Posts with tag: average house price

Final Pre-Brexit House Price Data Revealed

Published On: July 21, 2016 at 8:43 am

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The final pre-Brexit house price data to be released has been published by the Land Registry, which found that annual price growth has been led by London, while the North East storms ahead with the highest monthly increase.

The figures, for May 2016, show that house prices across the UK have risen by 8.1% on an annual basis, taking the average property value to £211,230. On a monthly basis, house prices rose by 1.1% on April.

The year-on-year growth for the UK was led by England, where house prices increased by 8.9% over the last 12 months, taking the average value to £226,807. Monthly house price growth stood at 1.0% in May.

Final Pre-Brexit House Price Data Revealed

Final Pre-Brexit House Price Data Revealed

Wales saw an annual price rise of just 3.6%, which takes the average property value to £142,568. Over the month, house prices were up by 0.9% in May.

However, the greatest annual price increase was recorded in London, where values are up by 13.6% since May 2015 and the average price now stands at £472,163. On a month-on-month basis, values rose by 1.5%.

Regional house price data

Although London experienced the greatest increase in annual house price growth, the North East recorded the highest monthly increase, at 2.1%.

Despite this, the North East saw the lowest annual price growth, of 3.2%.

The most significant monthly price fall was experienced in the North West, with a decline of 0.3%.

Property sales 

Following a surge in property sales in March 2016, ahead of the Stamp Duty deadline for buy-to-let landlords and second homebuyers, transactions fell by 42.3% in April to the lowest level since May 2013. Data for May 2016 shows that sales have only recovered slightly since this substantial decrease.

Figures for March, the most up-to-date Land Registry data available, show that the amount of completed house sales in England soared by 52% to 102,597 annually.

Wales also saw a huge increase, of 49%, to 5,002 sales. However, London experienced the greatest rise in property sales, of a huge 60.6%, reaching 14,783 in March.

The founder and CEO of eMoov.co.uk, Russell Quirk, comments: “The latest official house price index for May and last of the pre-Brexit property landscape echoes that of its predecessors from Halifax and Nationwide.

“A healthy annual increase of nearly 9% across England, with May continuing the upward trend seen for a while now, with a further 1% increase.”

He adds: “However, despite London seeing the largest annual growth, perhaps the shock of the bunch is the North East outperforming the capital with the greatest monthly growth of 2.1%.

“We’ve monitored the slow but steady demand growth in the North East, and it seems that this is starting to translate into an increase in prices, albeit marginal at the moment.

“In terms of sales volume, the market has certainly levelled out since the artificial spike of April’s Stamp Duty deadline. Although there has only been a slight recovery, this is to be expected and will probably take a month or two more before it returns to a level we might expect for this time of year.”

Annual House Price Growth Eases in June

Published On: July 7, 2016 at 8:36 am

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Annual house price growth eased off in June, down from 9.2% in May to 8.4%, according to the latest House Price Index from Halifax.

The report found that the annual rate of house price growth seen in the three months to June is the lowest since July 2015, when it was 7.8%.

Over the quarter, house prices were 1.2% higher in the three months to June than in the preceding three months (January to March). This was slightly below May’s 1.5% increase and is the lowest

Annual House Price Growth Eases in June

Annual House Price Growth Eases in June

rise on this basis since December 2014.

On a monthly basis, house prices rose by 1.3% between May and June, following a 0.9% increase in May. However, the report notes that month-on-month changes can be erratic, and the quarterly data is a more reliable indicator of underlying trends.

The average house price in the UK now stands at £216,823.

The Housing Economist at Halifax, Martin Ellis, comments on the figures: “There is evidence that the underlying pace of house price growth may be easing. House prices in the three months to June were 1.2% higher than in the previous quarter, down from 1.5% in May. The annual rate of growth fell from 9.2% in May to 8.4%, the lowest since July 2015.

“House prices continue to increase, albeit at a slower rate, but this preceded the EU referendum result, therefore, it is far too early to determine any impact since.”

The latest research by estate agents suggests that property sales and new instructions have surged since the Brexit outcome.

Halifax has found that home sales stabilised in May, following the introduction of the 3% Stamp Duty surcharge for buy-to-let landlords and second homebuyers in April.

A rush to complete sales ahead of the tax hike caused a sharp rise in March, followed by a significant decline in April. However, sales stabilised in May, rising by 1.5%. Despite this, the number of sales recorded over the month (89,700) remained 16% below the average over the six months to February.

