Showing posts with label Irish property prices. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Irish property prices. Show all posts

Saturday, November 19, 2011

21/11/2011: Residential Property Prices: October

Sorry to break the bad news, folks, but the latest Residential Property Price Index (RPPI) for October is showing accelerating property prices declines on foot of already substantial rates of contraction registered during 2011 as a whole. the bust is getting bustier.

All properties index fell to 71.2 in october from 72.8 in September, posting a monthly decline of 2.20%. This is the sharpest rate of monthly contraction in prices since March 2009 and the third fastest rate of decline in the history of the series! 3moMA for RPPI is now at 72.63. Year on year prices are now down 15.14% - the highest yoy decline since February 2010. Relative to peak prices are down 45.44%. 12 mo MA is at -1.36% for mom rate of decline and year-to-date rate of prices declines average -1.49%.

When it comes to Nama, relative to its cut-off date of November 30, 2009, property prices are now down 24.17%. When fully set up, Nama called bottoming out of the markets for Q1 2010. Since then, prices are down 20.62%, so those highly paid geniuses employed by Nama to 'value' properties and 'assess' markets are really shining stars. Recall that Nama paid an uplift of LTEV on assets purchased of an average 10%, plus carries a burden-sharing discount / cushion. Factoring these two into the equation, Nama-assessed properties are now held at a loss of 27.79% on their Nama valuations, even with burden sharing cushion 'savings' factored in. Taken across Nama book value, these (for now paper) losses can be assessed at ca €8.3bn.


Let's drill deeper. House prices sub-index is now at 74.3 against 76.0 in September, a decline mom of -2.24% the largest monthly drop since June 2011. 3moMA now stands at 75.77 and year on year change in the sub-index is 14.89% - the steepest annual decline rate since February 2010. relative to peak house prices sub-index is now -43.71% off. 

Apartments prices sub-index fell from 53.2 in September to 52.2 in October, a mom drop of 1.88% shallower than September mom decline of 3.10%. 3moMA is now at 53.43 and year on year sub-index is down 19.81% - the steepest annual decline since April 2010. Relative to peak, apartments prices are now off 57.87%.


Recalling that Nama holds loads of assets written against apartments, Nama cut-off-date valuations, LTEVs and burden sharing cushion included, Nama valuations for apartments-related properties are now off 35.10%.


Chart above shows the price dynamics for Dublin properties. Dublin sub-index stands at 63.1 against September reading of 65.1, a mom decline of 3.07% - steepest since the catastrophic drop of 3.76% in August this year. 3mo MA is now at 64.9 and year on year prices in Dublin are down 17.52% - largest yearly decline since March 2010. Relative to peak, Dublin residential prices are down 53.09%.

Given the above, we can update projections for the core index and sub-indices for 2011 as a whole. These are shown below.


Depressing is the word that comes to mind. The picture is made even less palatable when we recall incessant blabber from our Government reps and stuff-brokers, as well as property 'experts' that inundated the earlier parts of the year with 'property prices will bottom out in H2 2011' noise.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

25/10/2011: Residential property prices: September

According to CSO Residential Property Prices index, September 2007 saw the historical peak in prices for overall RPPI at 130.5. Today's data shows that the index now stands at 72.8, implying that property prices have fallen nationwide by 44.2% on average since 4 years ago. Miserable news.

Now, September RPPI for all properties has fallen 1.49% mom and 14.25% yoy, exceeding (in terms of fall) analysts expectations for 13.4% decline. 12mo MA of monthly declines now stands at 1.27% and year-to-date average monthly decline is at 1.41%.

Relative to Nama's cut-off valuation date of November 30, 2009, factoring in average LTEV uplift of 10%, Nama residential properties-linked assets portfolio is now on average 29.52% under water. Factoring 5% burden-sharing (subordinated bonds), the downside is now 26.2% which means that Nama will need a lift-up of 35% on current values to break even.


