Positive outlook for installers as storm clouds gather on the horizon
September was a big month with two of the Government’s key COVID economic stimulus packages, the Stamp Duty Holiday and the Furlough Scheme, coming to an end. Despite this, the housing market continued to grow at record pace, recording the strongest monthly rise for 14-years in September, with a 1.7% increase. It also reversed the downward trend seen in annual house price inflation since the 9.6% peak in May this year, rising from 7.2% in August to 7.4%.
Neil Cooper-Smith in the latest Business Pilot Barometer, reports that the window and door industry also saw a record month of activity, with sales jumping 19% following on from the 20% uplift seen in August, with at face value, the boom in home improvement showing little sign of slowdown. Leads, however, did drop by just under 10%, in a month and quarter, which has historically been important for sales. We suggest that this is however, more indicative of a softening of the link between sales of windows and doors and seasonal since Covid than any impending fall-off in demand.
Longer term, however, there are a number of factors which we believe may contribute to an easing of demand in home improvement later this year, and going into next. This has been in part driven by the energy crisis. September saw a number of high-profile failures in as energy providers struggled to cope with a major increase in wholesale prices. These continued to climb in October which has led to forecasts that the energy price cap could be raised to £1,660 by next summer, that’s a 30% increase on today’s level, something which has potential to reign in consumer spending. It’s also having an impact on manufacturers, who are paying more for the energy that they use in manufacture. This has already manifest itself in our own sector, with energy surcharges already introduced, by the ‘big three’ float glass manufacturers in the UK.
On top of this shortages of workers and supply chain disruption are contributing to higher prices and wage inflation, something flagged by the Bank of England at the end of September, alongside a 1% downgrade in UK economic growth forecasts.
The consumer prices index (CPI), which tracks consumer inflation is currently at 3.2% but is forecast to rise to as much as 4% by the end of this year. If it hits that figure, the Bank of England may attempt to take some heat out of the market by increasing interest rates. This may be from an historically low starting point of 0.10% but it has the potential alongside rising energy prices to contribute to a squeeze on household incomes, which may make homeowners think twice about discretionary spend. With order books still full to the end of the year and beyond for many installers, any thought of a slowdown may seem some way off but there are one or two storm clouds bubbling on the horizon, which in normal circumstances we would expect to lead consumers to reign in their budgets. The caveat to that is that normal still seems a little way off!