Posts with tag: Benham and Reeves

London tenants seeing ‘more manageable’ rent prices during pandemic

Published On: April 28, 2021 at 9:20 am

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Categories: Lettings News,Tenant News

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London has become a more affordable place to rent during the pandemic, according to research by London lettings and estate agent Benham and Reeves.

Benham and Reeves analysed the rent to income ratio prior to the pandemic and found that across London, 64.4% of the average net monthly earnings was required to cover the average rent.

The agent also analysed how this has changed based on the latest rental data combined with the latest earnings data from the ONS, whose estimates included furloughed employees and were based on actual payments made to these employees from company payrolls and the hours on which this pay was calculated.

The research shows that across London, this ongoing financial support via the furlough scheme and a reduction in the cost of renting means that the average London tenant is now paying just 60.2% of their income to cover the cost of renting.

This trend has been seen across 23 of the capital’s boroughs and in some cases has been far greater. However, areas such as Islington and Haringey have seen rent increases.

Pre-COVIDCurrently
LocationAverage Rent (Sep 2019)Average Net Salary (Oct 2019)Rent to Income RatioAverage Rent (Sep 2020)Average Net Salary (Nov 2020)Rent to Income RatioChange in Rent to Income Ratio
London£1,697£2,63464.4%£1,639£2,72160.2%-4.2%
Camden£2,536£3,40374.5%£2,012£3,22362.4%-12.1%
Lewisham£1,324£2,31657.2%£1,322£2,64350.0%-7.1%
Kingston upon Thames£1,390£2,77850.0%£1,288£2,98143.2%-6.8%
Hammersmith and Fulham£2,117£3,21565.9%£2,016£3,28861.3%-4.5%
Barking and Dagenham£1,194£1,80566.2%£1,206£1,95161.8%-4.3%
Harrow£1,407£2,36559.5%£1,445£2,61155.3%-4.1%
Hounslow£1,432£2,26063.4%£1,416£2,37059.8%-3.6%
Ealing£1,463£2,42260.4%£1,568£2,75856.9%-3.6%
Kensington and Chelsea£3,053£5,19058.8%£2,977£5,34955.7%-3.2%
Bromley£1,321£2,77947.5%£1,318£2,96644.4%-3.1%
Hillingdon£1,270£2,09760.6%£1,244£2,16257.5%-3.0%
Hackney£1,834£2,36377.6%£1,860£2,48175.0%-2.6%
Waltham Forest£1,309£2,26857.7%£1,359£2,45855.3%-2.4%
Bexley£1,106£2,36046.9%£1,113£2,49844.6%-2.3%
Redbridge£1,318£2,38555.3%£1,311£2,46553.2%-2.1%
Brent£1,535£2,20669.6%£1,494£2,19568.1%-1.5%
Croydon£1,136£2,26250.2%£1,155£2,36348.9%-1.3%
Merton£1,530£2,78754.9%£1,639£3,06053.6%-1.3%
Barnet£1,523£2,49061.2%£1,485£2,47660.0%-1.2%
Enfield£1,310£2,13261.5%£1,301£2,15060.5%-1.0%
Havering£1,169£2,30950.6%£1,175£2,36449.7%-0.9%
Westminster£3,018£4,04374.6%£2,822£3,80374.2%-0.4%
Newham£1,424£1,99971.2%£1,476£2,08370.9%-0.4%
Southwark£1,654£2,71161.0%£1,720£2,81661.1%0.1%
Lambeth£1,754£2,56168.5%£1,961£2,83869.1%0.6%
Richmond upon Thames£1,857£3,74949.5%£1,940£3,86950.1%0.6%
Tower Hamlets£1,803£3,15957.1%£1,810£3,10858.2%1.2%
Greenwich£1,404£2,64953.0%£1,494£2,75554.2%1.2%
Sutton£1,167£2,33550.0%£1,133£2,20651.4%1.4%
Wandsworth£1,883£3,39555.5%£1,948£3,39357.4%1.9%
Haringey£1,558£2,33966.6%£1,644£2,29271.7%5.1%
Islington£1,914£3,19359.9%£1,908£2,90665.7%5.7%
Data SourcesONS Private Rental Market SummaryONS Employee Earnings in the UKRent as a percentage of net incomeONS Private Rental Market SummaryONS Employee Earnings in the UKRent as a percentage of net incomeChange between rent to income ratios

Marc von Grundherr, Director of Benham and Reeves, comments: “The pandemic has caused a large degree of financial instability for tenants and landlords alike and so the last two years have been far from smooth sailing for those within the London rental sector. 

