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Corporate Identity

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Percentage of LCHO purchasers who are first time buyers 2004/5 ... Up to half of first time buyers are now receiving help with their deposit from parents. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Corporate Identity


1
Who are Low Cost Home Ownership (LCHO) purchasers
and what is the demand for LCHO? Analytical
Services Directorate
2
Structure of Slide Pack
  • The purpose of this slide pack is to present a
    selection of the data gathered and analysis
    carried out as part of the work for the Shared
    Equity Task Force
  • The presentation is split into two sections
  • Section I Characteristics of Low Cost Home
    Owners and
  • (slides 3 to 15)
  • Section II Potential Demand for Low Cost Home
    Ownership.
  • (slides 16 to 24)

3
I Characteristics of current LCHO purchasers
  • Including
  • Household type
  • Age Distribution
  • Regional Distribution
  • Previous Tenure
  • Income
  • Average Size of deposit
  • Value of purchase
  • Arrears and repossessions

4
Household type of LCHO purchasers
Household type of LCHO purchasers by type of
scheme, 2004/5
  • Over 65 of LCHO purchasers are working age
    without children.
  • Overall about 20 of LCHO purchaser are working
    age people with children.
  • The remainder are elderly
  • Families are most likely to access the HomeBuy
    scheme where 35 of purchasers have children.

Key RTB Right to Buy, RTA Right to Acquire
PRTB Preserved Right to Buy SHI Starter Home
Initiative SourceCORE (Continuous Recording)
sales 2004/5 Note that the data refers to LCHO
schemes prior to the inclusion of shared
ownership in the Homebuy scheme.
5
The age of LCHO purchasers
LCHO purchasers age of householder 2004/5
  • 60 of Starter Home Initiative (SHI) purchasers
    and nearly 50 of Homebuy and Shared Ownership
    purchasers are aged between 25 and 34.
  • Right to Buy (RTB) purchasers are more likely to
    be in their late 30s to 50s.

Source CORE Sales 2004/5
6
The location of LCHO purchases
Distribution by region of all LCHO purchases
2004/5
  • Nearly 60 of all LCHO purchases in England in
    2004/05 took place in three regions (London, the
    South East and the North West).
  • Most LCHO purchases in the North West, North East
    and West Midlands are RTB or equivalent.
  • Most LCHO purchases in London and the South East
    are Shared Ownership or Key Worker schemes.

SourceCORE Sales data 2004/5
7
Where are LCHO purchasers coming from?
Previous tenure of LCHO purchasers 2004/5
Percentage of LCHO purchasers who are first time
buyers 2004/5
  • Around 15 of purchasers accessing Homebuy or
    Shared Ownership are using the assistance to
    trade up rather than buy their first home.
  • Most LCHO purchasers are either private tenants
    or living with family or friends before buying a
    home.
  • - Those accessing shared ownership are more
    likely to have been living with family or friends
    (40)
  • - The SHI is more concentrated amongst private
    tennats
  • - HomeBuy is concentrated on renters, with a
    much higher proportion from the social sector
    than the other schemes

SourceCORE Sales data 2004/5
8
The value of LCHO purchases
  • Unsurprisingly, the purchase price for RTB
    tenants is lower than for other LCHO schemes.
  • The value of Shared Ownership, SHI and Homebuy
    purchases reflect prices in London and the South
    East where the schemes are concentrated.
  • Shared ownership purchasers buy the most
    expensive properties amongst LCHO participants.
  • Purchase prices are fairly consistent across age
    bands, but typically the median is lower in the
    first and last two age bands

All ages Shared Ownership 152,500 RTB, RTA,
PRTB 58,000 HomeBuy 142,500 SHI
145,000. FTBs London 180,000 FTBs South
East 150,000 FTBs England 125,000. Source
CORE Sales data 2004/5 and Survey of Mortgage
Lenders 2004/5
9
How much deposit do LCHO purchasers have?
  • Nearly 40 of all LCHO purchasers have no deposit
    and a further 27 have a deposit of less than
    5,000.
  • Right to Buy purchasers (which are not shown in
    the chart) are most likely to have no deposit
    (91), followed by Homebuy and SHI purchasers
    (51), compared to only 33 of shared ownership
    purchasers.
  • The median deposit in 2005 of all first time
    buyers who did not have family financial
    assistance is 7,000 among the under 30s, rising
    to 27,000 among the over 30s (Source J Tatch
    (2006) Will the real first time buyer, please
    stand up CML Housing Finance, 03/2006).
  • The median deposit for shared ownership
    purchasers in 2004/5 was 2,700 and for other
    schemes was 0 because of the high proportion
    with no deposit.

