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UK Housing Market Update

What the lead indicators tell us this month

A research produced by

Our forecasts for 2017 anticipated a high level of uncertainty as Brexit negotiations started. The announcement of a General Election on 8th June is part of this uncertainty and has not yet prompted a change in our expectations. We continue to expect slow or negative house price growth and subdued transaction levels, at least in the short term.

In line with this, Nationwide reported a second consecutive month of house price falls in April 2017. House prices fell -0.4%, according to their index. The RICS survey results were unchanged in March. It reported continued falls in the number of new instructions and the number of surveyors reporting an increase in buyer enquiries remains about equal to the number reporting falls. Transaction volumes were 10% lower over the last six months compared to the same period the previous year. This varied from 23% lower in London to only 3% lower in Scotland and Wales.

GDP growth came in at half the expected rate at the end of Q1 2017, at only 0.3%. It is anticipated the Bank of England will reduce its GDP forecast for the year following the weak first quarter. Meanwhile, inflation (CPI) has risen ahead of expectations to 2.2% in March. Household lending data from March shows a continued appetite for unsecured borrowing. This may mitigate the effect of inflation on consumer spending power in 2017, but is not a long term fix.

The strongest house price growth is focussed in East London and lower value London commuter towns. The London Borough of Newham still ranks in the top three local authorities in terms of annual house price growth, joined in February by Thurrock and Harlow.

The ONS index of rents currently being paid shows annual rental growth running at 2.0% in Great Britain in March 2017. The strongest rental growth was in the South East and East of England, at 3.4% and 2.8% respectively. LSL, Countrywide and HomeLet are all reporting slower growth over the last few months than the same period last year. The latest data for London suggests that rents have stabilised after recent falls.

Source : Savills

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