For Houses, nationwide, RPPI fell to 76 in September from 77 in August a decline of 1.3% mom and 13.93% yoy. The index is now down 42.4% on peak of 132 achieved in September 2007. Apartments sub-index is down to 53.2 in September from 54.9 in August, with mom contraction of 3.1% - the sharpest monthly decline since March. Yoy the sub-index is down 19.03% and relative to the peak of 123.9 (February 2007) the sub-index is down 57.06%.

Nama holds loads of apartments, so applying the earlier assumptions on LTEV, Nama apartments-linked sub-portfolio is under water 36.9%, implying, net of subordinated bonds, a 33.9% decline in valuations to November 2009 cut-off date. This suggests an average required uplift in apartments prices of 55.12% for break-even.

Dublin properties prices are now 51.6% off their peak, with sub-index for Dublin declining to 65.1 in September from 66.5 in August - a drop of 2.11% mom and 15.56% yoy.


Annual forecasts, updated to include September figures, are below


Monday, September 26, 2011

26/09/2011: Irish property prices hit Early Paleozoic layer

Another month, another "Splat, Zap, Squish!" from the Amazing Property Bust Land, Ireland. CSO's RPPI data out for August today is showing continued falls in property markets and accelerating on the July 'performance'. Here are the updated charts and numbers.

Headlines are not pretty, folks:
  • RPPI down 13.87% annually in August against a fall of 12.47% in July index now stands at 73.9 down from 85.8 in August last year.
  • In 12mo through August the decline was 10.8%.
  • Mom prices are down 1.6% in August. 3mo MA is at 74.9 down from 76.0 in July.
  • Relative to peak, prices are now down 43.4%
  • Relative to Nama valuations cut-off date of Nov 30, 2009, prices are down 21.3%. Adding LTEV uplift applied by Nama to purchased loans, state-held residential portoflio is now down in values some 28.5%.
Headlines on property prices by type are even less pretty:
  • RPPI for houses is at 77.0 in August, down 1.41% on 78.1 reading in July. 3moMA is now 77.9, down from 79.0 in July. Year on year prices are down 13.58% from index reading of 89.1 in August 2010. Relative to peak prices are down 41.7% (September 2007). This is the steepest rate of decline since March 2011.
  • RPPI for apartments is at 54.9, down 4.7% on July reading of 57.6. August 2010 reading was 67.2, so we are now 18.3% down yoy. 3moMA is now at 57.3, down from 59.0 in July. Monthly rate of declines is now accelerating for the 3rd month in a row. August rate of decline is the steepest monthly decline in the history of the series. Relative to peak (February 2007), apartments prices are now down 55.69%.
Geographical distribution of price changes:
  • Dublin residential property prices fell by 3.76% in August and were 14.85% lower than a year ago. Dublin house prices decreased by 3.4% in the month and were 14.7% lower compared to a year earlier. Dublin apartment prices fell by 6% in the month of August and were 17.4% lower when compared with the same month of 2010. 3mo MA for Dublin properties is now at 68.23, down from 69.7 in July. Relative to peak (February 2007) Dublin prices are down 50.56%. House prices in Dublin are 48% lower than at their highest level in early 2007. Apartments in Dublin are now 57% lower than they were in February 2007.
  • The price of residential properties in the Rest of Ireland (ex-Dublin) fell 0.3% in August compared with an increase of 0.2% recorded in August 2010. Prices were 13.2% lower than in August 2010. The fall in the price of residential properties in the Rest of Ireland relative to peak is at 40%.

My forecast for the annual results is below. In summary - we've gone from the penthouse to the ground floor, through the parking levels and still going - services levels, sewer, imaginary metro tunnel.... next "Splat" is due at around middle Paleozoic layer... see you in October's Early Mammals exhibit...