The index also shows that mortgage approvals rose modestly in May, after the Stamp Duty change affected the market. The volume of mortgage approvals for house purchase – a leading indicator of completed property sales – rose by 1.3% between April and May. However, approvals in the three months to May were 6% lower than in the previous three-month period.

The founder and CEO of online estate agent eMoov.co.uk, Russell Quirk, comments on the data: “Today’s figures show, even in the wake of Brexit, that the UK housing market is fundamentally strong. With a continuing, acute shortage of new housing being built and a growing population, even if immigration numbers are now curtailed, the demand vs. supply imbalance and the prospect of even low interest rates will underpin the market – even if there are short-term confidence wobbles fuelled by a media hungry for bad news.”

House Price Growth Continues to Rise in June

Published On: July 1, 2016 at 9:38 am

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Annual house price growth in the UK continued to rise during June, despite unpredictable demand levels and uncertainty surrounding the EU referendum, according to the latest House Price Index from Nationwide.

The building society reports that the north-south divide across the UK continued to widen during the second quarter (Q2) of the year, while the average rate of house price growth rose to 5.1%.

Over the past 12 months, annual house price growth in the UK has remained fairly stable, ranging between 3-6%. This trend was maintained in June, with price growth standing at 5.1% on average, up slightly from the 4.7% seen in May. The average house price in the UK is now £204,968, up from £204,368 in the previous month.

However, the Chief Economist at the Nationwide, Robert Gardner, notes that it has been difficult to record levels of demand: “It has become difficult to gauge the underlying pace of demand in recent months, due to the surge in house purchase activity in March ahead of the introduction of Stamp Duty on second homes on 1st April.

“It will therefore be difficult to assess how much of the likely fall back in transactions in the quarters ahead is because buyers brought forward purchases to avoid additional Stamp Duty liabilities, and how much is due to increased economic uncertainty following the referendum result. Gauging the likely impact on house prices will be even more difficult.”

House Price Growth Continues to Rise in June

House Price Growth Continues to Rise in June

Gardner explains how the recent Brexit result will affect the property sector: “Ultimately, conditions in the housing market will be determined by conditions in the wider economy, especially the labour market. It is too early to assess the impact of the referendum vote on the economy. However, it is encouraging that the labour market had remained robust in recent months, with solid employment growth and the unemployment rate declining to an 11-year low in April. Borrowing costs also remained close to historic lows.

“Moreover, the lack of homes on the market – with estate agents continuing to report a record low number of properties on their books – will also provide underlying support for prices, even if demand softens.”

The latest index reveals that regional house price growth has also maintained the trend recorded in recent quarters, with southern parts of England seeing faster rates of growth than the north.

Nationwide reports that the outer metropolitan region again experienced the strongest rate of annual house price growth in Q2, at 12.4%, up from 12.2% in Q1. Despite a slowdown in Q2, London was still the second strongest region, with prices up by 9.9% to a new all-time high – some 54% above pre-recession levels, compared with 10% for overall UK house prices.

The north of England is the only area to record an average house price decline in Q2. As a result, it has replaced Northern Ireland as the UK’s least expensive place to live. Average prices in the north are currently 9% below their pre-crisis peak.

Gardner comments: “It remains the case that the pace of house price growth tends to decline as you move from the south to the north of the country, even though prices in the south are already well above pre-crisis levels, while in Northern Ireland, Scotland, Wales and the north of England, prices remain well below their 2007 highs.

“It remains unclear how long this pattern will persist, and whether the north-south divide in house price levels will continue to widen.”

So how will the London property market fare in the coming years?

“The outlook for London is even more difficult to assess, because landlords and overseas buyers play a larger role in the market, and the outlook for demand from these sources is particularly uncertain,” says Gardner. “It is unclear how recent Stamp Duty changes and upcoming changes to the tax deductibility of landlords’ expenses will affect investor demand in the years ahead.”

He continues: “Similarly, it is difficult to gauge how sentiment from overseas buyers will be impacted by increased economic uncertainty on the one hand, and the sharp decline in sterling on the other (which, if sustained, reduces the cost of UK property in foreign currency terms).

“Property prices in the capital have been supported by extremely robust labour market conditions, as well as strong investor demand in recent years. Employment is now over 17% higher than its pre-crisis peak, compared to 6% higher in the UK overall. How labour market conditions evolve will be key, though valuations in the capital are already stretched by historic standards – the price of a typical London property on our measure (£472,384) is 12 times average earnings in the capital.”