“However, one silver lining to the ongoing uncertainty caused by Covid does seem to be an increase in rental affordability across much of the capital.

“This has come about due to two driving factors. The first being a drop in demand which has caused many landlords to slash rents in order to secure a tenant and recoup some form of rental income.  

“The second has been the ongoing financial support of the furlough scheme which has made the difference between retaining employment and losing it for a great deal of people. As a result, they’ve been able to maintain some form of income, albeit at a lower level, and this has enabled them to cover the cost of renting.

“As it stands, the cost of renting is more manageable now than it was two years ago and so those returning to the capital should be able to secure a decent rate of rent for the duration of their initial tenancy. 

“Of course, as we do return to normality, this growing demand is likely to bring rental prices back to their pre-pandemic highs and so any tenants with intentions of snagging a deal should act sooner rather than later.”

Government UK House Price Index shows annual growth but month-on-month standstill

Published On: April 23, 2021 at 8:17 am

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Categories: Property News

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The latest Government UK House Price Index has been released, showing an average annual increase of 8.6% for February 2021.

The index also shows a 0.0% month-on-month change from January, with the average price of a property in the UK sitting at £250,341.

Colby Short, founder and CEO of GetAgent.co.uk, comments: “The market remains in a very strong position despite monthly price growth sitting still and this was no doubt down to two factors. The first being the continued difficulties in securing a buyer caused by lockdown restrictions and the second being a drop in momentum on the run-up to what would have been the Stamp Duty holiday deadline. 

“While the latter will no doubt have an impact when it does arrive, it’s far more likely price growth will hit a bump in the road rather than a brick wall. The main reason for this is a severe shortage of housing stock available to satisfy demand and so even when buyer numbers reduce, we’re likely to see demand continue to outstrip supply which will keep the rate of house price growth stable.”

James Forrester, Managing Director of Barrows and Forrester, comments: “Many will be quick to panic at the sight of a month-on-month price growth stall but this simply doesn’t portray the overall health of the market, in the same way our efforts in combatting Covid can???t be assessed on such a short-term basis.

“The long-term picture shows a market in very good health, driven by strong regional performances across the board, from the South West, the East Midlands, Yorkshire and the Humber and the North West. As we enter what is often the busiest time of year, we can expect the market temperature to rise and house prices to follow suit for the remainder of the year, at the least.???

Marc von Grundherr, Director of Benham and Reeves, comments: “Although London continues to trail the rest in terms of the rate of house price growth, we’re certainly starting to see an early indication that the market is on the up. Tenant and homebuyer demand has started to lift during the first quarter of the year and this is only likely to grow stronger as lockdown restrictions are lifted and a return to professional and social normality continues.”

“While the market isn’t running as hot as other UK regions at present, this should work in the favour of the London market in the long run. A far more steady return to form is likely to be made and this will ensure that any crash landing as a result of the Stamp Duty holiday ending is going to minimised within the capital.”

Nicky Stevenson, Managing Director at national estate agent group Fine & Country, comments: “The property market remains in a parallel universe at odds with the wider reality everyone has been living. It’s been a gloom-defying 12 months given that last March, when the first lockdown arrived, the market seized up, mortgage products were withdrawn and everyone held their breath.

“Fast forward a year and you no longer need to be a mystic or expert to predict what comes next and that’s precisely the point. Confidence is king and there’s plenty of it out there. That would have remained true even if the Stamp Duty holiday had ended. Now that it hasn’t, that’s just more fuel on the fire but its impact has been overstated all along.

“When it does finally end at the end of September, the market is likely to be cooling by then anyway after another bumper summer. Markets don’t move in straight lines but in the meantime the busy summer season and high demand, which is still growing faster than supply as the weather improves, is doing nothing to slow price rises.”

Latest Government UK House Price Index reveals jump in annual price change

Published On: November 19, 2020 at 10:55 am

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The latest Government UK House Price Index has been published, showing that house prices have seen an annual increase of 4.7%.

The UK House Price Index summary for September 2020 states that the monthly price increase for a property within the UK was 1.7%. The average house price was recorded as £244,513.

Nicky Stevenson, Managing Director at national estate agent group Fine & Country, comments: “No part of the UK economy has flown over the COVID storm like the property market and the picture in September strengthened across the board.

“This is the first time the index will have included the first sales that didn’t only benefit from the Stamp Duty tax break but were prompted by it too, and it shows.

“However, the race for space is still the market’s main driver. Price growth for flats and maisonettes is muted compared to larger properties, which have been flourishing amid high demand. 

“The heavy lurch in favour of more inside and outside space is behind the 21.3% surge in residential property transactions in September, a trend already identified for us by HMRC. 

“With growth nationwide fairly evenly spread, this mini-housing boom is really taking the whole country with it. The North East and Scotland had been lagging behind but growth jumped impressively in these areas, while the South West put in a blistering performance with annual growth of 6.4%.

“Much is being made of the Stamp Duty boost at the moment but the Help To Buy scheme also becomes less generous at the end of March. This will continue to be a contributing factor as we head into next year but it’s the Stamp Duty holiday that is stealing the show at the moment. In fact, the price of new builds had been growing twice as fast as existing properties over the summer but this trend was turned on its head in September.”

Lucy Pendletonproperty expert at independent estate agents James Pendleton, says: “This was the moment the market really entered fifth gear this year, leaping from the doldrums into the jet stream with the full weight of lockdown and the Stamp Duty holiday behind it. 

“After weighing on the market nationally in recent years, London is once again helping to lead the way. Buyers in the capital celebrated the Stamp Duty changes by delivering record prices that are now only a whisker away from the half a million-pound mark. 

“Expect this rate of growth to cool though. Fast forward to the autumn and renters have reverted to type and have begun putting off moves until the New Year. However, buyers are still treating vendors to a feast of offers. The bids coming in are quite business-like. There are no longer any silly offers being thrown in speculatively by those misreading the level of fear in the market. 

“Stock is still selling, as long as it’s of good quality and this is where there has been the odd wrinkle. Many landlords, spying an opportunity to get a good price for their rental, have been selling up in an attempt to ride the wave of high demand and offload their buy to let. However, there’s a lot of this stock on the market sitting around because too many landlords haven’t brought their properties up to scratch before listing them.

“We’re seeing some price reductions among those who were a bit late to the party and thought prices would continue to climb rapidly, but these homes are still attracting very healthy valuations compared with a year ago. Poor weather has had the most marked impact recently. Buyers are not as quick to make a commitment when the rain is coming down, even though they know time is against them if they are to capitalise on the Stamp Duty holiday ending in March.” 

Marc von Grundherr, Director of Benham and Reeves, says: “The property market continues to fire on all cylinders with positive movement across the board in all but one region on a monthly basis and a clean sweep where annual price appreciation is concerned. While the current Stamp Duty holiday has caused huge backlogs of sales waiting to complete, there’s no doubt that it has contributed a considerable level of fuel to the furnace. 

“Despite these backlogs, the fires of market activity should continue to burn bright and this will help carry the market through the traditionally quieter winter period.

“London, in particular, seems to have turned a corner, fuelled by international demand ahead of April’s Stamp Duty surcharge for foreign buyers. This confidence in the capital’s market makes for positive reading and a weaker pound has seen a huge influx of activity which is starting to translate to positive top-line price growth.”

James Forrester, Managing Director of Barrows and Forrester, comments: “High levels of homebuyer demand continue to grease the cogs of the UK housing market and this continued price growth is being primarily driven by second and third rung buyers looking for larger homes in the wake of lockdown restrictions. 

“A second national lockdown will only intensify this trend and as a result price growth should remain stable in the mid-term at the very least. Hopes of a vaccine will also breathe new life into the market with any chance of a downturn looking slim at present. However, the end of the Stamp Duty holiday and the furlough scheme could still pose a danger with many predicting the market could fall off a cliff as demand dries up.  

“That said, the current hopper of property transactions is overflowing with deals waiting to be done and this momentum should carry the market through any wider economic potholes that may arise over the next year. We expect the more affordable regional frontrunners to continue to lead the way both where transaction levels and house price growth are concerned.” 

Increasing house prices trend of 2020 continues in the UK

Published On: November 10, 2020 at 9:20 am

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Categories: Property News

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The November Halifax House Price Index report has now been released, showing the 2020 trend for increasing house prices continues.

