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UK properties with an address in a lane are much more expensive, new research shows

UK home owners in a street with the name ‘lane’ have a property worth over £100,000 more than those on a ‘street’ according to new research. The data, generated by findings provided by property market specialists Hometrack shows that the first line of an address really can say something about the value of a home. The results of the research by Barclays Mortgages show that while homes on lanes have an average property value of £245,906, some 22% higher than the national average while homes on streets come towards the bottom of the list with properties averaging £142,374 or 29% under the national average and 42% below lanes. After lanes the next most expensive addresses are found in ways and roads with average values of £218,742 and £212,717 respectively, followed by closes and avenues at £204,964 and £192,344. Regionally, there’s also some significant variation revealed by the figures. The biggest divide in direct cost between street name prices occurs in the South East, where properties on lanes are an average of £137,145 more expensive than those on streets. The most pronounced gap in price in relative terms is actually in Wales, with properties on streets barely reaching half the value of those on lanes with a price difference of 53%. By contrast, the region with the least fluctuation in price is the East of England, where prices vary between the above street names by just 36%. Comparing this to data released in 2001, all of the street names have massively increased in average value in the last 15 years. The average price for a lane property has doubled, from approximately £123,000 in 2001 to the £246,000 of last year, while even streets have jumped up from £92,000 to £142,000. ‘As this data highlights, the last few years have been incredibly buoyant for the housing market and economy, and this is great news for buyers and sellers across the nation,’ said Craig Calder, Barclays Director of Mortgages. ‘While this data paints a clear picture of victory for ‘lanes it’s interesting to see the varying statistics from around the country, and a huge growth in value overall,’ he added. Continue reading

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Research reveals chromic shortage of first time buyers in UK housing market

The UK housing market is experiencing a potentially serious shortage of first time buyers, particular in the South East and North West, new research has found. First time buyer activity in the North East and Yorkshire and Humberside is less than half of what it was pre-recession while London is the least affected, according to the report from private mortgage insurer Genworth based on an analysis of government and industry data. The South East averaged 86,733 first time buyers a year from 1974, when records began, up until 2006. But since 2007 when the financial crash hit, this has fallen to just 47,863 a year. As a result, this has created a total shortfall of 310,967, the biggest of any English region. The North West has also seen first time buyer numbers drop from 46,461 a year between 1974 and2006 to 23,875 between 2007 and 2014. This has created a shortfall of 180,685 first-time buyers. The North East’s first time buyer market is less than half of its pre-recession size as the data analysis shows that the average number of first time buyers between 2007 and 2014 at 10,575 is just 46% of the pre-2007 average of 23,191, the lowest percentage of any region. In contrast, London is the least affected in relative terms and has lost just a quarter of its first time buyers in percentage terms. Its average of 39,175 between 2007 and 2014 is equal to 73% of the pre-recession average, despite the continued house price increases London has seen in recent years. The report says that comparing these shortfalls to the regional populations of 18 to 45 year olds who are traditionally first time buyers, suggests a significant percentage are potentially ‘denied home owners’ as a result of the fall in first time buyer numbers. For example, a shortfall of 100,927 first time buyers in the North East compared to an 18 to 45 population of 1.3 million means as many as 21% could be classed as ‘denied home owners’. In the South East a shortfall of 310,967 compared with an 18 to 45 population of 1.6 million means 19% are in the same position. ‘Tougher regulation and higher capital requirements for lenders as a result of the recession have accelerated the fall in homeownership and dramatically reduced the number of people, especially younger households, who are able to buy their first home,’ said Simon Crone, vice president for mortgage insurance Europe at Genworth. ‘A dual crisis has emerged with the shortage of new homes exacerbated by a shortage of loans traditionally used to help first time buyers get on the property ladder with 5% or 10% deposits. Our analysis shows that all regions have felt the impact of the squeeze on first time buyers, regardless of the so-called ‘North/South’ divide,’ he explained. ‘While London and the South East face the biggest pressure of high house prices, a lack of housing… Continue reading

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Average UK rents up 11.8% year on year, led by the South West and Scotland

The South West of England and Scotland saw rents increase faster than anywhere else in the UK over the three months to July 2015, according to the latest index. The average rent in the UK for new tenancies over the three months to July 2015 was £977 per month or £761 excluding Greater London, the data from the HomeLet index shows. Indeed, the average rent on a new tenancy in London now stands at £1,538 per month, 9.5% higher than a year ago and overall rent price increases are running ahead of inflation and house price growth. The index, which claims to provide the most up to date figures on UK rent prices, shows that rent price growth in the private rental sector is now extremely broad based with average rental values up in every region of the UK except the North West and are 11.8% higher when compared to the same period in 2014. Three regions of the UK have seen rent prices rise at a rate exceeding that of London in the three months to July 2015. In the South West of England rent prices on new tenancy agreements signed in the three months to July were 11.4% higher than in the same period of last year, in Scotland they increased 11.2% and in the South East of England there was growth of 10.3%. In London where, in cash terms, the average rent on new tenancies is more than twice as high as in the rest of the country, prices continue to rise. New tenancies signed over the three months to July came with rents that were 9.5% higher than in the same period of last year. ‘The index demonstrates just how broad based the rise in rent prices has now become, confirming that this is a UK wide trend. Regions which have long been associated with a buoyant rentals sector, such as London, continue to experience rising prices, but rents are also rising in many other parts of the country at similar rates,’ said Martin Totty, chief executive officer of Barbon Insurance Group, parent company of HomeLet. ‘The South West of England, for example, is benefitting from its popularity with those attracted to the area for lifestyle reasons, as well as the strong local economy in many of the towns and cities of the region,’ he pointed out. He explained that over the past few years, price trends in the rental market and house purchase market have been very similar. ‘However, across the first half of this year, house price growth has slowed whilst rental values have continued to increase, perhaps reflecting a change in the relative attractiveness of renting versus buying over this recent period,’ he said. With early signs of the cost of mortgage finance starting to edge up, it will be interesting to see if this recent trend continues or if the change in buy to let mortgage interest tax relief announced in the Summer… Continue reading

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