Tag Archives: asia
Brexit uncertainty created pause in UK home borrowing in July
The UK’s mortgage sector was hit in July as a result of the European Union referendum with both the number and value of house purchase approvals falling month on month and year on year. The BBA figures show that house purchase approval numbers were 19% lower than in July 2015, though in the first seven months of 2016 they were some 2% higher than in the same period of 2015. The data also shows that remortgaging approvals were 6% higher than in July 2015 and in the first seven months of 2016 were 21% higher than in the equivalent period of 2015. Overall gross mortgage borrowing of £12.6 billion in the month was 6% higher than in July 2015 while net mortgage borrowing is 3% higher than a year ago. As the first lending figures since the decision to leave the EU not much can be taken from them, according to Rebecca Harding, BBA chief economist. ‘The data does not currently suggest borrowing patterns have been significantly affected by the Brexit vote, but it is still early days. Many borrowing decisions will also have been taken before the referendum vote,’ she pointed out. Andy Knee, chief executive of LMS, said that the figures suggest home buyers took stock in July. He pointed out that the value of loans for house purchases fell to its lowest level since March 2015 following a buoyant first six months of 2016, ‘What remains to be seen is whether this will become the norm or if August activity will be bounce back following the immediate shock. On the other hand, despite a small fall remortgaging is up as existing home owners capitalise on the record low mortgages available,’ he explained. ‘Following the vote for Brexit, swap rates fell leading to lower mortgage rates across the board. At the same time, intense speculation about a decrease in the Bank of England interest base rate to 0.25% and other monetary policy interventions have also contributed to lower rates, encouraged lending and driven home owners to take advantage of this,’ he said. ‘Anecdotally, there is little to suggest a lull in the demand for house purchase and remortgaging. We therefore expect activity to bounce back in the autumn months once the dust settles and some sense of normality returns,’ he added. According to Tanya Jackson, head of corporate affairs at Yorkshire Building Society, believes that people’s desire to own a property largely outweighed any uncertainty caused by the EU referendum in July. ‘That said, the full effects of the vote are unlikely to be seen until a few months after the outcome of the vote was announced, as those buying a home in July are likely to have begun the house buying process before the EU referendum,’ she said. ‘We do expect the outcome of the EU vote to limit market activity to an extent in the short-term as prospective buyers take a wait and see approach on how it affects their finances…. Continue reading
Improved rail links to London boost prime property prices in commuter towns
Prime property prices in key UK locations where train services make them commuter zones for London have seen prices rise in the second quarter of 2016, according to the latest index data. In Bristol, where commuters are within reach of London’s Paddington station, prime property prices have increased by 7.4% in the year to June 2016 with the second quarter of the year seeing a 17% rise in new buyer registration and a 19% rise in viewings. In nearby Cheltenham prime property prices increased by 8.6% year on year and 2% quarter on quarter, according to the index data from real estate firm Knight Frank, and this compared with annual growth of 1.3% in the UK wide prime property market. But in Oxford, another popular commuter city, prime prices increases by just 0.3% between April and June, taking annual price growth to 0.7% but the data report says that demand remains strong. In Oxford the slow down in price growth is attributed to uncertainty in the run up to June’s historic referendum and the decision to leave the European Union. ‘After several years of strong price increases, during which the city has comfortably outperformed the wider UK, the latest figures suggest that price growth at the top end of the market in Oxford has started to ease,’ said Oliver Knight, research associate at Knight Frank. ‘While the fundamentals underpinning the market remain unchanged, the reasons for the easing are twofold. Firstly, there was a softening in demand for prime property in the immediate run up to the EU referendum, with potential purchasers adopting a wait and see approach,’ he explained. ‘Secondly, and arguably more importantly, recent changes to stamp duty levied on the purchase price of the most valuable properties has made buyers increasingly price sensitive,’ he added. He pointed out that prime homes in Oxford worth more than £2 million rose in value by just 0.1% in the year to June as buyers and vendors factored higher purchase costs into pricing and offers. In comparison, properties worth up to £750,000, where the stamp duty burden is lower, rose by 1.7%. According to William Kirkland, Knight Frank Partner in the firm’s Oxford City Department, demand remains consistent and new high speed rail link at Oxford Parkway, which opened in October 2015, has helped stimulate demand in property markets to the north of the city as commuters using the line can now be in London Marylebone in under an hour. ‘As a result, there has been an increase in the number of Londoners looking to buy property in Oxford so far this year. Some 25% of all prospective buyers registering with Knight Frank's Oxford office in 2016 were based in the capital, up from 19% in 2015,’ he added. A growing imbalance between supply and demand continues to drive strong price growth in the prime Cheltenham market. There were 19% fewer prime properties available for sale across Cheltenham at the end of June year on year… Continue reading
UK first time buyers deposit saving scheme criticised
Concerns have been raised about the UK’s Help to Buy Isa which is aimed at first time buyers saving towards a deposit for their first home. When the scheme was announced last year by then Chancellor George Osborne it was assumed that young people would receive the extra money put in by the Government towards the purchase of a home as part of their deposit. With the average deposit on a first home around £15,000 the Chancellor announced that if first time buyers saved £12,000 they would get the next £3,000 paid for them. But now it has emerged that the scheme will no pay out before a home is actually purchased, leaving first time buyers needing to save the whole £15,000 before they can actually complete a home purchase. The small print of the Government's flagship Isa states that the bonus will not be paid out until the sale is complete and a spokesman suggested that it was never designed as a deposit saving scheme but to be put towards the cost of a home overall. It is thought around 500,000 would be home owners have already taken out Help to Buy Isas and they now need to discuss with their banks what will happen when they are ready to receive the promised bonus from the government. Mark Hayward, managing director of the National Association of Estate Agents, said that it has changed the goal posts for first time buyers who have saved in a Help to Buy Isa. ‘Consumers have been putting money aside on the basis that they believed it would be applied to their deposit on a new home,’ he pointed out. ‘To now clarify that it is not actually available until completion is the perfect example of a painful lack of transparency and frankly nothing short of deception. First time buyers are already struggling with getting on to the housing ladder and this much hyped initiative was welcomed at the time as a way of helping them, but in fact could have ended up costing buyers if they have gone ahead with a purchase believing that the bonus counted towards the deposit,’ he added. Continue reading