The report highlights:

  • House prices in October were 0.3% than in September on a monthly basis
  • House prices were 4.0% higher in the months August to October than in the preceding three months of May to July
  • House prices were 7.5% higher in October 2020 than in the same month the previous year – the strongest growth since June 2016

Russell Galley, Managing Director of Halifax, said: “The average UK house price now tops a quarter of a million pounds (£250,457) for the first time in history, as annual house price inflation rose to 7.5% in October, its highest rate since mid-2016. Underlying the pace of recent price growth in the market is the 5.3% gain over the past four months, the strongest since 2006. However, month-on-month price growth slowed considerably, down to just 0.3% compared to 1.5% in September. 

“Overall we saw a broad continuation of recent trends with the market still predominantly being driven by home-mover demand for larger houses. Since March flat prices are up by 2.0% compared to a 6.0% increase for a typical detached property. In cash terms that equates to a £2,883 increase for flats compared to a £27,371 rise for detached houses. 

“This level of price inflation is underpinned by unusually high levels of demand, with latest industry figures showing home-buyer mortgage approvals at their highest level since 2007, as transaction levels continue to be supercharged by pent-up demand as a result of the spring/summer lockdown, as well as the Chancellor’s waiver on stamp duty for properties up to £500,000. 

“While Government support measures have undoubtedly helped to delay the expected downturn in the housing market, they will not continue indefinitely and, as we move through autumn and into winter, the macroeconomic landscape in the UK remains highly uncertain. Though the renewed lockdown is set to be less restrictive than earlier this year, it bears out that the country’s struggle with COVID-19 is far from over. With a number of clear headwinds facing the housing market, we expect to see greater downward pressure on house prices as we move into 2021.”

Lucy Pendleton, property expert at independent estate agents James Pendleton, comments: “Average house prices may have crashed through a quarter of a million pounds for the first time but the growth rate that got them there is frankly ridiculous. 

“There seems little prospect that house prices are really rising this fast nationally, and it’s a dangerous thing to be saying, unless true, because it can scare off first-time buyers, who are the lifeblood of the market. 

“The huge demand that has driven the market higher has been fuelled by armies of buyers pumped up by impatience, adrenalin, frustration and relatively cheap borrowing. 

“That’s what will take the credit for this continuing surge in prices but we won’t see figures like this for long if we’re lucky. Growth like this is only ever in the interests of a tiny proportion of the population — it’s not good for agents in the long run or consumers. A boom followed by a bust in the spring should be avoided at all costs but the higher prices travel, the more likely that is. However, a slowdown in monthly price growth indicates that the market has already started to level off.”

Marc von Grundherr, Director of Benham and Reeves, comments: “We find ourselves in a dramatically different place to this time last year and while shorter term growth rates are starting to show signs of a seasonal slowdown, house prices continue to hit record highs. 

“A second national lockdown is unlikely to have any impact on current house price trends with the market remaining open for business and buyer demand remaining strong. 

“While the hopper continues to overflow with a huge number of pending transactions waiting to complete, there should remain a consistent level of house price growth to carry the market through Christmas and well into 2021.”

James Forrester, Managing Director of Barrows and Forrester, comments: “While the nation continues to wobble over the economic turmoil posed by the current pandemic and a second lockdown, the UK housing market is using these headwinds of uncertainty to fill her sails as house prices continue to climb ever higher.

“Homebuyers continue to overrun the market and for many, the task of buying or selling may well have provided a welcome distraction to the daily doom and gloom of COVID and so we haven’t seen the decline that many market naysayers so keenly awaited. 

“With the Bank of England announcing further economic support, we should see a degree of smooth sailing as the year ends.”

Read the full Halifax House Price Index report here.

Furloughed tenants in London spending 82% of income on rent

Published On: November 6, 2020 at 9:01 am

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Categories: Tenant News

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The continued level of unaffordability for tenants in London has been revealed by lettings and estate agent Benham Reeves, as the furlough scheme is extended.

Research from the agent shows the average London tenant was paying £1,644 a month in rent prior to the pandemic. They also earned an average net salary of £2,639, meaning 62% of their monthly salary was required to cover rent costs.

Under the latest version of the furlough scheme, which is a return to previous lockdown furlough scheme, employees will receive 80% of their current salary, up to a maximum of £2,500. As a result, London tenants who have been furloughed are seeing their net monthly income reduce to £2,003. This results in the average cost of rent requiring 82% of their monthly pay – a 20% jump compared to before the pandemic.

