In today’s episode of **Dave Talks Politics**:
**London Property Crash Proof – Homes Down 50% Since 2021**
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- Danny Davis and John Mearsheimer discuss the possible Iran response to a potential US invasion – highlighting risks of escalation and proxy retaliation across the Middle East.
- Tucker Carlson warns about Russian plans to nuke the UK and Germany if NATO crosses red lines – framing it as a direct threat in the new era of great power conflict.
- Canadian FM Anita Anand announces a reversal in Canada’s foreign policy toward China: “This is a new government with a new Prime Minister, a new foreign policy and a new geopolitical environment. It is necessary for us to diversify our trading partners and to grow non-US trade by at least 50% over the next 10 years.”
### What’s in the News
1. **This is Money publication – what it is and why it matters**
- This is Money is a UK-based financial news website, part of the Daily Mail group, with a readership of over 5 million monthly visitors (mostly middle-class UK adults aged 35-65 interested in personal finance, property, and investments).
- It focuses on practical money tips, market trends, and consumer issues – known for straightforward, accessible reporting rather than high-brow analysis.
- Significance: This article (Jan 12, 2026) is the first mainstream signal of a London property crash to the public, contrasting years of media narratives (e.g., FT/Guardian) claiming prices were “sideways” or “stable” – it breaks the illusion for everyday readers.
2. **Proof of London house price crash – 50% drops in key areas**
- This is Money (Jan 12, 2026): “Proof London prices are crashing... reveals the types of homes that have fallen 50%.”
- Some London postcodes saw property values drop by up to 50% nominal from 2021 peaks – real terms (inflation-adjusted) declines even steeper.
- Houses that once cost £1 million are now worth £500,000 or less – a massive wealth wipeout for homeowners.
- Years of “sideways” talk hid the pain – this article exposes the reality for millions.
3. **The hardest-hit property types – flats and new builds**
- This is Money (Jan 12, 2026): “Flats and new-build homes have been hit hardest – with some areas seeing 50% falls.”
- High-rise flats, leasehold properties, and new developments (especially in zones 1-3) suffered most – stamp duty changes, high service charges, and oversupply.
- Older terraced houses and Victorian conversions held better – classic London stock more resilient.
- New-build bubble bursts – buyers paid premium for “luxury” that lost half its value in 4 years.
- FT (Jan 2, 2026): “London property market remains weak due to high rates and oversupply in central areas.”
4. **Postcode-level evidence – dramatic real-term falls**
- Specific examples from This is Money (Jan 12, 2026): Certain E14 (Canary Wharf) and SE16 (Rotherhithe) postcodes down 40-50% nominal from 2021 highs.
- Real terms (inflation-adjusted): Losses 55-65% in worst areas – wages didn’t rise to match.
- London average: Flat/down 5-10% nominal from peak, but real declines 15-25% – contrast to “sideways” narratives.
- Postcode lottery – prime areas crater while suburbs hold – affordability crisis deepens.
- Guardian (Jan 2, 2026): “London sees ongoing stagnation, with real terms falls accelerating in central zones.”
5. **Explaining nominal vs real – the hidden pain**
- Nominal: Sticker price – e.g., a home down 50% from £1 million in 2021 to £500,000 in 2026.
- Real (inflation-adjusted): Accounts for rising costs – if cumulative inflation is 30% (ONS CPI 2021-2026), real fall is steeper: £500,000 / 1.3 ≈ £384,615 – down ~61.5% from original real value.
- For beginners: Nominal hides pain; real shows inflation bite – your “cheaper” house buys even less in a world where everything costs more.
- Inflation erodes gains – what looks like a 50% drop is actually worse when you factor in rising living costs.
- FT (Dec 21, 2025): “UK property real returns negative in 2025 due to inflation outpacing nominal growth.”
6. **Average debt-to-equity ratio in hardest-hit areas**
- In E14 (Canary Wharf) and SE16 (Rotherhithe), average loan-to-value (LTV) ratios at purchase were 60-75% (Nationwide, Jan 2, 2026).
- With 50% nominal falls, many owners now have negative equity: e.g., £800k mortgage on a £1M flat in 2021 → now £500k value, underwater by £300k.
