Investment
UK property prices continue upward as sales fall, latest index shows
Property prices increased by 0.4% overall in England and Wales in August and 0.3% in Scotland but sales fell to a new record low for the month, according to the latest real estate index. Property prices increased by 0.4% overall in England and Wales in August and 0.3% in Scotland but sales fell to a new record low for the month, according to the latest real estate index. The data from Home.co.uk show that the South East remains the UK’s fastest moving regional market and prices outdo Greater London with a six month rise of 6.1%. Overall year on year prices were up 6.5% but this rise to 12.8% of £60,000 in Greater London. Asking prices rose in all English regions, Scotland and Wales month on month with the biggest rises in the East of England and the South East at 0.9% and 1% respectively. The index report says that buyer demand and short supply in London and the southern regions continues to drive the national average higher, but at a lesser rate than last year. The supply crisis is worsening and August recorded the lowest number of properties entering the market for that month since the onset of the financial crisis. It suggests that the key driver for demand is the availability of mortgage finance, which remains abundant. Talk of interest rate rises at the Bank of England has not dented buyers’ appetite. Competition between investors remains fierce in London and surrounding regions where the lack of supply is felt most keenly. Indeed, the data shows that in London and the East of England, the volumes of properties entering the market are down 15% and 18% respectively year on year and down 75% and 73% compared with August 2008. ‘These and other southern regions are clearly sellers’ markets and prices remain firmly on an upward trajectory. Marketing times in the South East region have been the lowest in the country since February. Across much of the nation, marketing times are currently around the lowest we have witnessed since 2008,’ said Doug Shephard, the firm’s director. But he pointed out that in the North marketing times are considerably higher than in the South and prices are not rising appreciably and he predicts further upward pressure on prices over the coming months although the North-South divide remains one of the most daunting imbalances in the UK economy. ‘Whilst the stimulus enabled property boom rages in London and the southern regions, the northern markets continue to stagnate. Price appreciation over the last 12 months in the northern regions lay in the range -0.2% to 1.4%,’ said Shephard. ‘Wales too shows little or no sign of market recovery, with a rise of just 1.4% since September 2014. Looking back across the last five years, we can see clearly the dramatic polarisation that has taken place in the UK property market. Only three regions surpassed the average growth for England and Wales, namely London, the South… Continue reading
Poll suggests UK first time buyers see peer to peer lending as way to fund deposit
Over half of first time buyers in the UK expect to reduce the wait to own their home by at least six months by using peer to peer lending, it is claimed. A poll of customers by peer to peer lending service Zopa, found that two thirds aged 18 to 40 who don't own a home are using it to help raise a deposit and over half expect it to reduce the time it will take to reach buy a home. Some 34% of those surveyed said it will shave more than a year off the time until they can buy and a further 21% say it will reduce their waiting time by six months. The poll also found that 22% are hoping to buy in less than a year, whereas 47% hope to purchase a home between one and three years’ time. Of those looking to buy, over half are cutting back on clothes and other purchases and more than two out of three people are eating out less, going on fewer or cheaper holidays and choosing cheaper options for household essentials to boost their savings. In contrast, one in four people are making no lifestyle changes at all. Of those who weren’t saving for a deposit, 33.8% said it was because house prices are too high and almost a quarter said they have other savings priorities at present. The firm said it is alarmingly that over 40% of people are aiming to save a deposit of over £40,000, but this rises to 55% of people in London who are waiting to buy. This stands in stark contrast to those who brought 10 years ago, when only 2% of savers aimed for a deposit of £40,000 or above. The survey also found that 18% are receiving help from government schemes, such as Help to Buy but 55% expect to receive no financial assistance from their families in reaching their deposit target. For those first time buyers that have had financial assistance, the size of parental contributions is actually getting larger as deposit amounts increase. For those who brought their houses more than 10 years ago, only 8% of parental contributions were over £45,000. This percentage rises to 28% for people who brought less than a year ago. ‘Buying a home is a major milestone in many people’s lives and saving a deposit is getting harder each year as prices and the amount required increases,’ said Zopa’s executive chairman Giles Andrews. Continue reading
US home owners wary as housing market slows
Home owners in the United States are wary of where the housing market is going, while rising prices in some markets are driving renters away from home ownership aspirations, a new report has found. Overall, home owners are confident about the current state of the housing market, but they are less exuberant about future market performance, according to the mid-year results of the Zillow Housing Confidence Index (ZHCI). Millennials are ready to buy in slowing housing markets, but they are dialling back their plans to buy in red hot tech markets like Denver, Seattle, and San Francisco, the index report points out. Also, some 4.9 million renters say they plan to buy in the next year, down from 5.2 million in January, the survey of 10,000 renters and home owners also shows. That is down from 12.1% to 11.4% in the first six months of this year. A smaller percentage of those surveyed said it was a good time to buy. The percentage of those surveyed who believe people who have recently bought a home will be better off in 10 years fell from 61% to 59%, the data also shows. ‘The housing market is slowing down, and Americans' confidence in the future of the market is understandably fading a bit, too. Despite remaining quite confident overall, homeowners are less confident about the future than they are about the present,’ said Zillow chief economist Svenja Gudell. ‘Seeing still stronger than normal home value appreciation in markets like San Francisco and Seattle might remind them of the last housing bubble. But the good news is things are levelling off with no crash in sight. If incomes rise to keep up with home values people can count on home ownership in their future, even in hot markets,’ added Gudell. The report says that home value growth has slowed in almost all housing markets this year, giving homebuyers some breathing room. In those markets with marked slowdowns, many more buyers are looking to buy their first home. For example, 8% of Philadelphia renters said they planned to buy within a year in the January survey, when home values were rising at a 3.1%. In July, when Philadelphia home values were flat, 18% said they planned to buy within a year. And many of those new potential buyers are millennials. Just 1% of 18 to 34 year old Philadelphia renters surveyed in January planned to buy within a year, but that had increased to 23% in the July survey. The opposite occurred in markets where home value growth, despite having slowed overall, is still well above national norms. Here, renters are less optimistic about their buying prospects. In San Francisco some 18% of 18 to 34 year old renters planned to buy a home within a year when asked in January. At that point, San Francisco home values were rising at a 7.9% annual rate. In July, home values were up 11% year on year, and only 5%… Continue reading




