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Property prices in the UK and predictions for 2006

   

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More on Prices 

 

House prices may be more or less static overall, but latest figures from the Land Registry show that house prices in Wales shot up in the last quarter.

House prices in the principality went up by 7.42% for the three months ending in September 2005. Blaenau Gwent rose by 27.98% and Merthyr Tydfil by 27.75%. This is the third consecutive quarter that these two authorities have topped Land Registry’s property price figures. Wrekin in the West Midlands saw the greatest reduction with house prices falling by 6.29%.

The average house price in England and Wales for the quarter is £194,589 compared with £187,971 a year ago, an average rise of 3.52% compared with the same period in 2004. But the volume of sales decreased by 15.41% from 309,101 in 2004 to 261,481 for the same period in 2005.

Some 1,140 properties over £1 million were sold compared with 1,230 for the same period in 2004. At the other end of the scale, 78,559 properties were sold for less than £120,000, the starting point for stamp duty, compared to 95,190 for the same period in 2004.

In London, where property prices are highest, the average property price increased by 4.47% from £287,470 in 2004 to £300,329 for the same period in 2005. Here again the volume of sales decreased by 15.87% from 39,692 in 2004 to 33,393 for the same period in 2005. London also saw 634 properties over £1 million sold compared to 727 for the same period in 2004.

Commenting on the Land Registry figures, Milan Khatri, chief economist at the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (Rics) said: ‘According to Land Registry figures for the third quarter of 2005, average house prices in Greater London have topped £300,000 for the first time ever, though current rises continue to be strongest in areas away from London.

‘The figures show a further slowdown in house price inflation to 3.5% in the third quarter, down from 5.4% in the second quarter. A year ago, house price inflation on the Land Registry measure was 16.3%.'

He pointed out that as Land Registry figures are based on actual transactions and lag mortgage approvals, the recent upturn in the market reported by a variety of lenders and property websites would not be seen in Land Registry figures until the end of this year.

‘Completed transactions fell by 15.4% in the third quarter from levels a year ago, though the pace of decline is less than 34.8%, recorded in the year to the end of the first quarter of this year. This is consistent with recent evidence that housing market activity has shown a rebound following the August interest rate cut.

‘More timely Rics statistics show that buyers have become more confident as the much predicted housing market crash has failed to transpire. Rics expects the upturn in housing activity to be sustained, supported by steady growth in the number of jobs and incomes. However, with further significant interest rate cuts unlikely in the foreseeable future, a renewed housing market boom is quite unlikely,’ Khatri said.

Jim Buckle, managing director of property website, propertyfinder.com said: ‘The Land Registry data confirms what our own research is telling us. The property market is on the mend. It is very important not to get hung up on year over year figures as they do not reveal the current trends.

‘Despite being lower than a year ago, the Land Registry is showing that transactions rose 20% in the third quarter compared to the second quarter, with the recovery even stronger in the London area.’

But according to website SmartNewHomes.com, prices of new properties have been falling. The average price of a new home in the UK was £255,327, down 2.4% on the same time last year and a drop of 0.2% from the previous month.

SmartNewHomes says its statistics for new properties dispels hopes that the housing market has fully recovered from the downturn in prices and activity which has blighted it since the end of last year.

‘Although the worst of the downturn looks to be over with annual inflation now at minus 2.4% compared with minus 8.0% at its lowest point in spring this year, continuing negative quarterly inflation would indicate that a return to the strong positive growth rates of the last few years is some way off,’ it said.

Average new home prices in London, the South West, West Midlands and the North suffered the worst of the wider market slowdown, whilst East Anglia and Wales saw prices rise.

The readjustment in prices was mirrored across all property types with the exception of apartments which, as well as seeing prices rise 1.7% over the last month, continue to dominate the market making up over half of all new homes. Townhouses saw the largest price drop of 6.6% over the last quarter.

David Bexon, managing director of SmartNewHomes, said: ‘It has been a difficult year for the UK housing market, reflected in new home price inflation and activity.

‘Although the market is certainly out of the woods and the likelihood of a crash recedes significantly every month, it is still in a delicate state with buyers acting cautiously, slowing down activity across the board.’ He is predicting that prices could pick up again in the New Year.

However there is little consistency in housing market reports with wide geographical discrepancies and big differences depending on the type of property. The October report from Propertyfinder.com says that house hunters’ confidence is rising, with expectations of fat City bonuses boosting the market.

Some 54% of respondents expect house prices to rise over the next 12 months, says the Propertyfinder report, ‘signalling that the recent recovery in volumes of transactions can be sustained. In London and the South East, the two regions that benefit most when City institutions pay big bonuses, 61% of respondents now expect prices to rise.’

The report points out that since the spring, transaction volumes have risen slowly but steadily from 117,000 in April to 153,000 in September according to figures from the Office of National Statistics. Transaction volumes are up by 3% on this time last year.

Buyers in October on average made offers 6% below the asking price, while sellers are currently prepared to accept offers 5.5% below their asking price. With buyers and sellers now closely matched, the potential for sales to be agreed is much greater.

Propertyfinder says that people are now borrowing on average 58.5% of the value of the property, up from just 54.0% at the beginning of the year. This is also being encouraged by the rash of very attractive mortgage rates that have been on offer in recent months and once again is enhanced by expectations of a good Christmas bonus round in the City, the report says.

The reason most commonly given why property prices will rise is that people moving into their area will create increased demand, mentioned by 26.5% of respondents. Expectations that interest rates will be cut again was cited by just 20.4% of respondents.

Jim Buckle of Propertyfinder said: ‘At a time when homebuyer confidence is running high, a cut in rates could be just what the doctor ordered to spur the market forward. We don’t expect rates to be cut this week, and home buyers are clearly not banking on one, but still think there is a strong likelihood that the MPC will act to lower the cost of borrowing early in the new year.’

report by citywire.com

November 2005

 

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