Trustnet Magazine Issue 31 July 2017 | Page 4

YOUR PORTFOLIO / BUY TO LET / BUILT ON SAND? T HE SAYING “SAFE AS HOUSES” appears to be the default headline for any financial journalist writing about property – and despite being more than 150 years old, it still retains its original meaning. Its first documented use was in John Camden Hotten’s dictionary of slang in 1874, but it is believed to have gained popularity in the 1850s when used to describe the relative stability of property as an investment following the bursting of a bubble in railway stocks. Property’s safe haven status has rarely been questioned since then, whether in literary works (in James Joyce’s 1922 novel Ulysses, Leopold Bloom says: “Landlord never dies they say. They buy the place up with gold and still they have all the gold.”) or by the Bank of England’s chief economist Andy Haldane, who last year raised eyebrows in the financial services industry when he stated that property was a better bet for retirement than a pension. The general public appear to have a similar view – recently published results from the ONS Wealth and Assets Survey suggest that UK residents are looking to property as the “workhorse” of their pension savings, with 49 per cent of respondents citing it as the method of saving for retirement they bel