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Newly let property rents up in the UK while others remain stable
Rents in the UK remain stable for renewed and occupied tenancies but continue to increase for newly let properties in the first quarter of 2015, according to the latest rental index. Overall average rents for newly let properties increased 4.5% in the quarter to £894 per calendar month, up from £853 in the fourth quarter of 2014. Arrears continue to decrease in England, Scotland and Wales, a sign that household income is less stretched than a year ago, the index from Countrywide also shows. A breakdown of the figures shows that average rents increase for one and two bedroom properties in the first three months of the year, up 0.8% and 0.4% respectively compared to the previous quarter to £730 and £817. Three and four plus bedroom properties saw rents remain stable with just a 0.1% decrease to £939 and £1,435 per calendar month respectively. However, when looking at March 2015 compared to February 2015 rent increased for three and four bedroom properties by 1.6% and 16.4%. Two bedroom properties see no change in average monthly rent and one bedroom properties a 1.4% decrease. The average monthly rent in the quarter decreased in over half of UK regions, with the greatest decrease in the South East of England, down 1.9% compared to the fourth quarter of 2014 to £1,097. Average rents remain unchanged in the North but increased in central London, up 3.1% to £2,561. Month on month, rents increased in the majority of regions, with the South East seeing the greatest increase, up 14.8% in March compared to February. Average rent decreased the greatest in central London, down 4.4%. The average UK rent for renewed tenancies in March is £848 per calendar month, an increase of 0.8% month on month and 2.3% year on year. By property size, increases and decreases in average monthly rent for renewed tenancies remained relatively unchanged in March when compared to February, apart from one bedroom properties which saw a 4.3% increase. Two bedroom properties see a 0.6% increase, three bedroom properties see a 0.6% decrease, whilst for four plus bedroom properties the average rent remains unchanged. The only region to see a decrease in rents in March was central London, down 2.3% on February to £2,485. All other regions saw no change or an increase in rents, with Wales seeing the greatest increase, up 13% to £654. Year on year, the East of England is the only region to see a decrease in rents, down 0.9% in March 2015 compared to March 2014. The average rent for all occupied rental properties is £840 per calendar month, an increase of 0.2% month on month and 2.4% year on year. By property size, rents for occupied rental properties see marginal changes in rents month on month, with one, two and three bedroom properties seeing an increase of 0.7% 0.3% and 0.2% to £693, £773 and £879 respectively. Four plus bedroom properties see a small decrease of just 0.1%… Continue reading
Sales and prices up in Canadian housing market, latest index shows
National home sales in Canada increased by 4.1% from February to March and the average sales price is also going up but slewed by growth in Vancouver and Toronto, the latest index report shows. But the data from the Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA) also shows that while the national average sale price rose 9.4% on a year on year basis in March, excluding Greater Vancouver and Greater Toronto, it increased by 2.4%. March sales were up from the previous month in nearly two thirds of all local markets, led by Greater Vancouver, Fraser Valley, Calgary and Edmonton. Despite the monthly rebound, Calgary and Edmonton sales came in below the 10 year average for the month of March. ‘Low mortgage interest rates are good news for affordability as we head into the spring home buying season. This spring should see buyers coming off the sidelines in places where winter was anything but mild,’ said CREA president Pauline Aunger. According to Gregory Klump, CREA’s chief economist, Greater Vancouver and the GTA are really the only two hot spots for home sales and prices in Canada at present. ‘Price gains in these two markets are being fuelled by a shortage of single family homes for sale in the face of strong demand. Meanwhile, supply and demand for homes is well balanced among the vast majority of housing markets elsewhere across Canada,’ he explained. Year on year price gains for single family homes in Greater Vancouver and Greater Toronto have exceeded those in other housing markets tracked by the MLS® HPI throughout the first quarter of 2015, the data reveals. Actual activity in March stood 9.5% above levels reported in March 2014 and slightly above the 10 year average for the month. March sales failed to lift activity recorded during the first quarter above its 10 year average. First quarter sales were below their 10 year average in most local housing markets. The number of newly listed homes rose 1.8% in March compared to February. The rebound in Greater Toronto more than offset the continuing pullback of new supply in Calgary, where it had climbed sharply toward the end of last year but now stands at a multiyear low. The national sales to new listings ratio was 53.9% in March, up from 52.7% in February and 50.4% in January. A sales to new listings ratio between 40 and 60% is generally consistent with balanced housing market conditions, with readings above and below this range indicating sellers’ and buyers’ markets respectively. The ratio was within this range in about 60% of all local housing markets in March. The number of months of inventory is another important measure of the balance between housing supply and demand. It represents the number of months it would take to completely liquidate current inventories at the current rate of sales activity. There were 6.1 months of inventory on a national basis at the end of February 2015, down from 6.3 months in February and… Continue reading
UK asking prices reach new high, latest index shows
Asking prices in the UK have reached a new record of £286,133, pushed up by demand which has been exacerbated by a lack of sellers putting their homes on the market. The figures from the latest Rightmove monthly index also show that asking prices are up 1.6% month on month in April although the annual rate of growth has fallen to 4.7% compared to 5.4% in March. It also reveals that the property shortage experienced in many parts of the country has been exacerbated by a 2015 slump in the number of properties being put up for sale and by increased demand, with record spring search activity on Rightmove. Indeed, the number of new sellers is down 4% so far in 2015 compared to 2014 and March was the busiest ever month on Rightmove, up almost 20% year on year to 115 million. The supply issue is at its most extreme in the south of the country, with the price of property coming to market up by an average of nearly £85,000 or 27.5% since the last election in May 2010. ‘Record high housing demand and an under supply of homes have delivered a new all-time high in the price of property coming to market in the month before the election,’ said Miles Shipside, Rightmove director and housing market analyst. He believes that as the high cost of housing is a big concern for many home hunters, so the contents of the respective party manifestos and well thought out sustainable solutions to the lack of affordable housing supply will be high on many voters’ agendas too. ‘While the annual rate of price increases may be dropping back, down from 5.4% last month to 4.7% this month, it’s of little comfort to buyers as even more modest increases stretch buyers’ finances into new territory with prices at record average highs. Furthermore, the rapid fall in general inflation means that the inflation-adjusted rate of house price growth remains high,’ he explained. While the recovering housing market saw an 11% increase in new seller numbers from January to April 2014 compared to the same period in 2013, so far this year’s newly marketed property numbers have slumped and are down by 4% compared with 2014. Conversely, housing demand continues to burgeon, with Rightmove recording its busiest ever month in March. Website visits were up almost 20% year on year, to over 115 million. ‘Failure to meet house building targets since the eighties, nineties and noughties to match forecast housing demand has been a major factor in upwards price pressure both in the property sales and private rented sectors,’ said Shipside. ‘In spite of the distractions and uncertainty surrounding the upcoming election, demand for the right roof over your head seems unchecked. If you’re setting up home, moving jobs or your kids need to be in a new school, your personal housing agenda is perhaps higher than the bigger-picture political one,’ he added. ‘However, while demand is at record… Continue reading




