Tag Archives: real estate

Property prices in Ireland still rising but growth has slowed compared to a year ago

Residential property prices in Ireland increased by 7.4% in the 12 months to March 2016, down slightly from the 8% recorded in February. The latest data from the Central Statistics Office also show that while house prices are still rising the growth has slowed. In March 2015 the annual rise was 16.8%. Month on month property prices increased by 0.3% compared with no change recorded in February and an increase of 0.9% recorded in March of last year. In Dublin residential property prices increased by 0.9% in March and were 3.9% higher than a year ago. Dublin house prices increased by 1.2% in the month and were 4.1% higher compared to a year earlier. Dublin apartment prices were 1.6% higher when compared with the same month of 2015. However, it should be noted that the sub-indices for apartments are based on low volumes of observed transactions and consequently suffer from greater volatility than other series. The price of residential properties in the rest of Ireland decreased by 0.2% in March compared with an increase of 0.7% in March of last year. Prices were 10.5% higher than in March 2015. It means that house prices in Dublin are now 34.3% lower than at their highest level in early 2007. Apartments in Dublin are 41.2% lower than they were in February 2007. Residential property prices in Dublin are 36.3% lower than at their highest level in February 2007. The price of residential properties in the rest of Ireland is 35.4% lower than their highest level in September 2007. Overall, the national index is 33.6% lower than its highest level in 2007. Continue reading

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Official figures show fewer residential properties are lying empty in the UK

The number of empty homes in the UK is now at its lowest level since records began with a drop of over a third from 318,642 in 2004 to 203,596 in 2015. Figures also show an increase in the number of owner occupied homes in the past year, after seven years of decline, starting in 2007. The downward trend in ownership is continuing to level out after a fall from a peak of 69.5% in 2002 to 62.5% in 2015 and 62.8% in 2014. Data from the government also shows that the number of new homes up by a quarter in the last year alone, the highest annual percentage increase in net additional homes for 28 years. ‘We are turning around the housing market and making sure the best use is made of all housing including empty homes. We are very clear that a house should be a home which is why we have taken action to stop homes being bought up and left as an empty investment,’ said Housing and Planning Minister Brandon Lewis. ‘And we’ve taking forward the boldest ambition for housing in a generation, doubling the budget so we can help a million more people into home ownership, while delivering a bigger, and better private rental sector,’ he added. He pointed out that the government has introduced a number of measures to get homes back into use that have stood empty for years including rewarding councils for bringing empty homes back in to use through the New Homes Bonus and since April 2011, councils have been allocated over £4.846 billion for providing new homes. Other measures are providing over 704,000 additional homes, bringing over 106,000 empty homes will be back into use and providing 271,000 affordable homes and giving councils the power to increase Council Tax on empty properties. Alongside this charges have been introduce on certain ownership to prevent residential property being held through companies left empty and move to ensure that Capital Gains Tax is due on gains made by foreign owners who sell residential property in the UK, much of which is left empty. This means the same rules apply to residents and non-residents. Lewis added that the government is determined to provide more homes and has committed more than £20 billion over the next five years to help meet its ambition to provide a million new homes. He also pointed out that Right to Buy is being extended to 1.3 million people, shared ownership properties are being made available to a much larger number of people and 200,000 Starter Homes are being provided at a minimum 20% discount for first time buyers. Continue reading

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UK housing market slows after buy let rush in March, latest index shows

UK house prices increased by 0.2% in April but annual house price growth has slowed to 4.9%, down from 5.7% the month before, the latest index figures show. This takes the average price of a home to £202,436 with the slowing of activity not a surprise due to increased market growth in March due to stamp duty changes, according to the index report from the Nationwide. Robert Gardner, Nationwide's chief economist, said that the slowdown returns the annual pace of house price growth to the fairly narrow range between 3% and 5% that had been prevailing since the summer of 2015. ‘It may be that the surge in house purchase activity resulting from the increase in stamp duty on second homes provided a temporary boost to prices in March. However, it is possible that the recent pattern of strong employment growth, rising real earnings, low borrowing costs and constrained supply will tilt the demand/supply balance in favour of sellers and exert upward pressure on price growth once again in the quarters ahead,’ he explained. He pointed out that there were 165,400 transactions in March, an all-time high, some 11% higher than the previous peak of 149,000 recorded in January 2007 and estimates from the Council of Mortgage Lenders suggests that mortgage lending also rose sharply, to almost £26 billion in March, up 43% from the £18 billion recorded in February. ‘If confirmed by Bank of England data later this week, this would suggest a strong outcome, up nearly 60% year on year and also well above recent highs of £22 billion per month recorded in early 2015, though still well below the all-time high of £34.9 billion recorded in June 2007,’ Gardner said. ‘The increase in mortgage lending is likely to have been driven by a sharp increase in buy to let investors bringing forward their purchases before the stamp duty changes took effect. Buy to let has accounted for an unusually high share of lending in recent months, at around 19% of lending in the three months to February, but the strength of activity suggests its share could surpass 25% in March,’ he explained. ‘Viewing the transactions and mortgage lending data together suggests that, while buy to let lending is likely to have risen strongly in March, a large proportion of the boost to house purchase activity came from cash buyers,’ he added. Gardner also pointed out that cash purchasers have become a more significant part of the market since the financial crisis, accounting for around 35% of all transactions since 2008 compared with around 25% in 2006/20007. ‘Cash investors would have also been better placed to buy properties in the relatively short period of time between the stamp duty announcement at the November Autumn Statement and the implementation on 01 April,’ he added. But a continued limited supply of properties could mean that the market could still be lively in the coming months, according to Michelle Grant, investment director of Grant… Continue reading

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