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Research reveals the housing market winners to mark first games of Euro football cup
With the European Championship football tournament underway new research shows which countries have done best in terms of house prices since the last cup four years ago. The price of mainstream homes have increases in more than 74% of the countries competing in the tournament, according to the study from international real estate agent Knight Frank. Turkey topped the rankings with an increase of 65.6%, followed by the Republic of Ireland with price growth of 34.3% and Sweden up 32%. In fourth place is Iceland with house prices up by 30.6%, followed closely by England where prices are up 29.7%, Germany up 19.7%, Austria up 16.5%, Northern Ireland up by 15.6% and Russia up 15.2%. Next is Wales with price growth of 14.1% in the last four years, Switzerland up 10.3%, the Czech Republic up 8.2%, Hungary up 8.1%, Belgium up 4%, Poland up by 1.8%, Portugal up by 1.4% and Slovakia up by 0.9%. The country with the worst ranking is Ukraine where house prices have fallen by 22.6% but this is not surprising considering the unrest in recent years. Second from bottom is Italy where prices are down 13.1% and then Croatia where prices have fallen by 9% since the last tournament in 2012. In Romania prices are down 0.5%, France down 5.7%, Spain down 7.2%. Kate Everett-Allen, head of international residential research at Knight Frank, pointed out that the divergent performance of northern and southern Europe is evident. ‘The Nordic countries along with Ireland, England and Germany have seen prices accelerate while prices in most of the southern European economies still sit below their level in 2012,’ she said. Continue reading
UK property supply down almost 5% in May
Residential property supply in the UK increased by 4.8% in May but a breakdown of the figures show that the number of homes for sale fell in half of the towns covered by the index. In total month on month supply was down in 50.4% of towns with the biggest falls coming in the towns of Southport and Loughborough at 28% and 24.1% respectively. The data from the index from online estate agent HouseSimple also shows that towns in the Midlands saw the biggest increase in supply with Lichfield up 56% and Chesterfield up 36%. The index, which tracks the number of new properties marketed every month in more than 100 major towns and cities across the UK and all London boroughs, also shows that of the areas that saw the biggest falls in supply some 47% were in the North of England. In London supply was also down by 2.4% overall in May with the City of Westminster seeing the biggest drop at 33%. The overall fall follows a decline of just 0.8% in April. The borough of Bexley also saw a significant fall following a huge peak in April, when new property listings were up 58.9%. However, despite the overall fall in London dome 53% of its 32 boroughs saw an increase in supply last month. Waltham Forest saw property supply rise 31% month on month following an 8% increase in April and Merton saw supply increase 30% in May following a 15% increase in April. ‘Although property supply was up in May, in large swathes of the country, the number of new properties listed fell,’ said the firm’s chief executive officer Alex Gosling. He believes that the confidence of buyers could be affected by the forthcoming referendum on the future of the UK in the European Union and predicts that in the run up to the poll on 23 June there could be a significant drop off in activity at a time when historically there is a lot of activity in the property market. ‘On the flip side, this could actually provide an opportunity for prospective buyers, who have their finance in place and can move fast, as they may be able to negotiate a good deal with motivated sellers keen to tie up a sale before 23 June,’ he added. Continue reading
Rents remained unchanged in capital cities in Australia in May
Overall rental prices in Australian capital cities were unchanged in May but rates fell everywhere apart from Melbourne and Hobart, the latest index shows. Weekly rents were unchanged but year on year they were down 0.3% taking the average rate to $489 a week for houses and $469 a week for units, according to the data from the CoreLogic Rent Review report. The firm’s research analyst Cameron Kusher expects that the weakness in the rental market will persist and on an annual basis rents will fall further over the coming months. The data also shows that over the 12 months to May several capital cities saw a rise in rents. In Sydney they increased by 0.9%, in Melbourne by 2.3%, in Hobart by 3.7% and in Canberra by 0.1%. But falling rents pulled the combined capital average lower with a drop in Perth of 8.8%, a fall of 16.9% in Darwin, and down 0.9% in Brisbane and Adelaide 0.9% year on year. ‘Since we started tracking annual rent changes back in 1996, the May 2016 results represent the lowest annual change on record. The rental market slowdown has been rapid over the past year with rents increasing by 1.5%,’ said Kusher. ‘A number of factors such as the softest wages growth on record have contributed to this slow down. At the same time, we also saw unit construction hit record high levels and a lack of population growth which has contributed to a lesser demand for rentals,’ he explained. He pointed out that with rental rates easing over the year and home values continuing to rise rental yields continue to sit at record lows of 3.3% for houses and 4.2% for units. However, gross rental yields for houses are now at record lows in Sydney, Melbourne and Canberra while unit yields are at historic lows in Sydney. Continue reading