- After taxes/fees (stamp duty, agent fees ~2-3%, CGT if sold), net proceeds often leave owners owing more than they receive – trapped.
- You’re stuck – can’t sell without huge loss, can’t remortgage, can’t move – “underwater” homeowners frozen in place.
- Guardian (Dec 2, 2025): “Negative equity traps thousands in London, with LTV ratios worsening amid falls.”
7. **Economic impact – trapped homeowners and stalled market**
- Many folk stuck unable to sell – underwater equity means negative net worth after fees/taxes, creating “lock-in” effect.
- Reduced mobility: Fewer sales, lower transaction taxes, weaker consumer spending (can’t upgrade or relocate).
- Broader economy: Housing wealth effect reverses – confidence drops, spending falls, recession risk rises.
- Trapped owners = frozen economy – no chain reaction of moves, just stagnation and pain.
- FT (Jan 2, 2026): “Negative equity and lock-in effects stifle UK growth, with London hardest hit.”
8. **Tie to global politics – UK antagonism toward Russia backfires**
- UK’s aggressive stance on Russia (sanctions, £12B+ Ukraine aid since 2022) led to energy crisis – gas prices spiked, inflation soared (ONS, Dec 2025).
- Blowback: Sanctions raised costs (energy up 50-100% from pre-war), forcing rate hikes that crushed property.
- Money to Ukraine means less for domestic priorities – fiscal strain adds to housing woes.
- Supporting Ukraine “noble,” but the bill hits home – property crash as collateral damage from geopolitical games.
- Riff material: Geopolitical choices have real economic costs – UK paid the price in energy bills and home values.
9. **New Zealand’s real-term crash deepens – parallels to London**
- National prices down 31.3% real from 2021 peak (CoreLogic, Jan 5, 2026).
- Wellington down 30%+ real; Auckland down 20%+ real – rates, migration loss crush demand (Guardian, Dec 2, 2025).
- Signals economic drag; no rebound as unemployment rises.
- Similar to London: New-builds and urban areas hardest hit, with lock-in effects trapping owners.
10. **Broader UK context – London leads the fall**
- Nationwide (Jan 2, 2026): London up only 0.7% nominal in 2025, but down 15-20% real from 2021 highs.
- South East down 10-15% real – stamp duty and high costs hit hardest.
- Contrast to North/South divide: Regions like North West hold better – London as “canary in the coal mine.”
- Capital city bubble popping first – warning for other Western markets.
11. **Seeing the same in other Western countries?**
- Canada: Down 5-10% real from 2021; Toronto/Vancouver down 25-30% real amid rates/migration (Investment Executive, Dec 8, 2025).
- Germany: Down 5-10% real from 2021 – Berlin stagnation from high rates (FT, Jan 2, 2026).
- France/Italy: Down 10-15% real from 2021 – Paris/Milan weak from uncertainty (Guardian, Dec 21, 2025).
- Japan/SK: Flat to down 5-10% real – demographics/rates drag (Knight Frank, Dec 31, 2025).
- Common thread: Global inflation from energy shocks (Russia sanctions) and rates – yes, it’s spreading.
12. **USA’s Monroe Doctrine – insulation from Western woes?**
- US focus on hemisphere (Venezuela raid, Panama threats) diverts from Europe/Russia blowback.
- Domestic energy production (shale) shields from gas crises hitting UK/EU – property stable or up in many areas.
- But global inflation still hits – Florida down 20-30% real from hurricanes/insurance (Realtor.com, Nov 21, 2025).
- Monroe isolates US from Euro sanctions costs – but risks alienating allies.
OK team, so what does all this mean? Well, it means London’s property crash is real – 50% drops in key areas from 2021 peaks, with real terms showing even bigger losses.
1. If some London homes are down 50% from 2021, is this the start of a broader Western housing reset – or just the capital’s bubble popping?
2. Nominal flat but real terms down 15-30% – is the fiat illusion over, and are homeowners facing devaluation?
3. With rates high and no low-rate prop, will London lead the way to a 2008-style crash across the West – or is this the new normal?