Property Prices Double Every Seven Years... or do they?

House Prices Double Every Seven Years

By Cliff D'Arcy - 3 January 2008

At least three times in the past month, I've heard or read the following ‘fact':

"House prices double every seven years."

Most recently, I came across this claim in an interview with actress-turned-property-millionaire Fiona Fullerton in last weekend's Financial Times. Alas, while Ms Fullerton may be a successful buy-to-let baroness and author of Fiona Fullerton's Guide to Buying to Let, she doesn't have her facts right.

For property prices to double every seven years, they would have to increase by an average of 10.4% a year compounded. As something of a ‘Statto', I know that this is well above the UK's long-run average. Hence, in order to refute this bogus claim once and for all, I grabbed the house-price data provided by Halifax, the UK's largest mortgage lender.

The Halifax House Price Index (HPI) data go back to 1983 and take in the Eighties boom, the Nineties bust and the return to soaring house prices under this Labour government. Let's analyse these UK-wide data, looking at each seven-year period from 1983 to the present day:

1) Halifax House Price Index, 1983-2007




















As you can see, the above data encompass eighteen distinct seven-year periods. During this period, the average house price in the UK at least doubled on six occasions (the figures shown in bold). In addition, house prices came close to doubling in 1984-1991 and 1995-2002.

The important thing to note is that five of the above six ‘doubles' have occurred during the latest housing boom. Hence, it's absolutely clear that Ms Fullerton and her fellow property gurus are suffering from ‘recent events syndrome'. In other words, their statements only hold water using data taken from a decade of very strong house-price growth.

Now look at the data for 1988-1995 and 1989-1986, which take in the last property peak and the subsequent bust. House prices actually fellover seven years, by 6% and 4% respectively. That's a long way from doubling, isn't it?

So, only by conveniently forgetting the last property meltdown does the above claim hold true. In reality, these figures show that property prices grew by an average of 7.9% a year between 1983 and 2007.

Now let's check another reliable source of house-price data, from Nationwide BS, which goes back 55 years:

2) Nationwide BS House Price Index, 1952-2007
















 








The Nationwide BS sample extends our timeframe to include modest house-price growth in the Fifties and the boom of the Seventies (a time of huge price inflation all round). During these 49 seven-year periods, house prices doubled on 22 occasions, including six recent ‘doubles'. Then again, house prices were fairly tame over long periods, and fell in 1988-1995 (down 11%) and 1989-1996 (-10%).

What's more, the Nationwide BS figures show the price of the average UK property has risen by a compound annual rate of 8.7% since 1952. Again, this is below the 10.4% a year required for prices to double every seven years.

In Summary

Thus, a more truthful statement would be:

"On average, UK house prices double every nine years. However, this is a trend and not a one-way bet, and prices can fall over extended periods."

Finally, I suspect that recent weakness in the housing market is set to continue, and that non-trivial house-price falls will be a feature of 2008. So, before buying a property, take a long, hard look at long-term price trends in the local area. Otherwise, if you take only the good years into account and ignore the bad years, then your retirement master-plan could come unstuck!


Start Year End Year
1983 1990 118
1984 1991 96
1985 1992 65
1986 1993 49
1987 1994 28
1988 1995 -6
1989 1996 -4
1990 1997 1
1991 1998 9
1992 1999 32
1993 2000 37
1994 2001 54
1995 2002 97
1996 2003 113
1997 2004 132
1998 2005 132
1999 2006 129
2000 2007 126
Start Year End Year % Change Start Year End Year % Change
1952 1959 15 1977 1984 147
1953 1960 24 1978 1985 111
1954 1961 37 1979 1986 80
1955 1962 38 1980 1987 89
1956 1963 47 1981 1988 141
1957 1964 57 1982 1989 140
1958 1965 65 1983 1990 92
1959 1966 65 1984 1991 65
1960 1967 65 1985 1992 42
1961 1968 61 1986 1993 29
1962 1969 61 1987 1994 17
1963 1970 56 1988 1995 -11
1964 1971 74 1989 1996 -10
1965 1972 131 1990 1997 13
1966 1973 172 1991 1998 24
1967 1974 166 1992 1999 49
1968 1975 176 1993 2000 60
1969 1976 183 1994 2001 78
1970 1977 187 1995 2002 128
1971 1978 204 1996 2003 143
1972 1979 179 1997 2004 147
1973 1980 141 1998 2005 137
1974 1981 133 1999 2006 131
1975 1982 127 2000 2007 123
1976 1983 134

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