Why UK house prices are rising so fast in a pandemic
2021-06-17
UK house prices are soaring. Official figures show
they have been increasing at their fastest rate for more than a decade despite the
country being gripped by a pandemic.
The UK's biggest building society, the Nationwide,
has described the
UK housing market as "buoyant".
Potential first-time buyers and movers may have more
of a sinking feeling, as some watch the likelihood of owning move further out
of reach. This is what is happening, and why.
House prices in the UK have generally been going up
since the financial crisis. The latest official
figures, for March, show that trend speeding up.
Property values were 10.2% higher than a year
earlier - the fastest annual rate of growth for 14 years.
This map from property portal Zoopla shows that,
unlike recent booms, the biggest price rises have been outside of London and
the South East of England.
The steepest increases, shown in the darker shades,
have been clustered around the central areas of the UK and Wales.
One notable boom area has been Cornwall which,
according to property sales search site Rightmove, overtook London as the most popular
search destination for property buyers.
Many buyers are engaged in a race for space, according to Nationwide.
They want bigger homes with room to live and work, as well as a garden, and
easy-to-reach coast or countryside.
The trouble is they are in short supply.
Family homes are more popular, partly because people
have reassessed their priorities during Covid lockdowns.
That, and the cladding crisis, have
made some city-centre flats less attractive to buyers.
However, prices of apartments are still rising -
albeit at a slower rate than houses - and there are some signs of buyers taking
the chance to make a move into lively cities as Covid restrictions ease.
All this means lots of homes are being sold, certainly
compared with the start of the first national lockdown when the housing market
was closed.
The big spike in March came as buyers and sellers
rushed to complete deals ahead the stamp duty holiday expiring at the end of
the month.
In the end, ministers extended the tax break into the
summer. It can save people up to £15,000.
Any saving may well be eroded for buyers because the
demand for homes is not being matched by supply.
A lack of homes on the market, when demand from
buyers is high, is inevitably pushing up prices.
The result are the kind of scenes in which buyers
have queued
overnight outside estate agents' doors, and buyers have been
putting in offers for
properties they have not even viewed.
On top of that, buyers having to pay more are
borrowing more. One broker says they are "maxing out" on what they
can get from lenders.
That might be affordable when borrowing rates are
low.
The final chart shows that there are signs that the
rising cost of living is picking up speed. The Bank of England may choose to
control that by raising interest rates.
That would make mortgage borrowing more expensive,
putting some new property buyers who borrowed to their limit in financial
danger.
An income shock, such as the loss of their job,
could make that situation a perilous one.
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