House Price Predictions for 2017
House price
predictions for 2017
Courtesy of BBC News
As we start
2017, I wanted to start the year by taking a slightly different approach. By
way of a benchmark, I have reproduced the article below, courtesy of the BBC, which outlines some of the expert views of the
national housing market and their predictions for 2017.
We will track
this is future articles to see how Basingstoke to performing relative to the national
average, and to see how accurate some of these predictions actually become.
There are also a
number of links in the article leading to sources for much of the data from the
Nationwide Building Society and the ONS if you want more detail.
You can link directly to the BBC article here.
Buyers of a four-bedroom family home in
London need deep pockets - but perhaps not as cavernous as a year ago.
Asking prices in
the capital for these top-of-the-ladder properties fell by 8.7% over the past
year, according to search site Rightmove. House prices grew much faster in
eastern England and the West Midlands than in London, according to Zoopla.
London's annual
house price growth for 2016 (3.7%) was below the UK average of 4.5% for the
first time since 2008, the Nationwide Building Society says.
So, has the
London bubble burst? Are bargains to be had? Well, these things are relative.
One new
development in Radstock Street in Battersea will see eight large apartments go
on the market in February for £3.65m each.
For most people
around the UK, that is an eye-watering price for a three-bedroom property. Yet,
the developers say these homes will be attractive to downsizers - people aged
in their 50s and 60s already owning a home in central London.
The idea of
downsizing to a £3m-plus home might make those eyes water a little more, but
Louisa Brodie, head of search at Banda Property, says these apartments are
"realistically priced".
"They have car parking, a porter, and are brand new. Properties like this are rare to find, and areas like this have a unique selling point," she says. "London is still one of the most desirable places to live, anywhere." This is surely a sign that London property has been decoupled from the rest of the country for many years.
Despite the drop
in activity in London, the average house price in the capital is still
£474,000, more than double the typical price of £217,000 in the UK as a whole,
according to the latest official figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS).
The slowdown in
central London is the result of the most significant change in the housing
market in 2016 - a stamp duty surcharge on buy-to-let and second homes.
Since April,
anyone buying a home that is not their main residence has had to pay a 3% stamp
duty surcharge. This meant that, for second homes or buy-to-let properties, the
rate for properties priced at more than £1.5m reaches 15%.
The surcharge
led to a burst of activity in March followed by a steep drop in transactions in
April - a "hangover" that still persists, according to Simon
Rubinsohn, chief economist at the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors
(Rics).
In Scotland, the
equivalent tax - the Land and Buildings Transaction Tax (LBTT) - was also
up-rated.
Price changes
The new
surcharge, alongside a rise in normal stamp duty costs for £1m-plus homes since
2014, had a bigger impact on the market than the Brexit vote in June, according
to experts.
Ray Boulger, of
John Charcol mortgage brokers, says it led to many at the expensive end of the
market choosing to extend their homes rather than move. This made it more
difficult to create chains lower down the market.
He says a
"degree of nerves" surrounding the economy and potential buyers' caution
over stretching too far financially had kept a lid on house prices.
Another major
factor in the market over the last 12 months, according to the experts, is a
lack of homes going on to the market. This supply squeeze has meant that,
despite all the other pressures on affordability, prices continued to increase.
The constraint on supply proved to be more problematic than expected, according
to Mr Rubinsohn of Rics, whose prediction of a 6% rise in house prices for 2016
looks to be the most accurate.
This trend will
continue, he says, spelling more difficulties for first-time buyers whose
incomes may fall in real terms. Many will continue to rely on the Bank of Mum
and Dad for help with raising a mortgage deposit, while others will look to the
government's Help to Buy projects to find somewhere affordable.
Others see
first-time buyers as key to the buoyancy of the housing market.
"First-time
buyers still underpin the wider market. So long as the government continues to
support them either directly via Help to Buy or by further tax changes then the
market should not plunge but this is not completely in the gift of politicians
who frankly have more pressing matters to attend to," says property buying
agent Henry Pryor.
"Like last
year if you already own a home then you are probably better off than someone
who doesn't. If you don't, then it seems unlikely that 2017 will see a swift solution
emerge."
The experts have
a relatively wide spread of predictions for 2017 - from price falls overall to
rises matching or outstripping the general level of inflation.
Martin Ellis,
housing economist at mortgage lender the Halifax, is offering a hedge-your-bets
prediction of between a 1% and 4% rise.
"The
relatively wide range for the forecast reflects the higher-than-normal degree
of uncertainty regarding the prospects for the UK economy next year," he
says.
Given that a
buying a home is the biggest financial transaction of most people's lives, they
- and their mortgage lender - will want some certainty over their job and
income before taking the plunge.
Click on the image above, to access the BBC’s interactive map of
house prices in the UK. Although not a huge surprise in many cases, it is
interesting to see the relative cost of areas in the UK displayed on a map.
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