LONDON (BLOOMBERG) – Property asking prices in Britain fell at the sharpest pace in almost 2½ years as a traditional summer lull combined with increased caution about the outlook for the economy.
The cost of new homes listed for sale fell 1.3 per cent in August, reducing the annual pace of growth to 8.2 per cent from 9.3 per cent, property search website Rightmove said on Monday (Aug 15). The most expensive homes suffered the largest drop, and London had the biggest decline in the country.
Rightmove said prices typically fall in August when buyers go on holiday and focus on getting children back into school. Other reports from the Bank of England and mortgage lenders indicate that higher interest rates and concern about a cost-of-living crisis are starting to weigh on the property market.
“Several indicators point to activity in the market continuing to cool from the lofty heights of the last two years,” said Mr Tim Bannister, director of property science at Rightmove. “It is likely that the impact of interest rate rises will gradually filter through during the rest of the year.”
For now, a shortage of properties coming to market and strong demand are likely to keep prices from plunging. Rightmove noted a 20 per cent increase in buyer demand since 2019 before the pandemic started.
The figures underscore a steady surge in the cost of property over the past two decades that Rightmove has been conducting its survey, leaving many buyers straining to afford to buy.
Rightmove said housing costs have more than doubled in the past 20 years, rising 134 per cent to £365,173 (S$607,300). This outstripped a 76 per cent increase in average wages over that period and a 93 per cent gain in the Retail Prices Index, a measure of inflation.
Price growth has slowed in the past few months, taking some of the heat out of a market that was spurred on last year by a tax break on purchases.
A more traditional pattern of sales is starting appear, said Ms Josephine Ashby, managing partner of John Bray Estate Agents in North Cornwall, which contributed to the report. Buyers are having “sensible conversations about choice and value rather than the frenzied bun fight we experienced during the pandemic”.
Inquiries by buyers are down 4 per cent from 2021 levels but are higher than the pre-pandemic level.
Average monthly mortgage payments for first-time buyers with a 10 per cent deposit exceeded £1,000 for the first time.
source https://netdace.com/latest-news/uk-property-asking-prices-fall-the-most-in-more-than-2-years/