
Sell your house online
Latest prices june 2006
Average national asking prices rose by 0.8% (£1,613) in the last month. The annual
rate increased from 5.9% to 6.4%. This is in line with our revised 2006 forecast
announced last month, up from 5% to 8%.
The mini-boom in prices continues to be led by the south of the country. Indeed, falls in
many of the northern regions of England have now changed this from a southern-led
boom, to effectively a southern-only boom. One result is the reversal of the four year
trend of a narrowing gap between prices in the north and the south. .”In June 2002,
average prices in the South were double those in the north. The gap is now widening
again, having reached a turning point last September when the average property was
only 46% more expensive in the southern half of the country. The southern regions are
now over 55% more expensive as they return towards their long term supremacy. (See
chart 1)
The average annual rise in the south of the country now stands at 9.4%.The south’s
resurgence is led by increased demand for ‘top end’ properties, fuelled in part by cashrich
buyers from both the UK and abroad. Access to sources of money other than
mortgages based on earned income has meant that the south is less constrained by
traditional affordability parameters. Economic migration as the south became
comparatively more affordable and a shortage of suitable properties are also
contributing to the rise. Increases have been most marked in the Greater London
region, especially in the wealthier boroughs. Buyer affordability improved there after
prices fell by 1.3% in 2003 while the north of the country was booming. Greater London
sellers are now asking £33,106 (11.7%) more for their properties than a year ago. In
contrast, the lowest rise in a region of England is the North where sellers can ask only
£158 (0.1%) more.
Miles Shipside, Commercial Director of Rightmove comments “The buoyancy of the
southern economy and demand for quality property by affluent buyers are having the
effect of increasing homeowners’ net worth even further. With hindsight, the best time
to move from the north to the south and ‘bridge the gap’ was in September last year,
when the difference was at a four year low of 46%. Parts of the north are now being left
behind, as stretched affordability has limited sellers’ ability to increase prices in most
regions”
The average annual rise in the northern half of the country is 2.7%. With inflation
currently running at 2.2%, prices are close to a standstill in real terms. Affordability
seems to have reached its limits, and can only be improved by wage increases, a
reduction in interest rates or a fall in real house prices. With the next move in rates
anticipated to be upwards, housing activity in the regions further away from London
could be hardest hit.
An upward movement in interest rates would come at a time when the pace of price
rises is slowing due to seasonal factors, from 2% in May to 0.8% in June. This is a clear
sign that the recent rate of increase is not sustainable, and will slow in the second half
of 2006.
Miles Shipside adds “Demand and transaction levels are still healthy in the north despite
the slowdown in prices. Any upward movement in interest rates could put this in
jeopardy at a time of year when the market normally slows down
Read more!