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Residential sales in Spain record highest growth since January 2013

Residential property sales in Spain increased by 23.6% in May year on year, the highest figures since January 2013, the latest official figures show. The figures from the National Statistics Institute also show that home sales have now increased year on year for four months in a row. However, sales did fall back slightly from the year on year figure of 29% recorded in April. The second hand market and, to a lesser extent, sales of new homes, were responsible for the May increase, up by 26.7% and 12% year on year respectively. The data also shows that in the first five months of the year home sales increased by 15.8% compared with the same period of 2015, with second hand homes up 21.9% but new house sales down 3.4% over the five months. Month on month sales growth has slowed. Compared with April sales in May 2016 were up by 3.5% but this was the lowest increase registered in this month in the past five years. The highest numbers of home sales per 100,000 inhabitants were registered in the Balearic Islands and La Rioja and Andalucía was the region to register most home sales, followed by Catalonia, Valencia and Madrid. In contrast, the regions which registered the least home sales in May were La Rioja, Navarre and Cantabria but in relative terms, home sales rose in all of Spain’s regions except for Navarre, which registered a decline of 20.2% compared with May 2015. The most significant increases were in the Balearic Islands with growth of 70%, followed by La Rioja up 68.9% and Murcia up 61.8%, while the lower increases were in Cantabria with sales growth of just 1.7% and Galicia up 7.8%. Continue reading

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UK house prices up 1.8% in second quarter of 2016, but stagnant in London

UK house prices increased by 1.8% during the second quarter of 2016 and were up 8.5% compared to the same period a year earlier, according to the latest quarterly index data. This took the typical price of a standardised UK property to a record of £215,582 from £211,868 in the first quarter of 2016, the Halifax House Price Index administered by market shows. The data also shows that London house prices have increased more than double the UK average and nearly four times greater than in Northern Ireland despite stagnating in the second quarter of the year while prices in Scotland and Wales fell. Also, the annual increase of 8.5% during the second quarter was the lowest recorded since the third quarter of 2015 but house prices have now risen on a quarterly basis for 15 successive quarters, and prices are also up some 36.6% since the height of the financial crisis in the spring of 2009. But overall, considerable regional variations in terms of both house price inflation and standard house price levels continued into the second quarter of 2016. London, followed by the South East, remain by far the most expensive areas to purchase housing, with the average house price in the capital currently pushing close to £450,000. With the lowest prices in Northern Ireland at £119,000, the gap between the most expensive and cheapest regions is at a new record of just under £330,000. That said, in a sign that April’s stamp duty changes have perhaps taken some heat out of the London market, prices were unchanged in the second quarter following a 7.2% rise in the previous quarter, although they remained well up on a year earlier at 14.6%. Along with the South East with growth of 13.9%, house price inflation in London was the strongest seen in the UK. Outside of these two regions, no others recorded double digit house price rises with most registering considerable slowdowns compared to the previous quarter. In Scotland prices fell 1.6% and were down by 0.6% in Wales while the rate of growth in Northern Ireland fell sharply to just 3.5%. Moreover, house prices in Northern Ireland are still some 48% down on their peak seen in the second quarter of 2007. Indeed, in Wales prices remain close to 10% down on pre-financial crisis levels and Scotland some 6.4% down. Other regions currently recording house price levels below pre-financial crisis highs include the North down 6.9% and the North West down 2.5%. ‘The UK housing market showed signs of cooling in the spring, with the annual rate of inflation slowing to 8.5%. Although average prices moved 1.8% higher than the first quarter, only six of the 12 UK regions saw house prices rise in the three months to June, with prices falling in five regions and stagnating in London,’ said Chris Williamson, chief economist at Markit. ‘This is the first time that prices have failed to rise in London since late 2012. The… Continue reading

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Landlords organisation calls for change of mind on UK tax rises

Private sector rent increases in the UK are inevitable unless MPs move to halt the what the sector believes are unfair tax changes being brought in by the government, it is claimed. The plans to tax landlords on their income rather than after allowances, part of the loss of mortgage interest relief, will inevitably lead to rent increases, according to the Residential Landlord’s Association. Legislation now going through Parliament to implement the Budget will see landlords’ tax bills soar and in some cases will wipe out their profit altogether and as supply of rental homes falls and remaining landlords are facing higher overheads rents will rise to cover costs, the association says. In a recent survey of RLA members, some 84% said that they are likely to consider increasing rents following the Chancellor’s tax hikes which have also included and extra 3% stamp duty charge on buy to let properties. The RLA is now calling for reasonable changes to the Finance Bill to protect both landlords and tenants. It wants the Government to scrap its MIR changes and to remove the stamp duty levy where landlords invest in new property to increase supply in the private rented sector. It has warned this tax raid will have a devastating impact on landlords at a time when the Government needs them more than ever. Some MPs have already voiced concerns. The former Welsh Secretary, David Jones, has called on the Government to stop clobbering landlords whilst the chairman of the influential 1922 Committee, Graham Brady said he has serious concerns about the effect on landlord finances. ‘Landlords do not want to increase rents unnecessarily but many will have to if they are stay in business as a result of these wholly unreasonable tax increases. It is unfortunately tenants who will end up paying the price either through higher rent bills or finding it more difficult to find somewhere suitable to live,’ said Alan Ward, RLA chairman. ‘We welcome the concern of many MPs and hope that they will be able to persuade the Government to change its mind,’ he added. Continue reading

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