Welcome to TheCreditCruncher.com

The Credit Cruncher was conceived to help you to keep up to date with credit crunch and recession developments, it provides some helpful credit crunch advice and it addresses personal debt. The Credit Cruncher also seeks to explain how the credit crunch started and shed some light on the worldwide recession. Recently, we have begun to look at how BREXIT will affect the UK economy. Please feel free to leave comments where relevant.

31 Aug 2008

There is no Credit Crunch

The Credit Crunch does not really exist because it has not been properly defined.

The economic crisis we find ourselves in is a combination of the collapse of the sub-prime mortgage market in the USA, rapidly rising fuel costs and static wages.
Although you may call it a credit crunch, or any other name, until it is strictly defined, you cannot measure it and therefore you cannot know when the crisis is actually over.

When you listen to people's comments it is obvious that the credit crunch means different things to different people. To some it is about interest rates, to others exchange rates, to many it is the fact that our food and fuel is becoming more and more expensive whilst our wages remain unchanged. All of these are elements of what seems to be a common crisis and what will eventually see us entering a recession. In contrast, a recession is a defined economic term which can be properly monitored, therefore we can know for sure when a recession is over.

The danger of using a loose term is that those using the term will interpret it in different ways. This still happens when the term recession is used, for some they will see it is a time that they lost money on a property, others may see it as signifying job losses. The credit crunch will be blamed for all these things and more, yet what we are really looking at is irresponsible mortgage selling which tipped lending over the edge to the point where debt exchanged hands for more than it was worth. This precipitated by a drop in house prices and coming at a time where we rely far too much on credit and in at atmosphere of rapid inflation. Because it is not defined, the crunch is what you want it to be, you can be sure that the politicians will be exploiting this fact to their own ends time and time again.

Popular Questions:
Will we all end up broke?
How long will the credit crunch last?
Sub-prime mortgages to blame?

26 Aug 2008

Credit cards for bad debtors

There are many credit cards on the market: some with lower interest rates, some with short-term 0% interest rates and there are also some bad credit rating credit cards that are designed to help people who want to rebuild and strengthen a bad credit rating, or create a credit rating when they don't have one.

These cards may well carry higher interest rates, but whilst you use them and pay them off in full every month you can use the card to build up an improved or new credit record whilst taking advantage of the interest-free period (up to 56 days in some cases). It is important however, that you don't fall into the trap of building up a debt on cards with high interest.
Using debt to build up a credit-rating may seem a strange concept and it is important that you use the opportunity to demonstrate an ability and willingness to pay promptly.

If you use a good credit card comparison site, you will find that some cards offer added benefits, for example Capital One's Classic credit card offers free access your credit report twice a year for free - so you can see exactly by how your credit rating is performing.
Barclaycard Initial credit card, offers the lowest APR of the 'bad credit rating' credit cards available and also comes with the same cardholder services and benefits as a Platinum card.

Always shop around for the best card that suits your needs rather then just accepting the one offered by your bank. This applies as much to those who are seeking a 0% for balance transfers card as to those who need a card to 'repair' a bad credit record.

20 Aug 2008

Future UK house prices

What does the future hold for house prices in the UK?
Currently prices are definitely on a climb down, but prices have not dropped as much as the market needs, so house sales are slowing down dramatically. I would estimate that the true market price is probably a good 10% lower than the current asking prices because sellers are not facing up to the reality of the devaluation of their properties. Until sellers face up to this reality, the market will just slow down until the market prices reach the buyers expectations.
Who can tell what the real price is then?
It's subjective, each house has it's own demand pattern whether that be simply price-elastic or not. The market however could arguably be estimated based on past performance and if that is the case, then the future could be grim!
I took the graph (produced by the Nationwide Building Society) that I printed a couple of posts ago and (very) crudely extrapolated it with the precise instrumentation to hand ie. a ruler and a pencil, and this is the new graph that I came up with:
This graph shows us that the average price of a UK house could HALVE by 2015 before climbing again. The red line is the average price which is present on the original graph the line below that is a line I added to represent the lowest price when the market has slumped, the one above is the top prices at the peak of a boom. I have followed the general 'shape' of the previous boom and bust scenario's from the 70's, 80's and 90's to produce a slump that will reach it's lowest point in 2015 with average prices at around £92,000. Recently average house prices have been £185,000, so that indicates a drop of 50% over the next 7 years.
I was shocked by the figures I came up with and am the first to admit that these look like pure speculation (and they are speculation), but if the graph is accurate and the current market is subject to similar pressures, then you cannot just discard the findings of this crudest of measurements.
I cannot imagine seeing prices fall to this level, but after coming up with this illustration I just wanted to nail my colours to the mast now and say let's see how accurate this prediction is in a few years time. Makes you stop and think doesn't it? After all the market has reliably risen year after year - in the past the rise has been roughly equivalent to the fall in terms of both time and the rate of change. there is no reason to believe that the fall cannot be similar to my rough estimation, if we are honest with ourselves, we know full well that house prices are over-inflated, we may be somewhat reluctant to face up to the extent to which this is true. Bear in mind also the fact that at the lowest point the market will dip below a 'true-market value' whilst the market adjusts, and I am now starting to convince myseolf that this prediction is not as crazy as it sounds...
The really worrying thing about this crazy graph is if you try and work out what the next price-peak will be, it is about then that you start to think 'this cannot go on...something has to change'

17 Aug 2008

Are we in a Recession?

