It is not “that difficult” to get on the property ladder in the UK, the chairman of NatWest has claimed.
Sir Howard Davies, chairman of the major retail bank, said prospective buyers have to save, and that “is the way it always used to be”.
It comes as property values were reported to have increased by 1.7 per cent on average across 2023, with the average home valued £4,800 higher than at the end of 2022, according to the Halifax house price index.
Average house prices rose by 1.1 per cent month-on-month in December, the third monthly rise in a row.
The typical UK house price in December 2023 was £287,105, up from £282,305 in the same month a year earlier.
“I don’t think it is that difficult at the moment”
Asked by BBC Radio 4’s Today programme when it will be easier for people in the UK to get on the property ladder, Sir Howard said: “I don’t think it is that difficult at the moment.”
Pressed about this claim, he added: “You have to save and that is the way it always used to be.”
The NatWest chairman said the 2008 financial crisis had led to safeguarding against “dangers in very easy access to mortgage credit”.
He added: “I totally recognise that there are people who are finding it very difficult to start the process, they will have to save more, but that is, I think, inherent in the change in the financial system as a result of the mistakes that were made in the last global financial crisis.”
Sir Howard also faced questions about the fallout of the debanking saga, in which former Ukip leader Nigel Farage revealed Coutts, a luxury bank owned by NatWest, was planning to close his account.
Mr Farage claimed it was due to his political opinions, but a BBC article appeared soon afterwards claiming the account was closed for commercial reasons.
Dame Alison Rose
The bank’s former chief executive Dame Alison Rose resigned after she admitted she had spoken to a journalist about Mr Farage’s relationship with Coutts.
Asked whether it was reasonable for the banking giant’s board to say they had full confidence in Dame Alison after the reports emerged, Sir Howard said: “I continue to say that the judgment that we made at the time was a reasonable one.
“At the time what we also said was that we wanted an independent legal review, which we commissioned, to be able to satisfy ourselves what was said and what was not, because it was not remotely clear at the time.”
He was also pressed on whether the review carried out by lawyers on behalf of the bank should have interviewed Mr Farage.
Law firm Travers Smith found failures in how the bank treated confidential information and how it communicated with Mr Farage.
Sir Howard responded: “That was a matter for them as to what they thought they needed to understand about the decision-making processes within the bank, and I think it was a very thorough report, it was an independent report, and I have no reason to question the conclusion that they reached.”
Related: UK’s 99th Huf Haus hits the market