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European Bank measures risk house price bubbles in UK, Germany and Norway

Quantitative easing by the European Central Bank could drive prices even higher in overvalued property markets in Germany, Norway and the UK, a new analysis suggests. House prices in these countries have risen quickly over the last year and a half and as a result the risk of house prices bubbles have re-emerged, according to a report from Moody’s Analytics. It explains that while the International Monetary Fund’s Global Housing Watch shows prices rising, it is case of a two speed market. Some have rebounded quickly after just moderate price declines during the financial crisis, the other group is still recovering from much steeper price drops. The first group includes Germany, the UK and Norway where house prices have shot up over the last few quarters and where the formation of a housing bubble is a real possibility and QE feeds asset bubbles, the report points out. Since March every month the EWCB has been buying €60 billion worth of euro-denominated assets issued by euro one governments, agencies, and European institutions and the programme will last at least until September 2016. This has seen yields on the government debt of countries viewed by investors as safe fall and this in turn has encouraged investment in property markets which yield higher returns. In Germany, house prices have been steadily rising since the middle of 2009 as its property market is viewed as a safe haven investment in an environment of increased uncertainty. Indeed, Germany was one of the few European countries to avoid a housing market slump during the 2008/2009 downturn, thanks to prudent bank lending regulation. However, the report says that growing demand for German properties is leading to overvaluation, especially given the insufficient supply. Only recently has construction finally picked up. In the first half of this year, German building authorities granted 10% more building permits than in the same period a year earlier. But it will take a few years before supply catches up to demand. German house prices have therefore been rising more quickly than rents and incomes. Although the price-to-income and price to rent ratios are still relatively low compared with Germany’s long term average, the report says that if this trend persists the housing market could overheat. While the outright risk of a housing bubble forming in Germany is relatively low, the Bundesbank is monitoring the situation. So far, it has not intervened. However, in the UK the authorities are doing so. Last year the Bank of England in 2014 warned of a possible housing bubble which could derail the country’s recovery and introduced tighter mortgage loan standards designed to reduce the supply of credit, taking some heat out of the housing market. The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority also introduced stricter underwriting rules for mortgages to ensure that banks assess borrowers’ ability to repay loans after interest rates start to rise. Yet loan standards are still relatively loose, largely the result of the UK government’s Help… Continue reading

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UK homes market sees more properties coming up for sale online

The number of UK home owners putting their properties on the market online has increased by 7.1% in the past month compared to the previous month, the latest research shows. Some 67% of major towns and cities in the UK have seen a rise in the number of new properties being marketed in the same period, according to the data from online estate agents House Simple. The index, compiled from the number of new properties listed every week on the property portal Rightmove in more than 100 major towns and cities across the UK and all the London boroughs, also shows that although new stock levels remain low overall across the country, home owners are finally starting to put their homes on the market. The largest increases in new listings in the past month compared to the previous month was in Swindon with growth of 47.3% followed by Liverpool and Leicester, both at 30.4%, then Lancaster at 24.3% and Sunderland at 22%. Next came Halifax at 21.1%, Coventry at 21.1%, Hereford at 19%, Lincoln at 17.6% and Oxford and Dundee both at 17.5%. These towns and cities were followed by Edinburgh and Blackpool at 17.2%, Hartlepool at 17.1% and Bolton at 16.3%. The figures also reveal a distinct north/south divide, with home owners in the north of England and Scotland appearing to be more active in June and July in marketing their properties. Nine out of 15 of the new property listings risers are in the north of England or Scotland, while four towns/cities in the Midlands also feature in the list. Winchester saw the biggest drop in new properties coming onto the market in the past month compared to the previous month with a fall of 17.9%, followed by Hull down by 13.7%, Doncaster down by 12.5% and Cambridge down by 8.7%. Next came Nottingham with a fall of 8.1%, Torquay at 7.6%, Grimsby at 6.2%, Norwich at 5.8% and Glasgow at 5.7%. The London property market has slowed in recent months. However, Rightmove figures analysed by HouseSimple reveal that the capital has seen an 8.1% increase in new properties being listed in the past month compared to the previous month. Some 78.1% of London boroughs have seen an increase in new properties being marketed in the past month and the biggest rise was in the City and Westminster at 29.5%, Islington at 28.8% and Southwark at 27.1%. Meanwhile the biggest fallers have been Bromley, down 11.2%, Kingston upon Thames down 6.6% and Havering down 4.4%. ‘A stampede of sellers coming to market was expected after the General Election result, but that stampede never materialised. In fact, for the first few weeks there appeared to be a fair amount of caution and reluctance amongst sellers to market,’ said Alex Gosling, chief executive officer of House Simple. ‘This may have been a case of waiting to see if property prices might start to rise rapidly with the confidence generated by a stable, majority government. Now it… Continue reading

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Extensions and alterations add £6.5 billion to the value of UK homes

Home owners in the UK have added an estimated £6.5 billion to the value of the country’s housing stock in the 12 months to March 2015, according to new research. Some 220,000 owner occupiers in the UK extended or altered their home in past year, equivalent to one in 74 home owners, the report from international real estate adviser Savills also shows. Based on the assumption that the average extension or alteration adds 10% to the value of the average home, this would create an average uplift of £30,000 per property, the report points out. By contrast mortgaged home movers are still only at half the level they were 10 years ago pre credit crunch, at 358,400 in the year to the end of March 2015, according to data from the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML). ‘The cost of taking the next step up the housing ladder and the difficulties in acquiring the mortgage finance to do so appear to have encouraged a significant proportion of owner occupiers to extend or alter their existing home,’ said Lucian Cook, head of Savills UK residential research. ‘Changes made by the mortgage market review and increased stamp duty for properties over £1 million are both likely catalysts to home improvements, impeding the rate and volume of transactions in the market,’ he added. The report also suggest that there is a far greater propensity to alter or extend in high value markets. Savills estimates one in 44 home owners did so in London the year to end March 2015, while £3.6 billion of the £6.5 billion was added to the value of housing stock of London and the South East. ‘High value markets have generally been the strongest performers post credit crunch. Extending has therefore been both more financially viable, with owners recouping the money spent on home improvements through house price growth and more attractive given the relative costs of upsizing,’ said Cook. The research also shows that Hammersmith and Fulham and Kensington and Chelsea top the list of local authorities with the highest propensity to extend, both creating an uplift in property values of over £100 million before fixtures and fittings are taken into account. Beyond London, areas such as St Albans, Cambridge, Winsor and Maidenhead and Guildford have all seen significant numbers of home owners extending their home. Continue reading

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