It's a question that many are asking... Why is this a Credit Crunch, Why not just call it recession??

The answer is simple, there is a very precise definition of recession - there is no official definition for a Credit Crunch - and in fact we are not (yet) in recession. There is little doubt that we will be, but the exact deifintion says that a country's GPD (Gross Domestic Product) should be in decline for two consecutive quarters. This is not yet the case.

Recession can be just a national event if the decline is only recorded in one country since each country natuarally has it's own GDP, and some countries may not even record any decline at all. It is not uncommon to see cuts in interest rates in this economic climate in order to stimulate the economy by stimulating investment. Dropping interest rates has two effects:

  1. Those that need to borrow to boost their business activities can borrow at an advantageous rate.
  2. Those that have money to invest may be more prepared to invest in risk ventures whilst bank rates are low.
Quite how this will work out when the banks are squeezed for cash to lend due to their previous bad investments gives some pause for thought.
A recession normally lasts anything from 6 months (two quarters) up to eighteen months (six quarters). The Credit Crunch is already here, but once the GDP begins to rise and we officially emerge from recession, no doubt the Credit Crunch will be declared defeated too...

Popular Questions:
Will we all end up broke?
How long will the credit crunch last?
Sub-prime mortgages to blame?

11 Aug 2008

The Credit Cruncher

This site has been live now for two months and is due for a review. I have a few burning issues that I really wanted to write about, and that was the basis of the Credit Cruncher. I used a familiar blogging platform but played with some of the elements to distance it slightly from the traditional blog format and illustrate that the posts made are not really more relevant just because they were written recently.
What I have found is that topics have really come together under the following headings:
  1. Credit Crunch News
  2. What is the Credit Crunch?
  3. My personal experience in reducing my own debt
These are my main headings, and my inspiration has come from many sources, including newspapers, the internet and my own thoughts and distant memories of Economics classes....
My feeling is that the Credit Crunch itself is with us for the next two years, and I aim to make this site a major resource in the meantime.
Please feel free to read through the posts and leave comments.

7 Aug 2008

Credit Crunch Latest

In the UK, Bank of England interest rates have been kept down at 5% it has been announced today, with many believing that there will be no rise in rates this year. However prices continue to rise driven mainly by rising fuel costs. Even without a change in the rate, it is widely believed that mortgage lenders will compete for business by lowering their rates. Nationwide have recently announced cuts, others including Lloyds TSB have already dropped their rates. In America, the US Federal Reserve is holding rates down at 2% for the foreseeable future in an attempt to encourage an economic up-turn.

At the same time, there are new figures on the slowdown of the housing market with a drop of more than 1.5% in house prices for the fourth month in a row. Prices still remain significantly higher than they were 5 or 6 years ago, and not many home owners are currently staring negative equity in the face. Some areas in the US have seen prices drop around 25 to 30% in the last 12 months, but when you look at the graph above, you can see the familiar pattern of boom and bust being repeated. The 'booms' are ever higher, but the 'bust' part of the curve never drops lower than the previous low... If we repeat the previous patterns, we end up with a real 'slump' in the market by about 2010-2011, but there is no guarantee that this current slump will follow previous patterns.

Related posts:
Is this the new Great Depression?
Credit Crunch News
The Multiplier

4 Aug 2008

Economy fuelled by debt

I’m not one to subscribe to the conspiracy theories concerning why debt is so prevalent, but the widespread acceptance of debt as a way of life is certainly a contributory factor to the credit crunch. Why else would the sub-prime market borrowers have been happy with the deals they were offered unless they were comfortable with the concept of debt.
In generations gone by when debt was the domain of the upper classes, the working man would have shied away from debt like a disease. ‘Modern’ man (in the Western world) now embraces debt like an old friend who will see him through hard times.
In fact debt is neither a disease nor a friend, but something to be used appropriately and with caution, like a medicine that could be fatal in the wrong dose. The truth is that our economy is fuelled by debt, and when this is in proportion, it can help to keep the economy afloat. However, when foolhardy lending tips the balance from healthy to unhealthy – that’s where our friend the credit crunch rears it’s ugly head.
I have heard it rumoured it certain quarters that the credit crunch doesn’t actually exist, but it is a kind of conspiracy theory to keep the proletariat in their place ie. to justify static wages and rising prices, and to a degree there is some truth in saying the credit crunch does not exist. This is because as a single identifiable entity – it does NOT exist in that it cannot be quantified. Bad debts can be quantified as can negative equity, the price of fuel and interest rates – but the credit crunch cannot as it means different things to different people.

Popular Questions:
Will we all end up broke?
How long will the credit crunch last?
Sub-prime mortgages to blame?