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UK asking prices reach new record of £294,834
The price of property coming to the market in the UK this month has hit a new national record, up 0.9% to £294,834, the latest index figures shows. Demand is being fuelled by cheap borrowing yet supply is limited by some home owners’ reluctance to sell, according to the monthly index report from Rightmove. The average £2,550 asking price rise is the largest amount seen in the month of September since 2002, driven by price jump in family home sectors of 1.2% while owners of first time buyer properties have seen prices stall with a fall of 1.1%. Prices at the top end are rising faster with the research showing that the top 15 highest priced counties have all seen values rise this month by double the national average at 1.8%. These counties are all in the higher-priced southern regions which have all risen this month, driven by supply shortages with fewer home owners selling. The lower priced northern regions have seen prices fall, reducing would be sellers’ ability to raise adequate funds to move and exacerbating supply shortages while overall new seller numbers are down on the same period last year in both the north and the south with a drop of 4.9% and 7.1% respectively. ‘Prices are at an all-time high, yet borrowing is historically cheap and positive sentiment is aided by the ongoing postponement of rate rises from these six-year lows. Demand from those who can afford to buy remains high, and suitable supply remains tight, with the number of properties coming to market down 6% on the same period in 2014,’ said Miles Shipside, Rightmove director and housing market analyst. ‘The result is the biggest monthly price rise seen at this time of year for 13 years. High demand, lack of suitable supply, and increasingly stretched affordability are leading to some extremes in market forces in different sectors and parts of the country,’ he explained. ‘One of the effects is that those who own property that is in most demand, either by type or location, are seeing their values continue to rise. Their properties are rich in features and benefits that others want to buy, and as a consequence they are getting proportionately richer than either owners of less desirable homes or those who are not on the housing ladder at all,’ he pointed out. It is the typical family home market sectors that have risen most this month. Second stepper and top of the ladder properties, covering all property types with three or more bedrooms, went up by an average of 1.2%. In contrast first time buyer type properties with two bedrooms or fewer fell by 1.1%. ‘This year’s price surge in the first time buyer sector has stalled this month, and has now been overtaken by second stepper homes both in terms of monthly and annual increases. It looks like some of those buying typical first time buyer properties are now struggling to afford prices in this bracket… Continue reading
Row breaks out over issue of retirees downsizing in the UK
Older home owners in the UK should not be forced to downsize just to let the younger generation onto the housing ladder. Saga, a services and advice provider for people aged over 50, has hit out at remarks attributed the Financial Conduct Authority, the UK’s financial watchdog, that retired people should not continue living in properties that are too big for them. Lynda Blackwell, head of mortgages at the FCA, is reported to have told Ministers that they need to address the situation in the UK where retired people continue living in the family home once their children have left. She explained that the current housing shortage could be addressed by these so called ‘last time buyer’ moving to smaller properties to free up homes for people lower down the housing ladder. But Saga believes it is a form of bullying. ‘If people have saved and paid for their house over their working lives, it's down to them if they want to fill it with family or live on their own,’ said Saga’s director of communications, Paul Green. ‘But setting the generations against each other or talking about tackling older home owners is not just unhelpful it's insulting,’ he added. He explained that recent research carried out by Saga in association with Wadswick Green retirement village clearly showed that two thirds of older home owners would like to consider moving home ready for retirement but are prevented from taking that step either because there aren't sufficient appropriate properties to move to, or the costs to move far outweigh any benefit from doing so. ‘One of the solutions Saga has researched is allowing one stamp duty free move for those rightsizing for retirement which, according to independent economists CEBR, would release 111,000 family homes onto the market,’ said Green. ‘This is a win for older home owners who want to downsize, but also for younger families that want to move up the ladder and also for the exchequer. The research shows that by giving this tax free move it would be counterbalanced by an estimated £461 million of stamp duty that would be generated by the house sales that might otherwise not have taken place,’ he explained. ‘If we want to tackle the housing crisis we need to do so holistically. First time buyer schemes for the young are a good start, but we need to consider incentives to help encourage those that would like to move, to take that step. The FCA are right, we definitely need to do more and do it better, but using divisive language will only alienate the very people we need to help and encourage,’ he added. Continue reading
UK annual property price growth dips slightly, latest official data shows
UK house prices increased by 5.2% in the year to July 2015, taking the mix adjusted price of a home to £282,000, according to the latest data from the Office of National Statistics (ONS). This mean annual growth was down slightly from 5.7% in the year to June 2015 and excluding London and the South East, which tend to have higher prices, the average annual growth was 4.4%. A breakdown of the figures show that the average mix-adjusted house prices in July 2015 stood at £295,000 in England, £173,000 in Wales, £154,000 in Northern Ireland and £196,000 in Scotland. London continued to be the English region with the highest average house price at £525,000 and the North East had the lowest average house price at £156,000. London, the South East and the East all had prices higher than the UK average price of £282,000. House price annual inflation was 5.6% in England, 0.3% in Wales, 7.4% in Northern Ireland and down 1.3% in Scotland. Annual house price increases in England were driven by an annual increase in the East of 8.3% and the South East at 6.7%. The data also shows that in July 2015, prices paid by first time buyers were 4.4% higher on average than in July 2014. For owner occupiers (existing owners), prices increased by 5.5% for the same period. Overall average house prices in seven of the nine 9 English regions are at record levels, with prices in the North West surpassing the pre-economic downturn peak of January 2008 for the first time. The only English regions not now at record levels are the North East and Yorkshire and The Humber. It is weak supply that is driving up prices, according to Rob Weaver, director of property at residential investment platform Property Partner. ‘The supply issue is nothing less than an enigma. Given that properties overall are commanding decent prices, you would expect to see more people selling. Something in the market is broken. Even though employment levels are strong, consumer confidence may not be as robust as surveys suggest,’ he said. ‘Many households are almost certainly wary of not being able to secure a mortgage under the new lending rules, and that could be impacting their intent to move. Households have almost certainly become more conservative in the wake of the global financial crisis. Paying debt down has become more appealing than racking it up,’ he pointed out. ‘Many are doubtless sitting on their hands until the economic picture gets clearer because the recovery has become less definitive during the first half of the year. This latest data shows that the property market has become a lot more balanced, with sustainable levels of price growth across a number of regions. It is almost a relief to see prices in the capital growing at 5.5%, compared to the high double digit growth rates of a two years ago,’ he added. Peter Rollings, chief executive officer of Marsh & Parsons, comments pointed… Continue reading