Time to cough up for the Equitable Life members as well

News that publication of the long awaited report by the Parliamentary Ombudsman into the Equitable Life debacle has been postponed until next summer  is yet another insult to the society’s long suffering members.

Campaigners hade been hoping that the report by Ann Abraham would shame the  government into paying compensation to the thousands of members who have lost significant portions of their pensions due to the under funding  by the insurer of generous guarantees which led to the near collapse of the society.

The postponement until April next year is the third delay to the publication of the final report on the Ann Abraham’s investigations. The current delay is due delays in responses from the Treasury, the Financial Services Authority and other organisations. 

Assuming that the report is published in April 2008 (and I wouldn’t be surprised if there are further delays), this will be four years since the Ombudsman’s inquiry first started and eight years since the seriousness of the underfunding at Equitable Life first became apparent.

Ann Abraham herself complained of the excessive detail of the Treasury’s response to the original draft of her report and  Paul Braithwaite of the Equitable Life Members’ Action Group accused the Treasury of “throwing the kitchen sink” at it, in order to delay its publication until after Gordon Brown had left the Treasury.

The government’s deliberate delaying tactics in this matter are nothing short of disgraceful, given that the High Court, the European Commission and Ann Abraham have all recommended compensation for the Equitable Life members.

As another group of pension victims – the 125,000 individuals who lost their pensions through the demise of final salary schemes before 2004 – look set to win their  long run fight for compensation, the Government should bite the bullet and face up to its responsibilities towards the equally deserving Equitable Life members.

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Stand by for a house price correction

So now it’s official. UK house prices slid 0.8 per cent in November, their biggest fall since June 1995 and the first drop in price since February 2006, according to the Nationwide’s latest house price survey.

The annual rate of house price inflation now stands at 6.9 per cent, down from 9.7 per cent in October.

Well, what’s new? A combination of higher mortgage interest rates, tighter lending criteria, lower loan to values and the introduction of Home Information Packs are all having a dire effect on the housing market.

Small wonder, then, that the number of mortgage approvals fell to a near three-year low in October, nearly a third less than in October 2006.

As mortgage approvals are a key indicator of activity in the housing market, Nationwide sees this as pointing towards a rapid downturn in the market. Land Registry figures indicate that even prices in London, which were buoyed by City bonuses and wealthy foreign investors for much of 2007, have now started to slow.

Commentators like Capital Economics who were predicting a house price crash of up to 30 per cent a few years (since revised to 10 per cent) may not be so far of the mark.

All of which could be a good thing. The London market, in particular, was a bubble waiting to burst and if prices fall by 10-20 per cent, so be it. Sub prime mortgage holders’ misery, could turn into a blessing to all those who have been priced out of the market in recent years – first time buyers in particular. But anyone wanting to release the equity in their home by trading down had better get a move on.

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