The Borneo Post

UK house prices fall again in April as buyers face Brexit pinch

-

LONDON: British house prices fell for a second month in a row in April, suggesting households are feeling the pinch from rising inflation since last year’s Brexit vote and low wage growth, data from mortgage lender Nationwide showed yesterday.

Nationwide said house prices declined by a monthly 0.4 per cent following a fall of 0.3 per cent in March which had been the first drop since mid-2015.

In annual terms, prices were 2.6 per cent higher, the weakest increase in almost four years.

Economists polled by Reuters had expected house prices to rise by 0.1 per cent in April from March and by 3.3 per cent in annual terms.

Britain’s households are facing a loss of spending power due to rising inflation - aggravated by the fall in the pound since last year’s referendum decision to leave the European Union – which is starting to outpace wage growth.

A survey published earlier on Friday showed British consumers were their most gloomy in four months in April as they weighed up the outlook for the economy and their finances ahead of Brexit and June’s general election.

The last time Nationwide reported two consecutiv­e months of house price falls in monthly terms was in mid2012.

“While monthly figures can be volatile, the recent softening in price growth may be a further indication that households are starting to react to the emerging squeeze on real incomes or to affordabil­ity pressures in key parts of the country,” Nationwide economist Robert Gardner said. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia