This has to be my favourite use of Google maps and BBC backstage to date: Google Maps – BBC Travel News.
jpg to ASCII and tables
Found a cool site to allow conversion of jpegs to ASCII and table images IMG2ASCII version 2.0
Google maps go hybrid!
Google maps has launched a new feature, the “hybrid” button. Now you can see satellite maps with certain roads overlayed on top. Amazing! Check out an example on this Farnborough house prices page at OurProperty.co.uk. NB You need to click the “View Map” link.
Bush wobbles on bike
Just as Britain was receiving news that London had won its olympic bid, George Bush was out on his bike in the grounds of Gleneagles when he crashed into a police officer. Apparently the fall did not alter his schedule, and he later dined with the Queen. So Bush has wobbled on his bike, but will he wobble on commitments to reducing poverty and saving the environment? That remains to be seen.
The Map Guru
I have to say that Barry Hunter is the map Guru! Check out his site Nearby.org.uk, which has pretty much everything you could ever need for uk maps.
Property developers struggling to sell
The Cloisters is a new build development of 47 one and two bedroom flats built by Natta Country Homes in Farnborough. Priced at £155,950 upwards these flats are marketed as Luxury apartments to ideally suit London commuters, and with the Farnborough main line station (45 mins from waterloo) situated a stones through away, you might think they would sell like hot cakes.
Building work began last year, with the show home being open from Easter this year, and yet at the time of writing, according to the Land Registry’s latest data, they hadn’t sold a single unit. During the peak of the housing boom, properties like this were selling “off-plan” before even the first brick was laid…
So what has happened?
The problem is, prices of houses in the UK, and indeed many other countries (US, Spain, Ireland, Australia to name but a few) have completely lost touch with reality. In the years since the stock market bubble bursting in 2000 investors looked elsewhere for places to put their money, and with historically low interest rates, houses looked an attractive option. This massive influx of cash into the property market has subsequently caused the total value of all residential property in developed economies to increase by $30 trillion dollars, which is equivalent to 100% of those countries combined GDP. Not only does this completely dwarf any previous house price boom, but compare it to the stock market boom of the 1990s (where stock values increased by 80% over 5 years) and it looks like we may have the biggest financial bubble in history.
Unfortunately for our friends at The Cloisters in Farnborough, this isn’t their only bad news.
Bring on the Flats
In recent years the government has encouraged development on brown field sites, a consequence of this is that, as they are generally smaller in size, developers have been more inclined to build flats and apartments to maximise the amount of residential units they can build per unit of area, and thereby maximise their profits.
People in general do not aspire to live in a flat, they aspire to live in a detached house. The surge in supply of flats in recent years has been mostly driven by “buy-to-let” investors looking to cash in on the house price boom. However, in last year or so rental yields have fallen steeply, with the typical rent being somewhat less than the investor is paying on their interest-only mortgage. Some BTL investors were happy to make a loss the whole time their capital was still increasing in value, but in most places that has now stopped to. Since flats now account for 44% of all new residential building (up from just 16% in 1997), and BTL investors are no longer buying them in the numbers they once were, this has caused what can only be considered as a glut in new build flats.
Do your sums
Taking our example of The Cloisters in Farnborough, their estate agents are claiming you can expect to let out one of their 2 bedroom Somercote flats for £700 a month, and yet if you paid their asking price of £178,950, you would be facing a monthly payment on an interest only mortgage of at least £760 (85% LTV @ 6% interest), which implies a monthly loss of £60 before you even include any null periods or maintenance costs. Over the course of a year you could probably expect to make a several thousand pound actual loss in your cash flow, perhaps significantly more on paper if house prices go down.
If on the other hand, as a potential buyer, you decided to rent instead at the market rate of £700 a month, you would be saving yourself around £150 pound on the equivalent interest only mortgage (95% LTV @ 6%).
So what for the future?
Buyers (particularly first time buyers) are becoming wise to this, and are now choosing not to buy at inflated prices. As sales dry up, some vendors will try to sit it out and hold their prices, but others will eventually be forced to sell at a discount, and this of course will add downward pressure on prices.
So I think now it is almost certain that in some way or another house prices will need to start moving back towards their historical norms. This could be in the form of a prolonged stagnation in prices, or it may be a short sharp correction.
What is far from certain, is what effect this will have on the overall economy.
Source of Figures
The Economist “In come the waves” June 16th 2005.
The Economist “What goes up” May 12th 2005.
Johnston Press RSS Feeds
Looks like more uk news providers are jumping on the RSS bandwagon, Johnston press has just opened up their entire network.
Google launches UK satellite maps
Just a few months after Google launched satellite maps of the US, now they have followed up with the same for the UK… Google Maps – london eye. Although presently they seem to have been taken from a slightly odd angle, and the quality is quite low, at least it is a start!
Browse news by day
Since the BBC have opened up their news content recently, I’ve been working on an archive of all their past articles. It only started running properly in May 2005, but from then onwards you can now browse the news on a daily basis in my bbc news archive.
Free World Geo Data
I was searching for ages to try to find the place names and longitude and lattitudes of all the population centres on the planet and in the end the U.S. miltary helped me out. They offer for free download on their NGA: GNS; GEOnet Names Server place name files for most countries, in total a 200 meg download. Thanks very much!