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Property market activity soars in England and Wales in March due to stamp duty change

Property sales in England and Wales have seen their strongest March for nine years with transactions up 30%, some 80,000 home sales, the latest index data shows. House price growth also accelerated, up 6.9% year on year and 0.6% month on month, taking the average price to £291,650, the figures from the Your Move house price index also shows. It means that a typical home is now worth £18,745 more than a year ago. When London and the South East are left out of the calculation prices were up 5.1%, suggesting that the market is still strong outside these two growth areas. Indeed, the London market saw the fastest growth of any region as house prices rose 8.2% or £44,548 year on year. Bath and North East Somerset saw the largest March pick-up in property prices, climbing 5.3% or £18,603 month on month According to Adrian Gill, director of Reeds Rains and Your Move estate agents, the impending stamp duty rise for additional properties that was introduced at the start of April helped March record the strongest homes sales for the month since 2007. ‘The surge was widespread across England and Wales. This goes beyond any normal seasonality, with second home and buy to let investors rushing to beat a bigger tax bill,’ he explained. Overall some 73% of local authorities in England and Wales experienced a monthly upswing in home values, the highest proportion of areas seeing positive property price rises since July 2014. ‘This will be welcome news for homeowners, who now have a fantastic opportunity in the current sellers’ market. The pervasive shortage of homes on the market is still driving up values, as buyers have to compete for each available property. If they are going to make it easier to get a foot on the property ladder, the Government will have to double down on its help to first time buyers, or let up on landlords,’ said Gill. He also pointed out that after a bit of a downturn over the winter months, the London property market is growing again with prices up 8.2% higher than a year ago. ‘The lift in London’s house prices seems steep. But we’re actually in a much calmer position than previous years, with the current rise still well below London’s record 20.6% year on year growth, established in July 2014,’ Gill said. He also pointed out that the growth in London property values means it is once again pulling away from the rest of the country, with London and the South East now dragging up national house price growth by 1.8%, double the rate seen at the end of 2015. ‘As a result, we’ve returned to a two speed housing market, as growth in the rest of the country is easily outpaced by London and the South East. But it’s not all about London, as house prices are still advancing in the Northern cities, with the average… Continue reading

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New home loans falling in Australia, latest data shows

New home loans in Australia saw a further decline in February from the high levels of late 2015, according to the latest report from the Housing Industry Association. Despite a growth in the total number of owner occupier loans, excluding refinancing, new home loans fell by 6.5% month on month and were 2.7 per cent lower than a year earlier. During February the number of loans for the construction of new dwellings eased back by 1.9% in seasonally adjusted terms, while the number of loans for the purchase of new dwellings fell by 15.4%. Compared with a year earlier, loans for dwelling construction were down by 2.8% and there was a 2.6% decline in the number of new dwelling purchase loans over the same period. However, HIA senior economist Shane Garrett said that it is important to remember that new home lending volumes are still high by historic standards. ‘The decline in new home loans during January and February is consistent with our view that new home building will moderate during 2016 from last year’s record highs even though the number of new home starts this year is still likely to be one of the highest on record,’ Garrett explained. ‘While the markets that have risen on the recent wave of construction are likely to continue to perform in the near term, there is a risk that markets which didn’t fully participate in the boom may find this more painful,’ he pointed out. ‘It is vital that state governments are prepared to step in and offer support to our industry as required over the next few years,’ he added. Compared with a year earlier, the number of loans to owner occupiers building and buying new homes in the three months to February 2016, increased most strongly in the Northern Territory with growth of 37.4%, followed by growth of 20.2% in New South Wales and 9.3% in Victoria, New home lending volumes also rose in South Australia by 4.7%, in Queensland by 3% and in the Australian Capital Territory by 2.5% but over the same period, lending volumes fell in Tasmania by 33.1% and in Western Australia by 20.4%. Continue reading

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Demand for UK property fell by 5% in first quarter of 2016

Property demand across the UK as a whole fell by 5% in the first quarter of 2016 to 39% overall but demand is still up 9% compared to the same period in 2015. London’s outer boroughs and commuter belt continue to outperform the rest of the country where property demand is concerned, according to the hot stop index from estate agent eMoov. With demand at 72%, the London Borough of Bexley remains the hottest spot in the UK once again while Bristol at 68% climbs from third to second and Bedford at 66% was up four places to third. Cambridge and Watford, both at 62%, remain in the top 10 but have dropped down the rankings and outside the top five while Medway at 63% and Milton Keynes at 61% appear in the top 10 at fifth and ninth. Aylesbury at 63% also returns to the top 10 in sixth for the first time since the start of 2015. With demand currently at 65% Ipswich is placed in the top 10 for the first time to take fourth place and the report suggests that a direct commute into Liverpool Street of just over an hour is making the town more popular with London workers searching further afield for affordable property. Aberdeen with demand at 15% is one of the lowest cities on the list but it has seen a 50% increase over the last quarter so that property demand has returned to the same level as this time last year and the city is now off the bottom spot. At 27% Durham is the second biggest climber over the last three months and has also seen the biggest increase in demand over the last year across the whole UK at 90%. Second biggest climber year on year is North Lanarkshire in Scotland with a 67% growth in demand, followed by Barnet up 57%, Sandwell up 56%, Bolton up 45%, Gloucester up 42% and Manchester up 40%. Aberdeen’s shift up the table means it is now only the fifth coldest spot in the UK. Now at the bottom are the London boroughs of Westminster and Kensington and Chelsea, both at 12%. ‘It is interesting to see that despite the rush ahead of April’s stamp duty deadline, the UK market as a whole has cooled during the first half of the year. Although it’s undoubtedly a seasonal influence due to the festive period, it would seem that those looking to push through a second home or buy to let purchase, didn’t have the overall demand impact that many thought they would,’ said the firm’s chief executive officer Russell Quirk. Continue reading

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