The CEO of online estate agent eMoov.co.uk, Russell Quirk, comments on the figures: “This month’s Nationwide House Price Index has shown that the housing market is sound and defined by a cemented imbalance between low supply and ever increasing demand, low mortgage costs and a deeply-ingrained aspirational home owning culture.”

House Price Growth in Bristol Surpasses London

Published On: June 29, 2016 at 9:35 am

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Bristol has become the first city outside of the South East to record greater house price growth than London for more than six years, according to the latest UK Cities House Price Index from Hometrack.

House Price Growth in Bristol Surpasses London

House Price Growth in Bristol Surpasses London

Annual house price growth in Bristol reached 14.1% in May, surpassing London (13.8%) and Cambridge (13.4) to top the chart.

Hometrack reports that this trend has seen large regional cities experiencing the highest growth rates over the past three months, led by Liverpool (5.4%), Bristol (4.2%), Manchester (3.9%) and Leeds (3.7%), driven by an improving economic outlook and strong demand from landlords ahead of the 1st April Stamp Duty deadline. Overall, city level house price growth rose from 10.8% in April to 11.2% in May.

However, London was one of eight cities to record slower annual house price growth, down from 14.2% in April to 13.8% in May.

House price growth across UK cities

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Hometrack expects to see a rapid deceleration in house price growth over the next six months, particularly in the capital, as buyers approach a wait-and-see approach to assess the short-term impact of the Brexit.

The Insight Director at Hometrack, Richard Donnell, comments: “House price inflation in major cities outside of London and the South East, such as Bristol and Liverpool, has been accelerating, but it is now expected to slow towards low single digits in the coming months, as demand cools on the back of the EU referendum result. At present, we expect housing market turnover to bear the brunt of increased uncertainty rather than house prices.

“Standing back from the immediate turmoil in financial markets, the reality is that the fundamentals of the housing market remain unchanged, with record low mortgage rates and a wide imbalance between supply and demand. The UK doesn’t have a problem with housing demand – the more important question is how many buyers and sellers feel confident to participate in the market in the near term.”

He adds: “Market sentiment can change quickly, and the sooner a clear picture emerges over the likely impact on the economy and the outlook for jobs and mortgage rates, the sooner transaction volumes should stabilise and more buyers return to the market.”

UK House Prices Rise to Record High

Published On: June 21, 2016 at 10:11 am

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The average price of a house in the UK soared by over £20,000 during the last financial year, reaching an all-time high. UK residential property price inflation is now back at double-digit figures after two years of slower growth, reports The House Shop.

Plenty of prospective buyers chasing the decreasing supply of houses for sale has shot prices up by £21,500+ compared to March 2015. That’s a 10.1% price rise. The most recent Halifax home cost index shows the average cost of a house in the UK is now at £214,811. As well as being the largest increase since July of 2014, it’s the second largest over all since the credit crunch that happened late 2007.

Housing prices fell by little (1.5%) in February 2016, before rising around 2.6% again in March.

Halifax derives their data from homebuyers who apply to Halifax for home mortgages. Martin Ellis, a Housing Economist for Halifax, has stated that the property price rise is driven by the current supply vs demand imbalance, which he classified as “acute”. February of this year marks three months in a row of increased numbers of new houses being completed.

Although the amount of new houses for sale hitting the market has increased in the last few months, that number is clearly not keeping up with a concurrent rise in demand.

According to another major mortgage lender, Nationwide, house prices actually dropped for two consecutive months last year in July and August, causing some concern that the market might be turning around. Nonetheless, since the price drop that happened from late 2007-early 2009, the UK market has been steadily rising, and the latest price boost shows that a couple of months of consecutive house price falls are not at all a sign of a real estate market downturn.

Effect of the EU referendum

UK House Prices Rise to Record High

UK House Prices Rise to Record High

Many leading economists and newspapers have shared speculation and warnings that UK property prices could fall if the UK electorate decides to vote UK out of the European Union in Thursday’s referendum. However, economists have published advice that inflation could rise as well as fall, and the property market could go either way. The only thing that it seems safe to say is that some buyers and sellers might be cautious over the next few months, hoping for a sharp price decline or rise, respectively, after June 23rd.