Source CORE Sales data 2004/5 (excl. RTB, RTA,
PRTB, RTM and other sales)
10
Incomes of LCHO households by age group
Median gross income of household and partner,
LCHO scheme purchasers and other tenures 2004/5
  • Between the ages of 30 and 39, Homebuy purchasers
    have incomes closest (at 85 of) to all owners
    buying with a mortgage.
  • Right to Buy and equivalent scheme purchasers
    have the lowest incomes of all LCHO purchasers
    and the gap between this group and all home
    owners widens with age.

11
LCHO subsidies and borrowing terms
Characteristics of LCHO participants average
values for 2004/05
  • Source NAO report (2006 unpublished)
  • By way of comparison, the average purchase of a
    normal first-time buyer was 125,000 (2005),
    their average deposit was 33,000 (2005) and the
    average initial mortgage rate was 4.99 (2004).
  • Average purchase will be much higher in
    high-demand areas where the majority of the those
    helped through LCHO will be purchasing (as such,
    the FTB comparison ought to be weighted to
    reflect the regional distribution of LCHO sales
    in these regions to make the comparison fairer).
  • Source Smith J et al (2005) Understanding First
    Time Buyers, Council of Mortgage Lenders

12
Arrears and repossessions of LCHO purchasers
Over 80 of LCHO purchasers are first time buyers
(Slide 7), most do not have a deposit (Slide 9)
and median incomes are lower than borrowers as a
whole (Slide 10). Arrears In 2001, a survey
of LCHO purchasers found that 10 had been in any
arrears with their mortgage payments in the last
year1. Repossessions There is a lack of data on
LCHO repossessions. In 2001/2 repossessions of
shared ownership stock was estimated to be
0.77pa, compared to 0.21 among all mortgaged
properties1.
Sources 1. Bramley G et al (2002) Evaluation of
the Low Cost Home Ownership Programme ODPM
13
Who can buy from the Private Rented Sector (PRS)?
The incomes of households moving from private
rented accommodation to owner occupation compared
to those who moved but stayed in the private
rented sector.
  • Not surprisingly, people moving out of private
    renting into owner occupation have much higher
    incomes than those who remain in the PRS.
  • Over 60 of new owner occupiers who were
    previously private renters had incomes over
    30,000 compared to 31 of those moving within
    the PRS.
  • These figures refer to typical, or average,
    households at a national level. The figures will
    vary between regions.
  • The figures refer to non-LCHO purchases.

Owner occupiers and private renters who had moved
into their current accommodation in the last two
years and were previously private renters.
Source Survey of English Housing (SEH), 2004/5
14
Who will buy in the future?
  • Ability to buy
  • Slower growth in young adult incomes in the 1990s
    relative to average incomes has driven a
    reduction in home ownership among under 30s.
  • Delays in entry to the labour market whilst in
    higher education and student debt are slowing
    down graduate progression to home ownership.
    With a rising income trajectory, a high flying
    graduate couple will have both the income and
    sufficient deposit be able to buy by age 31,
    lower income graduates by mid 30s.
  • Non graduate couples have been estimated to be
    able to save for a deposit by age 28 but due to
    slow earnings growth are either much delayed or
    never able to have sufficient income for a large
    enough mortgage.
  • Single person households, especially
    non-graduates are most constrained by both
    earnings and lack of deposit.
  • Up to half of first time buyers are now receiving
    help with their deposit from parents. Providing
    a deposit can reduce time spent saving by between
    6 and 10 years.
  • Sources
  • Andrew M (2006) Housing tenure choices by the
    young CML Housing Finance 07/2006
  • Tatch J (2006) Will the real first time buyer
    please stand up? CML Housing Finance 03/2006

