Has The Rally In House Builder Shares Run Its Course?

 | Dec 10, 2014 10:15

Over the course of the last twelve months the UK construction sector has been the most buoyant section of the UK economy posting 12 successive monthly PMI readings above 60, though as we head into 2015 there are some signs that we are seeing a bit of a slowdown, and investors should keep a wary eye on the Bank of England in the event they shift position next year on a rise in interest rates, given MPC policymaker Ian McCafferty’s comments this morning.

As it is we've seen mortgage approvals start to decline from their peaks at the beginning of 2014 when we saw monthly borrowing come in at 72k a month, to levels just below 60k in November and their lowest levels since July 2013.

When looking at the most recent housing data it has become apparent that certain measures introduced in April have served to take the edge off some of the recent gains in house price values, particularly in London and the South East with the net result that the share prices of the major house builders started to slide back in mid-March. These measures were designed to try and mitigate the mistakes of the past and ensure that any new mortgage lending was affordable in the event interest rates were to rise unexpectedly.

To recap the Mortgage Market Review are rules set out by the Financial Conduct Authority, to ensure that any new lending is affordable and that new borrowers had enough of a financial buffer to absorb a rise in interest rates, or a change in personal circumstances.

There was also a concern that some of the bad lending practices that led to the problems in 2007 were starting to resurface so the Bank of England announced in June that it was going to introduce new LTI (Loan to Income) caps at the end of that month, to help stem this problem, and sure enough this has prompted a further slowdown in mortgage approvals. These do appear to be working given recent FCA data which shows that UK household appetite for high borrowing showing much slower growth in Q3.