Tag Archives: irish

Irish property prices on the rise again and now up 16.8% year on year

After two months of falling prices, property in Ireland is on the rise again with values up 0.9% across the country, according to the latest index. Residential property prices are now up 16.8% on an annual basis and in Dublin they are 22.8% higher than March 2014 after a 1.1% monthly rise. A breakdown of the figures from the Central Statistics Office shows that in Dublin house prices rose by 1% in March whilst apartment prices increased by 2.1%. However, a CSO spokesman pointed out that 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. Outside of Dublin residential property prices rose by 0.7% in March and prices are up 10.7% compared with March 2014. Prices still need to catch up considerably before reaching anywhere near their peak levels of 2007. At national level prices were 38.2% lower than their peak level. Dublin house prices are 36.9% behind, apartment prices 42.2% lower than their peak and Dublin residential property prices overall were 38.7% lower than their highest level. Outside of Dublin residential property prices are still 41.5% lower than their highest level in 2007. However, the 16.8% overall year on year rise in property prices is the largest annual increase since the height of the property boom and confirms that the real estate market is heading in the right direction in a steady manner. According to Alan McQuaid from Merrion Stockbrokers the monthly declines in house prices in the first two months of 2015 were probably weather related, with the lack of supply the key driver of prices. ‘Although the tighter lending restrictions imposed by the Central Bank and the end of the Capital Gain Tax property purchase incentive scheme may weigh negatively to some degree, it appears that house price growth may be stronger in 2015 than we previously envisaged,’ he explained. He believes that the improving economy should sustain the house price recovery in the short term even with credit restrictions. Continue reading

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Legal experts says major changes are needed to meet UK’s chronic housing shortage

Seismic changes are needed if any of the top political parties' housing targets in the UK are to be met in the short or long term, it is claimed. Planning permissions, regulatory requirements, funding, the economy and lack of skills have all added to the current housing shortage, according to Rosemary Edwards, partner and head of residential development with corporate solicitors Shulmans LLP, who has acted for many of the UK's top house builders for over two decades. ‘I have heard of many major house builders being accused of land banking but this is patently ridiculous. A house builder's business is entirely based on selling homes. If they can build them and sell them, why would they hold back?’ she said. In reality a house builder will struggle to sell more than say 40 houses a year on any one site, so natural market forces mean that a scheme of 200 houses may take five years to build out. Increased planning and regulatory hurdles have added time and cost, such as the new Community Infrastructure Levy, now effective in some districts, including Leeds. Staff shortages in local authority planning departments can also add to delays,’ she explained. She also pointed out that there is also the problem of mortgage finance. ‘We may say that we need 200,000 new houses or more each year, but not everyone who wants a house can afford one and mortgage eligibility criteria have tightened up considerably in recent years,’ added Edwards. According to Tim Halstead, Shulmans' managing partner and a nationally acknowledged authority on house building, while there's a great deal of talk about building on brownfield sites, doing so throws up as many problems as it supposedly solves. ‘Such sites often have several land owners, so you have to bring them all together or persuade the local authority to exercise compulsory purchase powers. That all takes time and of course you have to build houses, where people want to live which may not be on a former industrial site,’ he said. ‘There is often the added complication of expensive clean-up of contamination or increased costs arising say from digging out old foundations. Those costs can make schemes unviable without subsidy. As long ago as the 1980s we worked on a site in Hull that got a central government grant of £20 million but there just isn't that kind of money around right now,’ he added. Halstead also pointed to a chronic UK skills shortage being another factor in the low numbers of new houses being built. ‘Many skilled construction workers left the industry during the recession. You can't just click your fingers and bring in an endless supply of tradesmen to get new houses built,’ he explained. ‘House builders are now competing, more so than ever before, to recruit skilled labour and to maintain relationships with quality contractors and suppliers. That drives up costs and can cause delays,’ he added. Recent proposals include encouraging small and medium… Continue reading

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UK residential landlords see lowest void periods for 13 years

The average annual void period for residential landlords in the UK has dropped to its lowest level since 2002, new research shows. Indeed, the average void period, which is the length of time between rental property tenancies, reported in the first quarter of 2015 was just 2.4 weeks, the lowest since the Paragon Mortgages survey began. In the last quarter of 2014 the average void period was 2.6 weeks, and comparing the first quarter of this year against the first quarter 2014, the length of time a landlord has experienced a void has fallen by 14% from 2.8 weeks. Landlords have been reporting low or falling void periods since 2013, with only a slight fluctuation in the middle 2013 when the average climbed marginally to three weeks. ‘Void periods have been consistently low for some time, which is not unexpected when you also look at what landlords are telling us about the level of demand from tenants,’ said John Heron, director of mortgages at the specialist buy to let mortgage lender. The survey also found that in the first quarter of 2015 some 42% of landlords said in their view tenant demand was either growing or booming and 54% felt demand was stable. ‘The housing market is currently experiencing a shift, with more people choosing to live in the private rented sector. This is supported by the figures released this month by the English Housing Survey which show 4.4 million households are now privately rented, compared with 3.9 million households in the social rented sector. This change in housing dynamics appears to be a continuing and long term trend,’ added Heron. Continue reading

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