Monday, August 29, 2011

29/08/2011: Residential Property Price Index: July 2011

Residential Property Price Index for Ireland for July 2011 was released earlier today by the CSO, showing continued deterioration in property prices across the board.

Per CSO: "In the year to July, residential property prices at a national level, fell by 12.5%. This
compares with an annual rate of decline of 12.9% in June and a decline of 12% recorded in the twelve months to July 2010." Chart below illustrates:
Residential property prices fell by 0.8% in the month of July. This compares with a
decline of 2.1% recorded in June and a decline of 1.3% in July of last year. To give a bit more granularity to the data:
  • RPPRI now stands at 75.1, down from 75.7 in June, and 3mo MA is 76.03, against June 3mo MA of 77.07.
  • Relative to peak property prices have no declined 42.45% against June to-peak decline of 42%.
Using 7 months of 2011 data, we can forecast expected declines in the index for 2011 as a whole:
Please note: this is a crude forecast. The result suggests that prices can decline to 75.3% of 2005 levels by the end of 2011 for all properties, with corresponding declines in House prices to 78.41%, Apartments to 57.47% and Dublin prices declining to 69.02%.

Let us make another set of important calculations. Recall that section 73 of the NAMA Act 2009 established the definition of the cut-off date for NAMA valuations. This date was later set at 30 November 2009. NAMA then applied an LTEV uplift on properties valued to that date. According to NAMA own business projections, the agency will require 10% increase in property values referenced to LTEV and November 30th 2009 cut-0ff-date to break even. In addition, NAMA claimed that its valuations are based on the consulting report they received from London Economics that timed property markets bottoming out to the latest Q1 2010.

Well, since the cut-off date, Irish residential property has now fallen a whooping 20.02% and relative to the end of Q1 2010, when NAMA expected the bottoming of the property cycle, the property values are down 16.28%. Ooops...

Back to the data:
  • Index for House prices stood at 78.1 in July, down from 78.6 in June (-0.64% mom) and down 12.25% yoy
  • House prices 3mo average index is now 79.03, down from 80.1 a month ago.
  • House prices are down 40.83% to peak
  • Apartments continued falling at precipitous rates, with Price Index for Apartments down to 57.6 in July from 59.4 in June. A decline of 3.03% mom and 15.67% yoy.
  • Apartments prices 3mo MA is now at 59, down from 59.93 in June.
  • Apartments prices are down 52.59% to the peak.

Having posted a bizarre increase from 70.5 in April to 70.8 in May, Dublin prices have fallen off the small cliff in June settling at the index reading of 69.1. July data shows Dublin prices flat at 69.1. This means that 3mo MA is now at 69.67, down from 70.13 in June. Relative to peak, prices in Dublin are down 48.62%. Year on year, July Dublin prices are down 11.86%, an improvement on annualized rate of decline of 12.64% in June, but worse than yoy change attained in May (-11.5%).

Monday, July 4, 2011

04/07/2011: Irish property prices - daft.ie report

My comment and rather back-of-the-envelope outlook for Irish property markets is available with daft.ie report - link here. Note that the prediction concerning rents-prices feedback is based on my earlier analysis published here - see the last chart.

Strangely, at least in one instance my opening paragraphs were identified by some commentators as being a 'political statement'. To all who know my work, this should sound like a mistake for two reasons:
  1. I have never taken partisan political positions. While I do hold strong policy views, these are not aligned with any political party or movement. I have consistently provided advice to and public engagement with any political party or movement that asked for such. During the last election, as in the previous elections, I did not support any particular party, although I did support / help a number of individual candidates whose views span left and right of the political spectrum and with whose views I was not necessarily in full agreement.
  2. The entire opinion piece is based on my understanding of economic facts. I have spoken on many occasions about the adverse effects of increased taxation on investment and household spending. I have been vocal about the mirage of 'foreign investors flocking to Ireland' stories being pulled out of thin air by our real estate journalists. Over a number of years, I have been critical of the state policy of promoting - via pricing systems and lack of regulatory independence - inflation in state-controlled services. Nothing political here.