15
Who will buy in the future?
  • Choice (not) to buy
  • Unlike other age groups, enthusiasm for home
    ownership among under 25s has not recovered since
    the early 1990s recession. Whilst in 1989, 64
    thought it was sensible for couples to buy as
    early as possible, this was down to 44 in 20041
  • Young people are showing historically low levels
    of interest in saving towards a deposit,
    expecting either to rely on parents or a 100
    mortgage.
  • Attitudes to renting among people in their
    twenties are increasingly positive, valued for
    its mobility, flexibility and location in popular
    areas2.
  • Young people still see marriage and having
    children as the most important triggers for
    buying a home. The mean age at first marriage
    (31 for men, nearly 29 for women) and a woman
    having her first child (27.5) continue to rise
    and the proportion of people remaining single
    longer is increasing all driving the age of house
    purchase up3.
  • Sources
  • 1 British Social Attitudes The 22nd Report,
    National Centre for Social Research, 2005
  • 2 Smith J et al (2005) Understanding First Time
    Buyers, CML
  • Marriage, divorce and adoption statistics, Series
    FM2 no.31, Office for National Statistics, 2006
    Birth Statistics 2004, Series FM1, No 33, Office
    for National Statistics, 2006.

16
II Potential demand for LCHO
  • Including
  • The stock of potential demand
  • The flow of potential demand

NB the analysis presented in this section is
based on the sample of social and private tenants
for whom we have income data in the Survey of
English Housing. The analysis is based on a
comparison of regional (or super-regional)
lower-quartile house prices and incomes. It does
not make any assumptions about debt levels or
deposits.
17
The Stock of Potential Demand
Income Distribution of Private and Social Renters
  • There are around 6 million households in the
    rented sector (2.2m in the PRS and 3.8m in the
    SRS)
  • Not all of these households will want to access
    homeownership, and some will be able to access it
    unassisted

of renters (PRS SRS) able to afford
homeownership unassisted by super-region
  • The ability to afford homeownership will depend
    on the relatively size of household income and
    local house prices
  • Using lower-quartile super-regional house
    prices, assuming no deposit or other assistance,
    and a mortgage multiplier of 3.5 around 12 of
    renters overall could afford to buy unassisted
    (6 in the SRS and 22 in the PRS)
  • This is equivalent to approximately 450,000
    private renters and 216,000 social renters.

Source Communities and Local Government internal
analysis, based on SEH data (2004).
18
Affordability Private renters (un)able to afford
homeownership in 2004 by age
Percentage of households in the PRS able to
afford homeownership in 2004 by age category
(England)
  • The distribution of households able to afford
    (without LCHO) by age shows that
  • 81 of those aged 16-29 in the PRS are unable to
    afford many are likely to be saving and will
    expect higher incomes in the future
  • For 30-44 year olds, 71 are unable to afford.
    It is likely that more are able to afford due
    higher incomes

Of those unable to afford in the PRS in 2004,
household percentages by age category
  • Of those unable to afford in the PRS in 2004, in
    the North only 25 are in the 30-44 year old
    category compared with 35 in the South (excl.
    London).

Source Survey of English Housing (SEH),
Communities and Local Government
19
Stock of Demand and Equity Loans
  • With an equity loan of 25, an additional 7 of
    private renters (150,000) and 3 of social
    tenants (118,000) could afford homeownership
  • With an equity loan of 75, an additional 24 -
    on top of the 29 that could afford with a 25
    loan of private renters(478,000) could afford
    an additional 17 - on top of the 9 that could
    afford with a 25 loan of social tenants
    (590,000).
  • Even with a 75 loan, around 73 of social
    tenants and 47 of private tenants would be
    unable to afford to homeownership.
  • We can look at how the affordability position
    changes with the introduction of equity loans of
    differing sizes
  • Those that can afford with an equity loan but
    who could not afford otherwise might be regarded
    as constituting the potential demand for LCHO
    assistance.
  • We model for two size of equity loan 25 and
    75 on the same basis as in the previous slide
    with a charge on the unowned equity of 2.75 from
    the outset

Number and of private/social tenants who could
afford homeownership with 25 and 75 loans
20
Targeting PRS tenants into Home Ownership
  • The previous slides show that 22 (or 450,000)
    of PRS households can afford home ownership
    unassisted
  • In addition other PRS tenants could access
    homeownership with, for example, a 25 equity
    loan this would lead to an extra150,000 who
    could afford to access homeownership.
  • The additional 150,000 PRS tenants potentially
    helped into home ownership would fall into the
    income bands as illustrated in the chart. This
    comprises tenants in the 26,000 31,200 (48)
    and 31,200 - 36,400 (52) income bands
  • The 450,000 already able to afford home
    ownership, are in the highest income bands. With
    the additional 150,000, all in the 31,200
    36,400 band can now afford and 44 in the 26,000
    31,200 band can now afford
  • In total, there would be 600,000 (29) of
    tenants in the PRS able to afford home ownership

