Tag Archives: housing

Some home markets in the US are still struggling to recover, latest index suggests

More than a quarter of homes across the United States lost value over the past year, despite the ongoing housing market recovery, according to the latest real estate market report. Some markets have already surpassed home values reached at the height of the housing bubble, while other markets are struggling to leave the recession behind, the analysis from real estate firm Zillow shows. Nationally, homes appreciated 3.3% from a year ago, rising to a Zillow Home Value Index of $180,800. However, the national growth rate has levelled off over the past five months, suggesting the housing recovery is ending and the market is returning to normal. Overall some 27.9% of homes lost value over the past year. Before the housing market crashed, an average of 21.2% of homes were losing value and in December 2008 some 81.6% of homes lost value, the highest amount during the recession. Markets on the East Coast and in the Midwest had the highest share of homes that lost value, led by 48.1% of homes in Baltimore which saw prices fall over the past year. Philadelphia with 43.4% and Washington DC at 41.2% also had large shares of homes losing value. Conversely, few homes lost value in hot markets like Denver, Dallas, San Jose, and San Francisco, which all saw double digit home value growth over the past year. Just 1.5% of homes in Denver and 4% in Dallas were worth less in August 2015 than they were a year ago. ‘We're not going in reverse, but we are hitting the brakes a bit in some markets. It's easy to say the recession is over when a third of the biggest markets are more expensive now than ever before, but we're still seeing a number of homes losing value. The reality is there are still areas lagging behind in the recovery,’ said Zillow chief economist Svenja Gudell The report suggests that renters looking to become home owners may find more opportunities in slower markets like Philadelphia. According to the January 2015 Zillow Housing Confidence Index when home values there were growing at 2.8% annually, eight percent of renters in the area said they planned to buy within a year. This jumped to 18% in the most recent survey, when home value growth was nearly flat at 0.3%. The index data also shows that rents are still growing faster than home values. The Zillow Rent Index rose 3.8% on an annual basis to $1,381, giving potential buyers another reason to consider entering the market. Continue reading

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Row breaks out over issue of retirees downsizing in the UK

Older home owners in the UK should not be forced to downsize just to let the younger generation onto the housing ladder. Saga, a services and advice provider for people aged over 50, has hit out at remarks attributed the Financial Conduct Authority, the UK’s financial watchdog, that retired people should not continue living in properties that are too big for them. Lynda Blackwell, head of mortgages at the FCA, is reported to have told Ministers that they need to address the situation in the UK where retired people continue living in the family home once their children have left. She explained that the current housing shortage could be addressed by these so called ‘last time buyer’ moving to smaller properties to free up homes for people lower down the housing ladder. But Saga believes it is a form of bullying. ‘If people have saved and paid for their house over their working lives, it's down to them if they want to fill it with family or live on their own,’ said Saga’s director of communications, Paul Green. ‘But setting the generations against each other or talking about tackling older home owners is not just unhelpful it's insulting,’ he added. He explained that recent research carried out by Saga in association with Wadswick Green retirement village clearly showed that two thirds of older home owners would like to consider moving home ready for retirement but are prevented from taking that step either because there aren't sufficient appropriate properties to move to, or the costs to move far outweigh any benefit from doing so. ‘One of the solutions Saga has researched is allowing one stamp duty free move for those rightsizing for retirement which, according to independent economists CEBR, would release 111,000 family homes onto the market,’ said Green. ‘This is a win for older home owners who want to downsize, but also for younger families that want to move up the ladder and also for the exchequer. The research shows that by giving this tax free move it would be counterbalanced by an estimated £461 million of stamp duty that would be generated by the house sales that might otherwise not have taken place,’ he explained. ‘If we want to tackle the housing crisis we need to do so holistically. First time buyer schemes for the young are a good start, but we need to consider incentives to help encourage those that would like to move, to take that step. The FCA are right, we definitely need to do more and do it better, but using divisive language will only alienate the very people we need to help and encourage,’ he added. Continue reading

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Residential property sales reach a seven year high in Scotland

Home sales reach in Scotland reached a seven year high in July and prices increased by 0.4% compared to the previous month, the latest index data shows. Overall sales were up 6% but annual price growth slipped 0.1%, taking the average house price to £165,162, according to the Your Move index. The report says that the jump in sales is due to buyers capitalising on lower stamp duty under the new Land and Buildings Transaction Tax (LBTT) which was introduced in April of this year. Activity is growing at a time when the supply of new build housing in Scotland reached its highest level since 2010/2011 but there is some hesitation at the higher end of the market which the report says is the reason why prices are now overall 0.1% lower than a year ago. ‘Activity has been picking up speed in recent months. Lower stamp duty for purchases below £325,000 under the (LBTT) first got the ball moving in April. Since then, the conclusion of the general election, supply of new build homes and the favourable mortgage rate environment have only added to this momentum,’ said Christine Campbell, Your Move managing director in Scotland. ‘After a slightly sluggish start to 2015, sales in the first seven months are exceeding those in 2014. It’s the middle and lower end of the housing market where the tempo is really quickening,’ she added. Indeed, the data shows that Stirling saw the biggest leap in property sales month on month in July, up 49%, with the most commonly sold properties flats. ‘Across Scotland overall we’re witnessing fewer top end home sales in 2015 than in 2014, due to the steeper transaction costs now incurred. The proportion of homes in Scotland sold for more than £325,000 has fallen from 9.2% of all property sales in July 2014, to just 7.8% a year later under the revised taxation system,’ said Campbell. ‘At the same time, there’s been a lot of propulsion emanating from the first time buyer market, feeding off a flurry of new build housing. Our analysis shows that the average price of a first-time buyer property has risen 6% from the second quarter of 2014 to the second quarter of 2015 as a result of this burgeoning demand,’ she explained. The data also show that total supply of new build housing in Scotland has reached its highest level since 2010/2011. Glasgow saw the biggest rise in new homes built in the past year followed by Aberdeenshire and Edinburgh, helping these areas become the first port of call for many new buyers looking to climb onto the property ladder. ‘With housing market activity mostly concentrated at the lower rungs of the property ladder, and a dearth of top end property purchases, overall Scottish house prices have dropped marginally year on year. As of July 2015, average house prices in Scotland are down 0.1% annually, equivalent to falling £176 in 12… Continue reading

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