run on government bonds.
Beijing wants to buy time. Its latest move includes a mooted plan to allow local governments to raise 1 trillion yuan in total through bond sales to repay LGFV debt. The Ministry of Finance may also ask banks to extend loans and slash the interest. Zunyi Road and Bridge Construction, a LGFV in China’s Southwestern Guizhou province, set a precedent earlier this year, as its creditor banks agreed to roll over its loans for 20 years and halved interest on them. Xi could also help by letting local governments shuffle their debt into the state’s balance sheet since the central government has a debt-to-GDP ratio of just 20%.
The problem with these measures is that they wouldn’t reduce LGFVs’ pile of debt. A harsher medicine is needed. The shock therapy option for Beijing is to force a fire sale to raise much-needed cash. LGFVs have 133 trillion yuan in total assets, around 60% of which are in land and physical assets such as industrial parks, transport infrastructure and investment properties, according to Guosheng.
Local officials have pushed back at Beijing’s requests to sell, arguing most of these assets are illiquid, according to the Financial Times. But even if the portfolio of land and fixed assets was put up for sale at a massive 80% discount to entice vulture and bad debt investors, that would raise around 16 trillion yuan, enabling the LGFVs to pay back all their outstanding bonds. At a more optimistic 30% discount, the proceeds would jump to 55 trillion yuan, which would cover all outstanding interest-bearing debt.
Even with asset sales, it’s inevitable that some LGFVs, especially in poorer regions, will have to fail. Beijing fears that would break the banks. S&P analysts calculate that about 20 trillion yuan of LGFVs’ loans may be at risk of restructuring. Letting these loans roll over with interest slashed – as in Zunyi’s case – would result in a 5 trillion yuan hit to bank capital, and reduce banks’ average capital adequacy ratio by 2.6 percentage points to 12.6%; that’s still within regulatory requirements.
The stakes are high. Despite Xi’s distaste for propping up the economy through real estate, the danger is that a fire sale of LGFVs’ assets could spark a widespread fall in the value of collateral for bank loans and cause a deeper crisis of confidence. That, in turn, might deal a considerable blow to lenders’ balance sheets and destabilise the financial system.
That said, the banking sector is sitting on 335 trillion yuan of total assets, and bad loans, impairments and provisions will only be an issue once lenders come clean on them. So far, they are not. As of June 2023, Chinese commercial banks claimed that non-performing loans were just 1.6% of all loans. Investors have already priced in more damage and pushed the average valuation of those listed to less than half of book value.
The makeup of China’s growth makes drastic action on LGFVs even more imperative. Unlike in the United States and other Western countries, China’s growth is still driven by investment rather than consumption. Investment as a share of GDP is a lofty 40%, according to Oxford Economics, double that of the United States.
Chinese households have ample savings, having accumulated 17.8 trillion yuan of bank deposits last year alone. But darkening job prospects, a diminishing wealth effect from real estate, and scars from years of pandemic lockdowns have made them extremely reluctant to spend them.
If Xi won’t boost property wholeheartedly and is not able to count on consumers, his efforts to revive China’s growth have to focus on smashing the great wall of local debt.
Follow @ywchen1 on X
CONTEXT NEWS
Global rating agency Moody’s on Sept. 1 revised down its 2024 GDP forecast for China to 4% from 4.5%. It maintained that China’s economy will grow at the rate of 5%, the official government target, in 2023.
China’s monthly economic update for August, including that on industrial output, fixed asset investment, property investment, retail sales and others, will be released on Sept. 15.
Editing by Peter Thal Larsen, Sharon Lam and Aditya Sriwatsav
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.

A view of semi-detached homes in Tilbury, southeast England, May 12, 2014. REUTERS/Suzanne Plunkett/File Photo Acquire Licensing Rights
Sept 11 (Reuters) – British homebuilder Vistry (VTYV.L) said on Monday it will shift its entire focus onto its affordable homes business as a slowdown in the country’s broader housing sector intensifies.
Shares in the builder rose about 11% to a more than one-year high of 893 pence in early trade.
