http://www.spiegel.de/international/business/0,1518,504406,00.html


*Britain's Coming Credit Crisis*

By Kerry Capell

Steep housing prices and a dependence on financial services make its economy
vulnerable. Some predict a blow to credit might even be worse -- much worse
-- than in the US.

Could any country be more exposed to the current credit crunch than the U.S.?
You bet, and that place is Britain. Unlike most of its European neighbors,
Britain shares many of America's financial traits-and problems. Access to
cheap credit has fueled a decade of unprecedented growth, with home prices
tripling over the past decade, a faster rise than in the U.S. Consumer
spending has skyrocketed, now making up roughly two-thirds of the country's
total outlays. And the overall economy in Britain is more dependent on
financial services than it is in the States.

Add it all up, and "Britain is likely to suffer more severely than the U.S."
if the current market turmoil continues, says Danny Gabay, director of
Fathom Financial Consulting in London. How severely? Gabay and many other
economists think annual growth in Britain could drop to about half the 3% or
so it has clocked in recent years.

Roughly half of Britain's growth in the last 18 months has come from
financial and business services-everything from accounting and legal advice
to real estate. Together these sectors bring in 30% of Britain's national
income, far more than in the U.S., says Peter Spencer, an economics
professor at the University of York. If a fall-off in financial services
were to put the brakes on leveraged buyouts, mergers, acquisitions, and
offerings of credit derivatives, thousands of jobs could be lost, primarily
at banks, brokerages, and other financial outfits, the Centre for Economics
& Business Research Ltd. estimates.

As in the U.S., consumers are another key driver of the economy-and today
they're among the most indebted in the world. British consumers owe $2.7
trillion on credit cards, mortgages, and other consumer loans-or more than
the country's entire economic output. Household debt as a percentage of
gross disposable income is 166%, compared with 127% in the U.S. So it's
hardly surprising that in the past year, British banks have had to write off
$18 billion in bad debts, mostly consumer borrowing.

Such write-offs could be just the beginning if housing prices start to fall.
Despite little growth in incomes, consumer spending has remained strong as
Britons have borrowed against the rising value of their homes. That
shouldn't be a problem if housing prices climb an additional 40% over the
next five years due to supply constraints, as predicted by the National
Housing Federation, an affordable-housing advocate.

But some economists are less sanguine. With the average home now costing
$370,000-roughly 11 times the average salary-housing is less affordable than
at any time in the past 15 years. The latest data show house price inflation
running at about 9.5% annually for the month of August, but the rate is
starting to slow. And in Yorkshire, Wales, and other areas, prices are even
falling. There are already signs of strain as homeowners start to feel the
pinch of five consecutive interest-rate hikes, to 5.75%, in the past year.
Foreclosures and personal bankruptcies are up by 30% in the first half of
2007, compared with the same period last year. Says Jamie Dannhauser, an
economist at Lombard Street Research in London: "The pain is only going to
get worse."

Although most believe that the Bank of England is unlikely to raise rates
further anytime soon, the cost of servicing mortgages is expected to climb.
That's because the crisis in the financial markets has raised the cost of
borrowing for lenders, who will in turn pass on those costs to consumers,
many of whom have adjustable rates. Subprime mortgage rates have risen by as
much as 2.5 percentage points this summer. Although subprime debt accounts
for about 10% of the market in Britain, compared with 25% in the U.S., the
growing popularity of so-called self-cert loans, where buyers don't need to
present proof of income, is on the rise. Some brokers estimate that they
account for one-third of new mortgages issued in the past year.

It's clear it wouldn't take much to do significant damage to the two pillars
of Britain's economy. Says Maurice Fitzpatrick, an analyst at tax advisory
firm Grant Thornton in London: "Because so much of economic growth relies on
consumer spending and the City of London, even a small event can have
disproportionate consequences."


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