NB this modelling is necessarily a
simplification of reality and therefore abstracts
away from household characteristics, such as
having children, that may mean that some within
the above income bands would not be able to
afford homeownership whilst some on lower incomes
could.
21
Flow of Potential Demand
  • There were around 360,000 newly forming
    households in 2004. 29 are already home owners

Income Distribution of Newly Forming Private and
Social Renters
of newly-formed renters able to afford
homeownership unassisted
  • The ability to afford homeownership will depend
    on the relatively size of household income and
    local house prices
  • Using lower-quartile super-regional house
    prices, assuming no deposit or other assistance,
    and a mortgage multiplier of 3.5 around 9 of
    newly-formed households who are renters could
    afford to buy unassisted (3 in the SRS and 11
    in the PRS)
  • This is equivalent to approximately 20,000 new
    private renters and 2,000 new social renters.

Source Communities and Local Government internal
analysis, based on SEH data (2004). NB the top
two charts are based on actual data, the results
in the bottom chart are modelling based
22
Flow of Potential Demand and Equity Loans
  • With an equity loan of 75, an additional 19 -
    on top of the 19 that could afford with a 25
    loan of new private renters (34,000) could
    afford an additional 14 - on top of the 4 that
    could afford with a 25 loan of new social
    tenants (11,000).
  • Even with a 75 loan, around 82 of new social
    tenants and 62 of new private tenants would be
    unable to afford to homeownership.
  • Again we can look at how this position changes
    with the introduction of equity loans of 25 and
    75.
  • With an equity loan of 25, an additional 8 of
    new private renters (14,000) and 1 of new social
    tenants (1,000) could afford homeownership

Number and of newly-forming renting households
(private/social) who could afford homeownership
with 25 and 75 loans in 2004
23
Estimates of demand for LCHO
  • External Estimates
  • Low Cost Home Ownership Taskforce
  • Based on work by Glen Bramley the Taskforce
    estimated that in 2001 there were around 120,000
    households whose incomes would not enable them to
    purchase in the open market
  • The Taskforce estimated that the need for LCHO
    assistance from newly forming households was
    20-22,000 per year.
  • With an LCHO product offering an equity loan of
    25, Bramley estimated that each 1 point extra
    affordability gain (in terms of the equity loan
    offered) would increase potential demand/need for
    LCHO assistance among under-35 households in
    England by 0.52 points Source Bramley, (2004),
    The Potential Market for Equity Loans in the UK
    see www.cml.org.uk
  • Steve Wilcox
  • Steve Wilcox identified a narrow intermediate
    housing market in England (defined as the
    proportion of younger working households that
    can afford to pay a social rent without recourse
    to housing benefit, but cannot purchase at lowest
    decile house prices for two and three bedroom
    dwellings) of 25.9 in 2005.
  • He also identified a broader intermediate
    housing market in England (defined as the
    proportion of younger working households that
    cannot purchase at lower quartile house prices
    for two and three bedroom dwellings) of 45.4 in
    2005. Source Wilcox, (2006), The Geography of
    Affordable and Unaffordable Housing

A younger working households is defined as
having a household representative aged 20-39
24
Summary
  • Almost as many LCHO purchasers are living with
    family or friends as renting in the private or
    social sector. They are part of the demand for
    housing coming from newly forming households.
  • The average incomes of current LCHO purchasers
    are lower than home owners as a whole, Homebuy
    purchasers have closest to typical first time
    buyer incomes whilst social tenants have the
    lowest and flattest incomes over the life course.
  • The key barrier to home ownership is consistently
    found to be the lack of a deposit nearly half
    of LCHO purchasers have no deposit at all.
  • Of those in the PRS, 22 (450,000) could afford
    ownership and a further 7 (150,000) could afford
    with assistance from the Open Market Homebuy with
    a potential further demand of 33,000 newly
    forming households pa.
  • Young people are showing historically low levels
    of interest in saving for a deposit and expect to
    buy later in life when their incomes are
    sufficient and they no longer require the
    flexibility of renting.
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