Taylor Scott International News
Household sentiment on future house price growth in the UK has slipped to a three year low with 23.7% believing that the value of their home increase over the last month. Some 4.4% believe that prices have fallen, according to the latest house price sentiment index from Knight Frank and Markit Economics with the reading falling from 61 to 59.7. Households in the North East perceived that the value of their home fell in June, the first time that households in any English region perceived house prices had fallen since August 2013. The future HPSI, which measures what households think will happen to the value of their property over the next year, fell to 67.7 in June from 70.3 in May. This is the lowest reading recorded by the index since August 2013. The gap between sentiment in the North and South of the UK is now wider than at any time since the inception of the index. But some 6.5% of UK households said they planned to buy a property in the next 12 months, up from 5.4% in May and the highest number since August 2015. ‘The decline in the future household sentiment index to a near three-year low coincides with growing uncertainty over the result of next week’s European Union referendum as the debates over the UK’s future step up a gear,’ said Gráinne Gilmore, head of UK residential research at Knight Frank. ‘The proportion of households who expect the value of their home to fall over the next 12 months rose to the highest level in nearly two years, but overall households still expect the value of their property to continue rising in the coming year, despite the uncertainty about the result of the vote,’ she explained. She also pointed out that the regional disparity in the index readings highlights the multi-speed housing market in the UK at present, with gap between sentiment in the North and the South widening to the biggest margin since the index began in 2009. Tim Moore, senior economist at Markit, agreed that heightened political and economic uncertainty seems to have weighed on house price sentiment to some degree in June, with expectations for the year ahead slipping to the lowest since August 2013. However, he pointed out that the month to month easing in house price sentiment was relatively modest, suggesting that UK households perceived little fundamental change in property market conditions since May. ‘Instead, ultra-low mortgages, improving labour market conditions and little sign of impending interest rate rises all appear to have helped keep house price sentiment at an elevated level in comparison to the survey’s historical average,’ he added. Taylor Scott International
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