Saturday, June 25, 2011

25/06/2011: Daft.ie v CSO RPPI - property prices in Ireland

Courtesy of the CSO RPPI - published for the first time this year - Ireland now has two series of property prices data to compare - Daft.ie asking prices and rents, and CSO's RPPI. Since Daft.ie pre-dates CSO dataset and since Daft.ie is a private undertaking with no access to the resources of the state in paying for and collecting data, it might be of interest to see how the two series compare.

This is exactly the exercise I performed.

Let's take a look at the CSO RPPI (an index) and Daft.ie (prices):
So a strong relation in terms of asking prices and RPPI - some 97% of variation explained.

Similarly, a very strong relationship between RPPI and Daft.ie reported asking rents:
Note that there are serious lags in the asking prices and rents relative to what RPPI is measuring, but overall, Daft.ie seems to be doing as good of a job of capturing prices over the long term as CSO data.

It is worth noting that when I converted Daft.ie prices to an index comparable directly to CSO RPPI, the results remained the same. So well done to Daft.ie gang - they really managed to run (and continue running) a superb database.

Another interesting issue is the relationship between property prices and rents:
Really, self-explanatory.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

22/06/11: Residential Property Index - May 2011

The CSO released their latest data for the new Residential Property Price Index (RPPI) for May 2011. Here are the highlights and updates, including forecast for 2011 (see last chart).
  • Year on year May 2011 residential property prices nationally are down 12.16% with RPPI standing at 77.3 in May down from 78.2 in April. The 6mo average rate of decline is now at 1.2% per month and 12mo average rate of decline is now 1.07% monthly.
  • Relative to peak prices across the nation are down 40.77%.
  • 3mo MA RPPI is at 78.17 in may, down from 79.2 in April.
  • RPPI is now down consecutively month on month since its peak in September 2007 with exception for August 2010 when it posted no change mom relative to July. Last time the index posted increase in yoy terms was January 2008.
So per chart above, the crunch is getting crunchier (note accelerated average rate of decline for 6mo relative to the average for 12mo), and mom changes are also posting acceleration downward from -1.01% in April to -1.15% in May.

Breaking down across two property types:
  • RPPI for houses fell to 80.4 in May from 81.3 in April, down 1.11% mom. This marks consecutive monthly contraction since August 2010 when it rose statistically insignificant 0.11%. Relative to peak the series now down 39.1%. the 6mo average monthly rate of decline is 1.21% well ahead of 12mo average of 1.03%
  • RPPI for apartments is down at 60 in may from 60.4 in April (-0.66%). Apartments prices index is down 51.57% on peak and 6mo average at -1.19% per month is signaling slower rate of decline compared to 12mo average of 1.41%
As a signal of stronger regional economy, Dublin presents a slightly divergent picture to May national level data:
  • Dublin RPPI rose from 70.5 in April to 70.8 in May (+0.43%mom), marking the first monthly increase since April 2008. This increase is statistically insignificant, however. In addition, 6mo average decrease rate of 1.06% monthly is still ahead of 12mo average of 1.01%, suggesting the latest move is unlikely to be a trend-breaker to the upside.
  • Dublin prices index is now 47.4% below the peak.
Now, using 5 months data for 2011 we can attempt a very crude forecast for the entire 2011, as shown in the figure below.
So far, all indications are - we are looking at another brutal year when it comes to property prices here. then, again, with zombie banks not lending and continuously hiking the cost of mortgages for existent clients, with Nama still hell-bent on derailing any sort of market bottoming-out dynamic, with all fundamentals signalling decreasing demand for property and reduced ability to pay for mortgages, it is hard to imagine the upside trend establishing in Irish property markets any time soon.

