Average house prices have risen
by nearly £3,000 this month as the property market continues to resist
predictions that the UK’s lacklustre economic performance will cause a
significant slump during 2023.
Despite low growth and historically high mortgage rates, which have
prompted forecasts of a 10% fall in prices this year, the average home is on
the market at £365,357 in March, a rise of 0.8% on the previous month.
The increase is below the typical March rise of 1% over the past 20
years but still reflects a market “on a much more stable footing than many
anticipated”, according to property website Rightmove, which published the
data.
Rightmove said the market was recovering from a spike in borrowing
costs at the end of last year, when policies put forward by Liz Truss and her
chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng spooked international investors and sent
mortgage costs soaring.
Average rates for a five-year fixed deal with a 15% deposit soared to
5.89% in October, shortly after Kwarteng’s
doomed “mini-budget”, prompting estate agent Savills to predict a 10% slump
in prices during 2023, amid the wider economic malaise.
The rate for the same mortgage deal has since fallen back to 4.65%.
Although this is still well above the 2.48% seen this time last year,
estate agent Knight Frank said borrowing costs could fall further, as lenders
compete to win business in a less buoyant market.
Central banks have also been tipped to think twice about raising base
rates, given turmoil in the banking sector after the collapse
of Silicon Valley Bank and the crisis
engulfing Credit Suisse.
Inflation has also edged
down to 10.1% from a peak of 11.1%, also registered in October last
year, while recent economic figures have shown the UK narrowly
averting a recession.
The improved economic environment drove up house prices in March,
Rightmove said, compared with February, when prices were unchanged.
Underlying factors, such as the UK’s apparent inability to build new
homes, are also preventing large price falls.
The rate of new housebuilding is predicted to fall in England, the
Home Builders Federation (HBF) has warned, owing to a range of government
policies that threaten to slow development dramatically.
The HBF said this would exacerbate the country’s housing crisis and
make it harder than at any point in recent history to become a homeowner.
Yet property experts are still predicting an overall price fall during
2023, with mortgage rates and inflation still stubbornly high amid the broader
cost of living crisis, coupled with factors specific to the housing market.
Downwards price pressure will persist as more owners come to the end
of fixed-rate deals and supply picks up from the lows of the pandemic,” said
Tom Bill, head of UK residential research at Knight Frank.
“We expect a 5% decline this year across the UK.”
The Rightmove data also showed discrepancies, with major variation
depending on region and the price bracket of homes hitting the market.
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