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Property sales in UK down 1.7%, says latest seasonally adjusted figures
Property sales in the UK fell by 1.7% between July and August but were 8.4% higher than a year ago, according to the latest seasonally adjust figures from HMRC. There were 99,930 residential and 9,090 non-residential transactions. The data also shows that since the beginning of the 2013/2014 financial year there has been a general month on month increase in transactions for the seasonally adjusted data. In February 2014 there was a gradual decrease followed by a flattening out of transaction numbers. July 2014 and August 2014 have seen new peaks for recent non-seasonally adjusted Transactions to their highest level since November 2007. According to Peter Rollings, chief executive officer of Marsh & Parsons, after a stirring start to the year, the UK property market has calmed, and trading conditions are beginning to look reassuringly more familiar again. ‘Steep house price growth during the first three months has softened to a steadier and more sustainable upward slant, as demand is finally being matched by an encouraging amount of new housing stock on the market,’ he said. ‘The volume of house sales dipped in the month to August 2014, but if we look at the figures through a longer term lens, there has still been a healthy step forward compared to the same point last year,’ he explained. ‘The market may have wound down for summer as it recovered from the adjustment of tighter lending regulation coming into force, but there’s still plenty of gas left in the tank. We expect sales to move up a gear in the autumn, as calmer competition for available homes boosts the confidence of home buyers and pedals the wheels of activity,’ he added. Meanwhile, the latest figures from the British Banking Association show that gross mortgage lending of £11.1 billion was 15% higher than in August last year. But gross mortgage lending in August remains below the £11.3 billion per month average of the last six months. The overall mortgage stock continues to rise in response to stronger demand and is 1.4% higher than a year earlier and sustained growth in business lending is beginning to be seen in the manufacturing, retail and wholesale sectors. Overall net business lending to non-financial companies was £1.5 billion in August, up from minus £0.9 billion in July. According to Duncan Kreeger, director of lender West One Loans, property market activity will remain muted unless lenders do something active about it. ‘High street banks have lent in the same way to the same customers against very similar properties for the last hundred years. In the 21st century, we shouldn’t expect old ways of doing things to power a red blooded recovery,’ he said. ‘Lending must be about getting homes on to the market as well as simply getting them off the market. In other words lenders will solve the biggest problem for the property industry by increasing supply, as well as demand,’ he pointed out. ‘Alternative finance is… Continue reading
A mansion tax in the UK would mostly affect owners in London and South East
The announcement by the UK’s Shadow Chancellor that the Labour Party will impose a mansion tax on homes over £2 million will put a heavy burden on home owners in London and the South East. Ed Balls has announced that if Labour wins the general election next year the tax will be introduced and the revenue used to increase spending on services such as the NHS. ‘We will do it in a fair, sensible and proportionate way, raising the limit each year in line with average rises in house prices,’ he said. He claimed it was not right that a ‘billionaire overseas buyer of a £140 million penthouse in Westminster will pay just £26 a week in property tax’. Labour would not say how much the mansion tax would raise but the Liberal Democrats who have also raised the idea of a mansion tax calculated it raise £1.7 billion a year, but Labour’s higher bands for homes worth tens of millions could raise more. But with property prices having shot up in the past decade, families who moved into relatively affordable homes could suddenly face huge tax bills because their home has increased in value even if their income has not. Indeed, according to figures from the Halifax House Price Index, a property in Greater London bought for £500,000 in 1994, would now be worth £2,056,381 and according to the Centre for Policy Studies think tank, almost one third of properties worth more than £2 million have been owned by the same people for more than a decade, and around a sixth for more than 20 years. Almost 96% of the mansion tax burden would absorbed by London and the South East with more than 108,000 households nationwide affected by the proposed tax, according to leading property website Zoopla. After conducting analysis of all properties in the UK currently valued at more than £2 million, Zoopla found that in excess of 108,000 households would be liable for the annual levy, at an average of £15,000 each. Properties in London and the South East would account for the vast majority, 95.9%, of the additional £1.63 billion cost with the rest of the country contributing just 4.1%, or £66 million, of the total contribution. ‘The introduction of a mansion tax would disproportionately penalise home owners in London and the South East who are already responsible for the vast majority of property tax take in the UK,’ said Lawrence Hall of Zoopla. ‘With more than 100,000 homes to be affected by this new levy, it is somewhat misleading to call it a mansion tax when many three bed family homes in London and the South East would find themselves caught by it,’ he added. A mansion tax would distort the realities of who own homes in the £2 million plus bracket, according to Nick Leeming, chairman of national estate agents Jackson-Stops & Staff. ‘This will affect people all over the country, not just in… Continue reading