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

07/06/2011: Residential property prices

An impressively decent dataset from CSO on residential property prices has been released for the second monthly installment, so here are the charts and some high level analysis.
  • Overall Residential Property Price Index (RPPI) for April was 78.2 or 0.8 points below March levels. Hence, mom the index has fallen 1.013% and is now 1 point below its 3mo MA. Year on year the index has fallen 12.233% and relative to peak of 130.5 reached in September 2007 it is now down 40.077%.
  • Overall RPPI has recorded its 8th month of consecutive declines having risen statistically and economically insignificant 0.11%mom in August 2010. Year on year, April marked 38th consecutive month of declines.
  • April index for houses fell 0.9 points to 81.3, down 1.095% mom, or 1 point below 3mo MA. Year on year index has fallen 12.013%. The peak for this sub-index was reached in September 2007 at 132.0.
  • April index for apartments fell to 60.4, down 0.6 points - a mom decline of 0.984% and a yoy decline of 15.288%. April reading was 1.233 points below 3mo MA. This sub-index peaked at 123.9 in February 2007.
  • Dublin properties sub-index has fallen 0.5 points in April to 70.5, a decline of 0.704%mom or 12.963% yoy. The sub-index now stands 0.77 points below 3mo MA and 47.584% below the peak of 134.5 in February 2007
Charts to illustrate:
To summarize - the deflation of house prices continues, although the monthly rate of decline has now fallen below both 6mo and 12mo average. This, however, might be due to seasonality, since April marks a relatively moderate month in terms of price movements in every year since 2008. house prices have now fallen 38.41% since their peak, while apartments prices have declined 51.25% from their peak.

It is worth noting - not as a criticism of the CSO, since it cannot do anything about the data - that the index is computed based on mortgages drawdowns, hence excluding any share of transactions that might take place on the 'gray market' (tax evading payments, swaps etc), as well as cash-only purchases and mortgages issued by lenders other than the 8 largest lending institutions from which the data is available.

Another issue, again - little that CSO can do for this - relates to hedonic adjustments undertaken in index computation. Hedonic characteristics used by CSO exclude a number of relevant parameters, such as number of bathrooms and the site size, as well as existence of garage and/or off-street parking. This, alongside with the tendency - due to planning permissions restrictions - to under-report actual floor area and number of bedrooms - means that the hedonic model might be relatively weak.

Finally, CSO employes a Laspeyers-type indexation method, which is "calculated by updating the previous month’s weights by the estimated monthly changes in their average prices". However, like all types of indices, Laspeyers indices suffer from some specific drawbacks. In particular, these indices are weaker in periods of adjustment in the markets. Here's a quick non-technical discussion:

Laspeyers index is designed to answer the question: "How much is the sales price today for the house that is of the same quality as in the base year (2005)?" Quality is compared using the hedonic model mentioned above, based on specific size of the house (floor area), its amenities (number of bedrooms, house type) and location (note - we do not know the granularity of such 'location' adjustment, which can be critical. For example, I live in Dublin 4, but not the "fashionable" part of it. This means that if location code used is D4 for my house, it will receive signficantly higher locational weight relative to true value of my location than a house in a "fashionable" D4 locale.

One key objection to Laspeyers index is that it is computed while assuming that the base year (2005) house remains unchanged over time. Hence, quality is assumed to be constant for referencing, implying the index over-states inflation and under-states deflation.

In addition, index does not capture the effects of substitution in housing. In other words, Laspeyers index does not reflect conversions of house features to substitute away from more expensive options, etc, or purchases shifting in favour of smaller properties.

Index also assumes that geographical distribution of house sales does not change over time - a feature that introduces significant biases into the index when locational markets are not uniform (when there are significant differences within the markets).

Finally, the index overstates price appreciation at the peak of the bubble, since at that point, less desirable properties were disproportionately represented in the market as buyers chased any home available for sale. This is known on the basis of the US data where at the top of the markets 'gentrification' of lower quality locations in many states has led to Laspeyers indices understating price inflation.