On top of this, Benham and Reeves also points out that in some boroughs the level of income required to cover rent costs for those on furlough has already exceeded 100%. 

The London agent uses Westminster as an example. Here, the research shows that the average tenant surviving on furlough will see their monthly net income reduce from £4,038 to £2,003. Prior to the pandemic, 75% of monthly earnings were required to cover the average rent of £3,046 in the borough but tenants on furlough have seen this climb to 152%.

Tenants in Kensington and Chelsea, Camden, Hammersmith and Fulham and Islington have also seen the average cost of renting exceed 100% of the average income for an employee on furlough. 

Marc von Grundherr, Director of Benham and Reeves, comments: “The outlook for London’s tenants is a tough one at present with a second national lockdown preventing many returning to work fully, if at all, while still having the struggle of paying rent and other monthly outgoings. 

“While the Government has introduced a number of schemes to help lighten this financial burden it’s unlikely to be enough with many seeing the cost of rent alone swallowing the majority, if not all, of their monthly income. 

“Of course, there will be those in a better position than the average tenant but it’s important to note that there will be many more that are worse off and facing an even tougher task.” 

The average net monthly income in each borough, how this has changed for those on furlough, and the percentage of both required to cover the average monthly rent. 

LocationAverage Rent pmPre-PandemicWith Furlough Scheme in Place
Average NET Salary pmRent as % of NET salaryFurlough net salary – including cap due to gov max contributionRent as % of NET furlough salary
Westminster£3,046£4,03875%£2,003152%
Kensington and Chelsea£3,023£5,21858%£2,003151%
Camden£2,302£3,38768%£2,003115%
Hammersmith and Fulham£2,117£3,20966%£2,003106%
Islington£2,003£3,19563%£2,003100%
Wandsworth£1,958£3,39958%£2,00398%
Lambeth£1,908£2,56574%£2,00395%
Hackney£1,842£2,36078%£1,94995%
Tower Hamlets£1,835£3,16258%£2,00392%
Richmond upon Thames£1,835£3,76949%£2,00392%
Newham£1,453£2,00772%£1,66787%
Haringey£1,669£2,35071%£1,94186%
Southwark£1,718£2,71763%£2,00386%
Brent£1,502£2,21768%£1,83482%
Merton£1,640£2,79959%£2,00382%
Barking and Dagenham£1,208£1,81667%£1,51480%
Ealing£1,569£2,43165%£2,00378%
Barnet£1,499£2,49860%£2,00375%
Enfield£1,292£2,11561%£1,75374%
Greenwich£1,476£2,65056%£2,00374%
Hounslow£1,352£2,26160%£1,86972%
Waltham Forest£1,352£2,27759%£1,88272%
Harrow£1,387£2,37059%£1,95671%
Lewisham£1,316£2,31957%£1,91669%
Hillingdon£1,200£2,11157%£1,75069%
Redbridge£1,311£2,37855%£1,96367%
Bromley£1,307£2,78747%£2,00365%
Kingston upon Thames£1,306£2,78247%£2,00365%
Havering£1,169£2,31151%£1,91061%
Croydon£1,140£2,26850%£1,87561%
Sutton£1,151£2,33649%£1,92960%
Bexley£1,092£2,35846%£1,94756%
LONDON£1,644£2,63962%£2,00382%
United Kingdom£987£2,03948%£1,69258%
SourcesONSONS gov.uk 

Property industry responds to August 2020 Government UK House Price Index news

The latest UK House Price Index from the Government has been published, revealing an increase in the price properties are being sold for.

The average UK house price is at £239,196, which is up 2.5% in the year to August 2020.

Director of Benham and Reeves, Marc von Grundherr, commented: “Explosive levels of buyer activity at the front of the sales process is continuing to yield a consistent increase where sold prices are concerned, albeit at a less headline-worthy rate of growth.

“Never the less, the UK property market is continuing to defy wider economic turmoil and build on the momentum seen since the market reopened.  

“London certainly seems to be picking up the pace despite a reduction in demand due to orders to work from home where possible. However, as the months have gone on, we’ve seen the green shoots of international demand start to return and it seems as though this is now aiding a house price revival in the capital.” 

Managing Director of Barrows and Forrester, James Forrester, commented: “More positive signs where house price growth is concerned but we’re also seeing the market start to buckle under the weight of stamp duty fuelled activity and this could have repercussions over the next few months. 