It’s been common lately to hear market managers warning that businesses will pull out of London if the UK withdraws from the EU. But many UK nationals also have property elsewhere in the EU, and might find post-Brexit that their finances will be in much better shape if they return home. For example, UK citizens who are currently living abroad and receiving their pension will no longer be able to. Even for financially independent UK nationals, they may find it much more difficult to come and go between the UK and their destination of choice. There are thousands of investors poised right now ready to buy their place in the sun abroad, and the referendum results will swing their purchases in many cases.

Rush of landlords and second homebuyers

Taking these cautions into consideration, Nationwide’s data shows that second homebuyers were in fact rushing to buy before the Stamp Duty rise in April. New alterations to Stamp Duty mean that property investors buying to let will now have to foot a 3% fee as of April. Nationwide reported an average 5.7% rise in prices over the last year, compared to Halifax’s 10%. Whichever figures you go by, it’s possible that the March jump in prices will be followed by a slight slowdown between April and June. This slowdown should just be on average, and the market will probably stay robust due to demand from people moving house and first time buyers.

The Chief Economist over at IHS Global Insight expects the upward pressure on house prices to ease after April due to this slight “waning” of second home buying interest. The prices that we are seeing right now, according to Halifax’s data alone, have pushed the price-to-profit ratio right back up to record amounts not seen since the last big property boom in the early 2000s.

Another possible influence on the market this year might be the fact that property inflation UK-wide has increased significantly more than wage rises over the last few years. This might be expected to slow buying, but borrowers have been able to keep up with more expensive houses due to low mortgage lending rates and being able to extend the repayment terms. Overall, optimism for property in the UK looks set to continue to outpace widespread economic caution and pessimism, regardless of the results of the Brexit referendum.

In addition to low mortgage rates and appealing interest rates, a continued squeeze on supply is keeping prices high. The high ratio of buyers compared to sellers means that rival buyers are pushing prices up. Although investors are going to be understandably more reluctant after the April rate rise, there should be plenty of new buyers ready to rush in and fill the void.

Flat prices, in particular, have risen rapidly since 2008 (compared to other property markets), and this is especially true in London. HouseSimple.com’s Chief Executive, Alex Gosling, is concerned that the record high that house prices reached up to March might lead some market watchers to speculate that property market must be spiraling out of control. But Gosling believes that the figures reflect investors seeking to avoid the April rate changes and that there will be a soft slide back to a healthy, more sustainable market increase over the coming months.

Asking Prices Hit Record High as Listings Drop, Reports Rightmove

Published On: June 20, 2016 at 9:28 am

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The impending EU referendum has failed to dampen valuations, with new asking prices hitting record highs, while the number of property listings has dropped by just over 5%, reports Rightmove.

The latest House Price Index shows that the average price of property coming onto the market over the past month reached a new high of £310,471, up by 0.8% on April and over £100,000 above the £209,000 that the Government’s new index reported.

Asking Prices Hit Record High as Listings Drop, Reports Rightmove

Asking Prices Hit Record High as Listings Drop, Reports Rightmove

The latest rise in asking prices contrasts to the figures reported in the run-up to the May 2015 general election, when uncertainty caused a price decline of 0.1% over the month.

Despite prices rising, fewer new vendors are coming to the market, with this month’s new listings now 5.3% below the monthly average for this time of year. The most reluctant sellers are those with larger homes – four bedrooms or more – with 6.6% fewer vendors.

However, homes are now selling faster, with the average number of days to sell at 57 in May, down from 60 in the previous month. This time last year, it was at 65 days.

The index also reports that the average price for first time buyers and second steppers rose by 8% annually, while they were up by 3.3% at the top of the housing ladder.

On a monthly basis, first time buyer prices dropped by 2.4%, while they were up by 1.8% for second steppers and 0.7% at the top of the ladder.

The Director and Housing Market Analyst at Rightmove, Miles Shipside, comments: “If you’re debating whether to trade up and make a big financial commitment, you naturally might hesitate before putting your property on the market just a few weeks before you know the vote outcome.

“With mere days to go, the number of new listings is still about 95% of the norm for this time of year, so the drop-off is relatively small in spite of what many are calling the biggest vote of our generation.

“This could mean that people are struggling to assess what the impacts might be, or are choosing to ignore them until they become more apparent.”

He explains: “A vote to remain should mean that the housing market quickly returns to its previous norm, but a vote to leave would create political and economic uncertainty, which historically has had more serious repercussions.”

Yesterday, Rightmove’s rival portal, Zoopla, warned that a vote to leave the EU would cause house prices to drop by 20%.