For thes reasons, Laspeyers indices are known as 'constant quality' indices.

Chain-linked indexation, employed by CSO, helps addressing some of these issues, but it does not eliminate them. Of course, that too has its drawbacks, namely the more substantial data requirement, plus the lack of index additivity (you can see this indirectly in the first chart above by the gravitational pull of the houses index on overall index.

Monday, February 22, 2010

Economics 22/02/2010: Leading indicators of an Irish recovery

For those of you who missed my Sunday Times article yesterday, here is the unedited version (note: this is the last article of mine in the Sunday Times for the time being as Damien Kiberd will be back with his usual excellent column from next week on):


The latest Exchequer results alongside the Live Register figures clearly point to the fact that despite all the recent talk about Ireland turning the corner, the recession continues to ravage our economy. And despite all the recent gains in consumer confidence retail spending posted yet another lackluster month in December 2009. Predictably, credit demand remains extremely weak, with the IBF/PwC Mortgage Market Profile released earlier this week showing that the volume of new mortgages issued in Ireland has fallen 18% in Q4 2009.

Even industrial production and manufacturing, having shown tentative improvement in Q3 2009 have trended down in the last quarter.

As disappointing as these results are, they were ultimately predictable. Economic turnarounds do not happen because Government ‘experts’ decide to cheer up consumers.

Instead, there is an ironclad timing to various indicators that time the recessions and recoveries: some lead the cycle, others are contemporaneous to it, or even lag changes in economy.


In a research paper published in 2007, UCLA’s Edward E. Leamer shows that in ten recessions experienced in the US since the end of World War II, eight were precluded by housing markets declines (first in terms of volumes of sales and later price changes). The two exceptions were the Dot Com bust of 2001 and the end of the massive military spending due to the Korean Armistice of 1953. Residential investment also led the recovery cycle.


Despite being exports-dependent, Irish economy shares one important trait with the US. Housing investments constitute a major proportion of our households’ investment. In fact, the weight of housing in our investment portfolios is around 65-70%. It is around 50% in the US. As such, house markets determine our wealth and savings, and have a pronounced effect on our decisions as consumers.


Consider the timing of events. Going into the crisis, Irish house sales volumes turned downward in the first half of 2007. House prices declines followed by Q1 2008, alongside changes in manufacturing and services sectors PMI. A quarter later, the whole economy was in a recession.


House price declines for January 2010 indicate that roughly €200 billion worth of wealth was wiped out from the Irish households’ balancesheets since the end of 2007. With this safety net gone, the first reaction is to cut borrowing and ramp up savings, to the detriment of immediate consumption and new investment.


So, if housing markets are the lead indicator of future economic activity, just where exactly (relative to the proverbial corner) are we on the road to recovery? Not in a good place, I am afraid.


Per latest data from the Central Bank, private sector credit continues to contract in Ireland, with December 2009 recording a drop of 6% on December 2008. Residential mortgage lending has also fallen from €114.3 billion in December 2008 to €109.9 billion a year later. This suggests that at least some households are deleveraging out of debt – a good sign. Of course, the decline is also driven by the mortgages writedowns due to insolvencies.


Worse, as Central Bank data shows, the process of retail interest rates increases is already underway. In November 2009 retail interest rates for mortgages have increased for all loans maturities and types. Irish banks, spurred on by the prospect of massive losses due to Nama, are hiking up the rates they charge on existent and new borrowers.


And more is to come. Based on the current dynamic of the interest rates and existent lending margins for largest Irish banks compared to euro area aggregates, I would estimate that average interest rates charged on mortgages will rise from 2.67% recorded back at the end of November 2009 to around 3.3-3.5 % by the end of this year, before the ECB increases its base rate. This would imply that those on adjustable mortgages could see their cost of house financing rise by around 125 basis points, while new mortgage applicants will be facing rates hike of well over 150-160 basis points.


