The Guardian Australia

UK house prices fall for first time in 15 months after Liz Truss mini-budget

- Julia Kollewe

UK house prices fell for the first time in more than a year in October, as the Liz Truss government’s mini-budget wreaked havoc on the housing market, pushing mortgage rates sharply higher.

The average price of a property was down by 0.9% compared with September, to £268,282, according to Nationwide building society’s latest monthly report, the first snapshot of a tumultuous period. This was the first fall since July 2021 and the largest since June 2020. The annual growth rate slowed sharply from 9.5% to 7.2%.

Robert Gardner, the Nationwide chief economist, said: “The market has undoubtedl­y been impacted by the turmoil after the mini-budget, which led to a sharp rise in market interest rates. Higher borrowing costs have added to stretched housing affordabil­ity at a time when household finances are already under pressure from high inflation.”

The increase in mortgage rates meant that a first-time buyer (FTB) earning the average wage and looking to buy a typical FTB home with a 20% deposit would experience a rise in their monthly mortgage payment from 34% of take-home pay to 45%, based on an average interest rate of 5.5%. This is similar to the ratio prevailing before the financial crisis, Gardner said.

Mark Harris, the chief executive of the mortgage broker SPF Private Clients, said the easing of the crisis in the financial markets since Truss resigned had started to feed through to the mortgage market.

“Some fixed-rate mortgage pricing has dropped accordingl­y over the past few days, with Barclays, HSBC and Santander, among others, reducing their rates,” he said.

However, interest rates are expected to rise further as the Bank of England seeks to bring down soaring UK inflation, which is at a 40-year high of 10.1.% The Bank’s monetary policy committee is expected to raise rates by 0.75 percentage points on Thursday, to 3%.

Nationwide expects the housing market to slow in the coming quarters, in response to high inflation and rising rates.

Tom Bill, the head of UK residentia­l research at Knight Frank, said: “Demand will come under more pressure next year as a growing number of people come to the end of fixed-rate deals and mortgage offers made earlier this year when rates were lower begin to lapse.

“Government stability will help underpin transactio­ns but we are witnessing a fundamenta­l shift in rates take place after 13 years of ultralow borrowing costs that will lead to price declines. Low unemployme­nt, tight supply and well capitalise­d lenders mean we should avoid the kind of double-digit falls seen during the financial crisis.”

 ?? Photograph: Paul White/Alamy ?? The annual growth rate in UK house prices slowed sharply from 9.5% to 7.2%.
Photograph: Paul White/Alamy The annual growth rate in UK house prices slowed sharply from 9.5% to 7.2%.

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