Housing Unpacked

Burnham, bonds and the mortgage squeeze

45 min · 22 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Burnham, bonds and the mortgage squeeze

Descripción

Tom is joined by Helen Thomas, CEO of Blonde Money, to unpack the political shockwaves around Andy Burnham’s attempt to become an MP, the growing tension between government policy and bond markets, and what it means for mortgages and property prices. With inflation risks building from energy disruption and markets wary of looser fiscal policy, they explore why mortgage rates may stay higher for longer and what a potential leadership change - or even an early election - could mean for the housing market. Against such a fast-moving backdrop, they explore the merits of fixing a mortgage for two or five years. ⁠Subscribe⁠⁠ [https://preferences.knightfrank.com/subscribe-to-uk-residential-outlook]to Tom Bill's UK Residential Outlook, for all the latest properties, exclusive market analysis, news and data.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Housing Unpacked!

Empezar

2 meses por 1 €

Después 4,99 € / mes · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts exclusivos
  • 20 horas de audiolibros / mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

20 episodios

Portada del episodio Burnham, bonds and the mortgage squeeze

Burnham, bonds and the mortgage squeeze

Tom is joined by Helen Thomas, CEO of Blonde Money, to unpack the political shockwaves around Andy Burnham’s attempt to become an MP, the growing tension between government policy and bond markets, and what it means for mortgages and property prices. With inflation risks building from energy disruption and markets wary of looser fiscal policy, they explore why mortgage rates may stay higher for longer and what a potential leadership change - or even an early election - could mean for the housing market. Against such a fast-moving backdrop, they explore the merits of fixing a mortgage for two or five years. ⁠Subscribe⁠⁠ [https://preferences.knightfrank.com/subscribe-to-uk-residential-outlook]to Tom Bill's UK Residential Outlook, for all the latest properties, exclusive market analysis, news and data.

22 de may de 202645 min
Portada del episodio City Hall Has Lost Its Grip on Housing: London Mayoral Candidate Peter Murray

City Hall Has Lost Its Grip on Housing: London Mayoral Candidate Peter Murray

On this episode of Housing Unpacked, Tom Bill is joined by Peter Murray OBE, co‑founder of New London Architecture, founder of the London Festival of Architecture and a former design adviser to two London Mayors. As he prepares his own run for London Mayor in 2028 as an independent, Murray explains the tipping point behind his decision to enter politics, driven by what he sees as a lack of understanding in City Hall about the mayor’s responsibility to deliver homes, infrastructure and better streets. He sets out his “get stuff done” philosophy, arguing that housing delivery in London has been choked by uncertainty, slow planning and strained relations with the development sector. Drawing on decades of experience across architecture, journalism and real estate, Murray outlines proposals to accelerate housing delivery, revive SME builders, restore certainty for investors, and bring design back to the top table through a City Architect. The conversation also covers density, tall buildings, affordability, transport reform, road pricing and what a more pragmatic, delivery‑focused mayor could mean for London’s future. ⁠Subscribe [https://preferences.knightfrank.com/subscribe-to-uk-residential-outlook]⁠⁠ to Tom Bill's UK Residential Outlook, for all the latest properties, exclusive market analysis, news and data.

5 de may de 202645 min
Portada del episodio Renters’ Rights Act: The End of the Hobbyist Landlord?

Renters’ Rights Act: The End of the Hobbyist Landlord?

In this episode of Housing Unpacked, Tom is joined by Louisa Sedgwick, managing director of mortgages at buy-to-let specialist lender Paragon Bank to explore the Renters’ Rights Act and what it really means for landlords and tenants. They discuss her involvement lobbying two separate governments on issues like the end of Section 21, the shift to periodic tenancies, tighter controls around asking rents, and why well‑intentioned reforms may squeeze supply, push rents higher, and disadvantage more vulnerable renters. The conversation also explores the recent mortgage market shock caused by the Middle East conflict and the looming challenge of meeting new energy efficiency standards. https://preferences.knightfrank.com/subscribe-to-uk-residential-outlook

20 de abr de 202647 min
Portada del episodio Middle East Ceasefire to Boost Buyer Sentiment more than Mortgage Market

Middle East Ceasefire to Boost Buyer Sentiment more than Mortgage Market

If it holds, the Middle East ceasefire will boost activity in the housing market as spring gets underway, but it hasn’t removed the pressure keeping mortgage rates high. In this episode of Housing Unpacked, Tom Bill is joined by Helen Thomas, CEO of Blonde Money, to explain why borrowing costs are unlikely to snap back to mid-February levels. They explore how the conflict will create a lasting supply‑side inflation shock, why bond investors still see the UK as a risk, what that means for mortgage rates, and the competing pressures on the Bank of England. The discussion also examines whether an internal challenge or the bond market is more likely to bring Keir Starmer’s premiership to a premature end. ⁠Subscribe [https://preferences.knightfrank.com/subscribe-to-uk-residential-outlook]⁠⁠ to Tom Bill's UK Residential Outlook, for all the latest properties, exclusive market analysis, news and data.

9 de abr de 202646 min
Portada del episodio Fighting the Last War: Markets, Mortgages and the Bank of England’s Hawkish Misfire

Fighting the Last War: Markets, Mortgages and the Bank of England’s Hawkish Misfire

In this episode, Tom and Michael Brown unpack how the Bank of England’s unexpectedly hawkish messaging last week helped ignite a sharp repricing across markets already rattled by the Middle East conflict, pushing swap rates up by nearly a full percentage point, and exposing the UK’s fragile fiscal backdrop. They explore why the Bank may be fighting the wrong inflation battle and what this means for borrowers weighing two‑ versus five‑year fixes, and why both housing market activity and policy decisions are now hostage to fast‑shifting geopolitical and energy‑price risks. ⁠Subscribe⁠⁠ [https://preferences.knightfrank.com/subscribe-to-uk-residential-outlook] to Tom Bill's UK Residential Outlook, for all the latest properties, exclusive market analysis, news and data.

25 de mar de 202638 min