On the house prices front, absent any real-time data, all that we do know is that residential rents remain subdued. Removing seasonality out of Daft.ie most recent data, released this week, shows that downward trend in rents is likely to continue. Commercial rents are also sliding and overall occupancy rates are rising, with some premium retail locations, such as CHQ building in IFSC, are reporting over 50% vacancy rates.


Does anyone still think we have turned a corner?


The problem, of course, is that the structure of the Irish economy prevents an orderly and speedy restart to residential investment.

First, there are simply too many properties either for sale or held back from the market by the owners who know they have no chance of shifting these any time soon. We have zoned so much land – most of it in locations where few would ever want to live – that we can met our expected demand 70 years into the future. We also have 350-400,000 vacant finished and unfinished homes, majority of which will never be sold at any price proximate to the cost of their completion. To address these problems, the Government can use Nama to demolish surplus properties and de-zone unsuitable land. But that would be excruciatingly costly, unless we fully nationalize the banks first. And it would cut against Nama’s mandate to deliver long-term economic value.


Second, there is a problem of price discovery. Before the crisis we had ESRI/ptsb sample of selling prices. Based on ptsb own mortgages, it was a poor measure. But now, with ptsb having pushed its loans to deposits ratio to 300%, matching Northern Rock’s achievement, there is not a snowball’s chance in hell it will remain a dominant player in mortgages in Ireland. Thus, we no longer have any indication as to the actual levels of property prices, and absent these, no rational investor will brave the market. The Government can rectify the problem by requiring sellers to publish exact data on prices and property characteristics.


Third, the Government can aid the process of households deleveraging from the debts accumulated during the Celtic Tiger era. In particular, to help struggling mortgage payers, the Government can extend 100% interest relief for a fixed period of time, say 5 years, to all households. On the one hand such relief will provide a positive cushion against rising interest rates. On the other hand, it will allow older households with less substantial mortgage outlays to begin the process of rebuilding their retirement savings devastated by the twin collapse in property and equity markets. Instead of doing this, the Government is desperately searching for new and more punitive ways to tax savings. Finance Bill 2010 with its tax on unit-linked single premium insurance products is the case in point.


Fourth, the Government can get serious about reducing the burden of our grotesquely overweight public sector. To do so, the Exchequer should commit to no increases in income tax in the next 5 years. All deficit adjustments from here on will have to take a form of expenditure cuts. Nama must be altered into a leaner undertaking responsible for repairing banks balancesheets, not for providing them with soft taxpayers’ cash in exchange for junk assets.


Until all four reforms take place, there is little hope of us getting close to the proverbial corner for residential investment, and with it, for economy at large.



Box-out:

Back in January 2009, unnoticed by many observers, a small change took place in the Central Bank reporting of the credit flows in the retail lending in Ireland. Per Central Bank note, from that month on, credit unions authorized in Ireland were classified as credit institutions and their deposits and loans were included in other monetary financial institutions. This minute change implies that since January 2009, Irish deposits and loans volumes have been inflated by the deposits and loans from the credit unions. Thus, a search through the Central Bank archive shows that between November 2008 and February 2009, the total deposits base relating to resident credit institutions and other MFIs rose from €166 billion to €183 billion, despite the fact that the country banking system was in the grip of a severe crisis. Adjusting for seasonal effects normally present in the data, it appears that some €14-15 billion worth of ‘new’ deposits were delivered to the Irish economy though this new accounting procedure. Of course, deposits on the banks liability side are exactly offset by their assets side, which means that over the same period of time more than €16 billion of ‘new’ credit was registering on the Central Bank radar. Now, this figure is also collaborated by the credit unions annual reports which show roughly €14 billion worth of loans issued by the end of 2007 – the latest for which data is available. This suggests that the credit contraction in the Irish economy during 2009 is understated by the official figures to the tune of €14-15 billion. Not a chop change.