Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement


Premium Article !

Your account has been frozen. For your available options click the below button.

Options

Premium Article !

To read this article in full you must have registered and have a Premium Content Subscription with the Northampton Chron & Echo site.

Subscribe

Registered Article !

To read this article in full you must be registered with the site.

Estate agency's job cuts lead to concern



Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date: 05 January 2008
FEARS have been expressed over possible closures and job loses in sections of Northampton's estate agency industry.
They come on the back of one of the country’s largest estate agents, Your Move, shutting offices and axing 315 full-time jobs nationally. The cuts are the first large-scale redundancies in the sector, which employs 50,000 people, since the property s
lowdown began late last year.

The move has sparked speculation about the effect of the market changes on the rest of the industry.

In an article in The Times, John Socha, the vice-chairman of the National Landlords Association, said the market was slowing across the board and “the cannier estate agents are acting now”.

He argued that, after almost a decade of growth in the sector, the industry was at its most vulnerable in the Midlands.

He added: “It is the places where the cost of entry, such as renting an office, is the lowest that are in trouble; perhaps cities like Leicester, Milton Keynes.”

Mr Socha also referred to the situation in Northampton, which had 200,000 residents and more than 60 estate agents, and raised concern about the future of the industry.

But Simon Bond, joint managing director of Northampton-based O’Riordan Bond, said he was confident that current market conditions would see established estate agencies, such as his, standing out from the crowd and increasing market share. But he believed some of the smaller estate agencies in the town would find the year ahead very challenging.

“It is now a genuine market. House prices will remain steady, but the number of transactions will fall slightly. This is because banks are less likely to lend money to people who cannot afford it, and because there are less people who are buying houses to make a quick profit, rather than buying them as a home,” he said.

“This is a good thing, and a steadier market gives more opportunities for good old-fashioned estate agencies going out and actively selling houses. The days of some estate agents just putting a for sale board outside a house and it selling itself are gone.”

The change in the market meant there were more chances for people to get on the first rung of the housing ladder. “We’ve had a good start to the year, and in the first few days of 2008 we have had 174 inquiries, which compares favourably to last year,” he added.

Dean Fielding, finance director of LSL Property Services, which operates Your Move, the UK’s third-biggest chain of estate agents, said: “It is very difficult to see where the market is going to land. Our larger competitors are doing similar things.”

oliver.jelley@northantsnews.co.uk



The full article contains 462 words and appears in Northampton Chron & Echo newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 04 January 2008 4:24 PM
  • Source: Northampton Chron & Echo
  • Location: Northampton
 
Prev
1
Next
1

davezz,

06/01/2008 16:12:25
Ah I see - so Simon Bond thinks the housing market is now "genuine" does he? Which means it was "false" before, I guess, pumped up by cheap credit provided by those idiots at the Bank of England. A little bird tells me a certain estate agents firm around here has already laid off about 30 staff. The same goes certain firms of solicitors who have already taken the axe to their conveyancing departments. Get out of sterling and buy gold, silver, oil, agricultural ETFs and resource based currencies e.g. Canadian $. I did! :-)
2

Mark T,

Northampton 06/01/2008 19:34:06
Northampton's housing market is going to crash by 30 to 40% over the next three years. Nationally and locally estate agents are going to have to scale back their offices. The tide has now turned, the hosuing market is dead and is only now going in one direction. If your in buy-to-let its time to sell, before your property costs you more than you will ever make.
3

TheCountOfNowhere,

Northampton 14/01/2008 15:37:42
I was told last week by an O'riordan Bond estate agent that they have in fact laid off staff!!!

From the tone of this artical it sounds like we are not being given the whole truth by a) The Chronicle and Echo and b)Simon Bond, who it has to be said has a vested interest in keeping the market high and any comment that he makes should be taken with a LARGE pinch of salt.

Also, I have heard today that one of the larger chains of agents in Northampton have gone into Receivership !!!!

Will the C&E finally run some articles on the true state of the Northampton housing market and the estate agents that have exasperated the problems ?

Does the C&E have a vested interest in not reporting whats going on at such a crucial time in the counties economy ?
4

Mark T,

Northampton 16/01/2008 14:20:22
The Housing Market is falling - Forget what the local agents are saying - This is the news

16th Jan 08 - The FT are reporting - 'Confidence in housing market plummets.

16th Jan 08 - The Times are reporting - UK house price decline worst since 1990s slump.

16th Jan 08 - BBC News are reporting - House price fall 'at 1990s rates'

Local Northamptonshire people need to know what's going on - we can't all fit into the Citizens Advice Bureau at once to try and resolve our debt problems.

We need real information not local estate agent marketing lines.
5

TheCountOfNowhere,

Northampton 18/01/2008 13:52:40
Well Said Mark T. Can the C&E do an article on the true state of Northamptonshires housing market ?

Ive heard today that an estate agency in Earls Barton has now closed !!!!

Bad times ahead for all.

Also, from what i've read the first time buyers buying new build flats will suffer worst. I feel sorry for anyone that believes the spin from people with a HUGE vested interest in the housing market and buys based on this.
6

Mark T,

Northampton 19/01/2008 09:46:24
This is where we are now [19th Jan 08 ] -

Retail sales plummet; gas and electricity prices soar, further eating into already squeezed disposable incomes; Citigroup and Merrill Lynch, two of the great symbols of American capitalism, forced to hand round the begging bowl among Asian and Middle Eastern sovereign wealth funds after massive write-downs on US sub-prime mortgage lending.

Northern Rock teeters on the brink of nationalisation; confidence in the UK housing market drops to its lowest level since the recession of the early 1990s; share prices bludgeoned; sterling in free-fall; corporate profit warnings at a six-year high; retail investors dash to withdraw their money from collapsing commercial property funds; credit insurers downgraded, threatening multiple defaults in debt markets.

Where next?
7

TheCountOfNowhere,

Northampton 21/01/2008 13:16:23
As of 21/1/2008 the latest rightmove house price index shows that the average East Midland house price dopped 6.1% in ONE MONTH !!!!!!

http://www.rightmove.co.uk/pdf/p/hpi/HousePriceIndex21stJanuary2008.pdf

See page 5 of 9.

And still no news of estate agent closures and job losses, which is remarkable in light of the above article and information.
8

Mark T,

Northampton 28/01/2008 16:09:23
28th Jan 08 – The Guardian reports – ‘House prices dip for fourth month as it takes longer to sell homes’

28th Jan 08 – The Telegraph reports – ‘Property prices fall as buyers stay away’

28th Jan 08 – BBC News online reports – ‘UK economy 'at risk of recession'

28th Jan 08 – The Times reports – ‘Housing costs rise’

What’s happening in Northampton? – Well if you look you will find that one local estate agent has now closed a number of branches?

This has ONLY happened because the market is falling – its therefore not a time to be even thinking of buying a property in a falling market.

It’s a time to be paying off as much debt as soon as possible before the coming recession hits home.

I'm not concerned about Estate agency's job cuts - I'm concerned about the levels of debt people have in Northampton.
Prev
1
Next

 

Comment on this Story

 

In order to post comments you must Register or Sign In

 
 
 
  

 
 


Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.