“If you’re not yet in the midst of your property purchase, the chances are you won’t complete in time to secure a stamp duty discount. As more homebuyers realise this is now the case, we should see the mad scramble of recent months start to reduce and market activity at the front end of the transaction process start to return to some level of normality. 

“Of course, with so many purchases already stuck in the hopper, the UK property market has plenty of fuel to see it through the quieter winter months and so while activity might start to fall, it’s likely the rate of house price growth will remain strong over the remainder of the year.” 

Matthew Cooper, Founder & Managing Director of Yes Homebuyers, commented: “While the market remains buoyant at present, we’re starting to see the repercussions of another ill-thought-out attempt by the Government to stoke the fires of house price growth.  The current stamp duty holiday has led to a huge uplift in demand which has helped boost market sentiment, there’s no doubt about that.  

“However, we’re now seeing huge delays at the legal stage of the selling process as those operating within this segment of the market have become overwhelmed and are ill-equipped to service such demand levels. 

“As a result, thousands of homebuyers who thought they were due to save thousands in stamp duty, will now be left wondering if this will be the case. For many of them, it won’t and we could see a sharp decline in market health as many pull out of a sale, while others refrain altogether.”

Government UK House Price Index
Property industry responds to August 2020 Government UK House Price Index news

Nicky Stevenson, Managing Director at national estate agent group Fine & Country, says: “Here is official confirmation that the market did indeed get up to a canter over the summer months. The annual rate of growth soared as buyers frustrated by lockdown and lack of space crammed into the market in search of larger properties. That alone explains this year’s sudden rally, as the stamp duty holiday was only introduced in July. A lag will mean any extra demand it created will not be seen in the Land Registry figures before the end of the year. 

“The question is how long this surge can last, with speculation already swirling that the market is set for a fall. Such predictions are probably premature. 

“Though strong growth like this will be temporary and we will soon be entering the traditionally quieter winter period, there are reasons to suspect that this is no ordinary autumn. 

“Consumer confidence among large swathes of the population is still very high. We already know that during lockdown a record 29% of disposable income was tucked away and saved as people were unable to get out and enjoy themselves. Rightmove also reported a 70% annual jump in the number of sales agreed during September and it says that, for the first time on record, agents have more properties marked as sold than available for sale. 

“This is incredible. These aren’t metrics usually associated with a stalling market, though the rate of growth will inevitably slow before picking up again in the New Year.”

Lucy Pendleton, property expert at independent estate agents James Pendleton, says: “This was the moment the market began to catch fire over the summer having emerged from the pandemic in better shape than many predicted. Now, as we enter autumn, the heat still isn’t coming out of this market.

“There’s been some talk lately of what effect the removal of many high LTV mortgages is having on the first-time buyer market which is as much a leading indicator as the all important London market. In the capital, where these two worlds collide, it’s having very little effect. Demand for cheaper properties hasn’t weakened and that’s because the bank of mum and dad is still widely open for business, interest rates remain low and high rents mean it’s still well worth getting on the property ladder. 

“As long as mortgage repayments remain cheaper than the cost of rent, demand to buy a first home will continue to show strength, and first-time buyers everywhere are still able to turn to the Help to Buy scheme if they need to. 

“We are about to hit a period when the market traditionally slows down. When the clocks change, people switch into hibernation mode and new enquiries begin to soften until the New Year. How much the stamp duty holiday will affect that this year remains to be seen, but this incentive plays a relatively muted role in the capital where prices are highest.”

Craig McKinlay, New Business Director at Kensington Mortgages, commented: “Compared to house prices crashing by over 15% in early 2009, it is still pretty remarkable how well the market is faring thanks to pent up demand and a stamp duty break. The market is more robust now than what can be said for the wider economy, and this is only likely to continue for the rest of the year for those who can make their next move on the property ladder.

“However, although home movers are doing well, the same may not be said for first-time buyers. Due to service demand, lenders keep dipping in and out of the high LTV market – making it difficult for this group of borrowers to find a mortgage tailored to their needs. The government’s Generation Buy scheme should reassure some lenders to enter more permanently again, but we need a set date of when this will be introduced sooner rather than later.

“For those that are struggling to secure a mortgage with a high street lender, it may be worthwhile getting in contact with a mortgage broker.”