Tag Archives: real-estate

Average residential rents in Australian capital cities falling

Residential rental rates in Australian capital cities fell by 0.2% last month, down to $487 per week, but are up 1.1% over the past 12 months. It is the slowest annual rise in capital city rents recorded by the CoreLogic RP Data monthly rental report since date was first gathered in December 1995. The firm’s research analyst Cameron Kusher said that the sluggish pace of rental appreciation continues to be attributed to the ongoing boom in home construction across Australia’s capital cities accompanied by record high participation in the housing market from investors. A breakdown of the figures shows that Sydney and Hobart have recorded the greatest increases in weekly rents and over the past three months rents are lower in all cities except for Sydney, Melbourne and Canberra. The report says that Sydney and Melbourne are recording relatively stronger rental growth despite a large surge in new supply and high levels of investment purchasing. Sydney and Hobart also recorded the greatest annual increases in weekly rents while rents in Perth, Darwin and Canberra continue to decline. With home values growing faster than rents, gross rental yields are at a record low level and continue to edge lower, the report adds. Continue reading

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Annual house price growth in Scotland twice that of rest of UK

House prices remain resilient in Scotland despite property tax change and are up 10.3% year on year, twice the annual growth seen in England and Wales. The average house prices is now £180,892, according to the latest LSL house price index, but values fell by 2.1% in May which is regarded as being due to the introduction of the new Land and Buildings Transaction Tax (LBTT). Indeed the tax has also put a brake on sales which declined 10% month on month, and again this figure is affected by the LBTT as there was a rush of sales being completed before it was introduced in April. The tax had the most impact on the £1 million plus property sector with only one property in this price band sold in two months. Properties over £750,000 now pay 12% in tax. But generally the market is in good shape, according to the report. In Glasgow, for example, house prices finally surpassed 2007 levels, reaching a new record of £146,286 due to high demand. ‘Two months into Scotland’s new transaction tax regime, and the impact of the overhaul is still reverberating around the property market,’ said Christine Campbell, Your Move managing director in Scotland. She explained that the general election was a fresh source of uncertainty for those considering the best time to move home and it has been an up and down time for buyers and sellers and as a result it is harder to make out the underlying course of the market. ‘Yet the trends that can be gleaned are positive. Scottish house prices are up by more than 10% on an annual basis, and the sentiment from buyers in our branches is upbeat as the stability of the housing recovery shines though,’ said Campbell. ‘There is no denying that the recent tax turbulence has affected property prices in the shorter term, with the latest monthly dip testament to further shock waves of the LBTT, as the market continues to absorb the change. May’s monthly fall of 2.1%, equal to £4,000, is the largest backwards step we’ve experienced for nearly six years,’ she pointed out. However, she also pointed out that this must be considered in the context of following an exceptional leap in March, when prices soared a record breaking £16,000 as a result of frenetic movement at the top end of the housing market, with 84 properties worth £1 million or more changing hands before the stamp duty switchover. ‘But since the new regime was enforced, there’s been only one million pound home sold in Scotland in the past two months, which is reining back current measures of growth,’ she added. During May, it was the most expensive parts of Scotland that saw average property prices slip backwards, in absence of some higher value sales. For example, house prices in Edinburgh have dropped 5.7% since April, while East Lothian saw an 11.2% monthly drop in May. ‘But overall, the… Continue reading

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UK house prices up 5.7% year on year, slight annual rise, ONS data shows

UK house prices increased by 5.7% in the year to May 2015, up from 5.5% in the year to April 2015, the latest official property market data shows. House price annual inflation was 5.8% in England, 2.5% in Wales, 2.9% in Scotland and 10.5% in Northern Ireland, according to the index from the Office of National Statistics (ONS). The pace of annual house price growth increased slightly across the majority of the UK in May 2015 taking he average mix-adjusted house price to £274,000 and was driven by an annual increase of 9.3% in the East of England and 8.2% in the South East. Excluding London and the South East, UK house prices increased by 5.2% in the 12 months to May 2015 and on a seasonally adjusted basis, average house prices increased by 0.9% between April and May 2015. In May 2015, prices paid by first time buyers were 5.1% higher on average than in May 2014 and for existing owners prices increased by 5.9% for the same period. The data shows that the regional disparities of the property market are steadily shrinking as price growth becomes more broad based, according to Jonathan Hopper, managing director of Garrington Property Finders. ‘London and South East England remain strong hotspots, but as the rates of price rises there return to more sober levels, five of the nine English regions saw their rate of price growth rise and the East of England, powered in part by an extraordinary surge in activity in Cambridge, has the fastest growing property values,’ he said. ‘Even North East England, which was hit hardest by the slump, is now seeing price growth of nearly 2% a year. Demand exceeds supply for all but the most expensive prime property, and this is steadily forcing prices up across the board,’ he explained. ‘Despite mortgages being at their cheapest level for years, buyers are still intensely value sensitive and in some regions seller expectations have been outstripping what buyers are willing to pay. Though confidence among both buyers and sellers remains high, as the summer slowdown begins, sellers must be wary of letting their pricing ambitions run away from what the market will tolerate,’ he added. Alex Gosling, chief executive officer of online estate agents HouseSimple, pointed out that despite the rate of price growth slightly decelerating, demand has remained constant. ‘A shortage of stock during the pre-election uncertainty stilted the market, however the flurry of properties which have come on since the election's clear result have coincided with a strong return to confidence,’ he said. ‘Both sellers and buyers are trusting the market more, prompted by steady economic growth, better employment prospects and a boost in earnings. But it is worth noting that vendors may consider it to be a sellers' market, but buyers are not making the same mistakes of the last boom, as they remain sensitive to both price and affordability,’ he added. With house price growth… Continue reading

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