British housebuilders are increasingly feeling the pinch from the Bank of England’s 14 consecutive interest rate hikes, which have hit profit margins and demand as buyers cope with elevated mortgage costs and affordability concerns.
Industry gauges, from mortgage approvals to house prices, have fallen in recent months. Mortgage lender Halifax last week reported a 4.6% annual drop in house prices, the fastest pace since 2009.
Vistry has been working with local government authorities and housing associations to build affordable homes and this Partnerships division has outperformed its Housebuilding unit, which operates on similar lines to rival builders.
“The scale of the social need for affordable mixed tenure housing across the country continues to increase and it is clear that Vistry is uniquely positioned as the leader in partnerships housing,” CEO Greg Fitzgerald said in a statement.
The FTSE 250 (.FTMC) firm said it would merge its Partnerships business with the Housebuilding operations by the end of the 2023 fiscal year to focus on this “high-return, capital-light, resilient” affordable-housing model.
“The shift in strategy removes any doubt about Vistry’s mixed model. It focuses the group on a less volatile part of the
housing market where need is very high,” Peel Hunt analysts wrote.
Vistry had bolstered its Partnerships business with its 1.25 billion pounds ($1.56 billion) acquisition of rival Countryside last September.
The company said it would aim to return 1 billion pounds to shareholders over the next three years and intended to launch an initial share buyback programme worth up to 55 million pounds in November.
Vistry, one of the biggest British housebuilders in terms of the number of homes built each year, reported a drop of more than 8% in adjusted pretax profit to 174 million pounds for the six months ended June 30. It reiterated its forecast for annual pretax profit to exceed 450 million pounds.
($1 = 0.7994 pounds)
Reporting by Aby Jose Koilparambil in Bengaluru and Suban Abdulla in London; Editing by Rashmi Aich and Louise Heavens
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A man looks at houses for sale in the window of an estate agents in Manchester, Britain, June 22, 2023. REUTERS/Phil Noble Acquire Licensing Rights
LONDON, Sept 7 (Reuters) – British house prices have fallen at the fastest pace since 2009 over the past year, reflecting the increasing impact of higher interest rates, mortgage lender Halifax said on Thursday.
Halifax said house prices were 4.6% lower last month than in August 2022, when they were close to their peak. This compared with a 2.5% annual fall in July and a median 3.45% decline forecast in a Reuters poll.
Prices fell 1.9% in August alone, the biggest monthly fall since November 2022, and also more than the 0.3% poll forecast.
“House prices have proven more resilient than expected so far this year…. However, there is always a lag-effect where rate increases are concerned, and we may now be seeing a greater impact from higher mortgage costs,” said Kim Kinnaird, director at Halifax Mortgages, part of Lloyds Banking Group (LLOY.L).
The Bank of England has raised interest rates 14 times since December 2021, taking rates to 5.25% in August. Governor Andrew Bailey said on Wednesday that rates were now “much nearer” their peak than before, although financial markets still expect a further increase to 5.5% this month and another rise after.
Rival mortgage lender Nationwide reported last week that house prices in August were 5.3% lower than a year earlier.
Official data showed house prices rose 27% between February 2020 and their peak in September 2022, reflecting increased demand for living space during the COVID-19 pandemic, temporary tax breaks and low interest rates over much of that period.
The average property price had now fallen back to levels similar to early 2022 at 279,569 pounds ($349,601), Halifax said, down 14,000 pounds from the peak last year but still around 40,000 pounds higher than before the pandemic.
A Reuters poll of housing market analysts last week showed they expected prices this year to fall 4% and to be unchanged in 2024 before rising 3.3% in 2025.
Imogen Pattison, assistant economist at Capital Economics, said the bigger-than-expected fall in Halifax house prices supported the consultancy’s forecast that house prices would drop a total of 10.5% by mid 2024.
“High mortgage rates will mean demand remains very weak while previously tight supply of second-hand homes on the market is easing,” she said.
($1 = 0.7997 pounds)
Reporting by David Milliken, Editing by Paul Sandle and Emelia Sithole-Matarise
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