Macclesfield Express

What does 2020 look like for the housing market?

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SOME fresh signs of life have been springing up in the housing market. The average UK house price jumped by just over £4,000 between November and December last year, according to Halifax. And some property websites have reported seeing a boost in activity during December 2019, compared with a year earlier – perhaps indicating more people are considerin­g moving in the near future.

So, what does 2020 hold for the housing market?

No one can ever predict exactly what’s going to happen. However, here’s a look at the trends and expert prediction­s, which could provide some clues...

Several experts believe houseprice growth across the UK could be somewhere around the 2% mark in 2020. Yorkshire Building Society thinks house prices could increase by 0-2%, the Royal Institutio­n of Chartered Surveyors expects a 2% average increase, and Rightmove also predicts sellers’ asking prices will increase by 2%. Meanwhile, Halifax expects house price inflation of 1-3%.

Economists have suggested that the December 2019 General Election result could bring more certainty to the market as 2020 gets under way. Indeed, property website Rightmove says it saw demand across the UK from prospectiv­e buyers increased by 28% in the four days after the election, compared with the same four days in 2018.

But experts also suggest Brexitrela­ted uncertaint­ies may inject a further dose of caution into the housing market as 2020 progresses.

Andrew Montlake, managing director of broker Coreco, says: “The first half of the year may see more activity than the second, as the feel-good factor caused by the General Election result slowly fades and the complexity of the trade negotiatio­ns becomes clearer.”

House prices across the UK’s major cities are tipped to increase by 3% on average in 2020.

Home buyers who fancy city living could face forking out more for a property this year. Property website Zoopla says it expects city house prices to increase by 3%.

In cities which are currently more affordable, house prices may increase by 4% by the end of 2020, it forecasts. Zoopla says the average UK city house price has already increased by around £90,000 – over the past decade – equating to a 4.4% average annual increase.

Rents are expected to increase faster than house prices in 2020. This is partly due to evidence that some landlords have been scaling down the number of properties they own – meaning there’s less choice for renters.

The Royal Institutio­n of Chartered Surveyors predicts rents will increase by 2.5% in 2020 as the sector continues to struggle with a lack of supply, compared with house price growth of around 2%.

At the same time, the number of first-time buyers is on the up.

According to estimates from Yorkshire Building Society, there were more first-time buyers across the UK in 2019 than in any other year since 2007. The Society calculates more than 353,400 took their first step on the property ladder last year.

Nearly twice as many first-time buyers secured a mortgage in 2019, as at the start of the financial crisis in 2008. Those entering the property market now account for more than half (51%) of homes purchased with a mortgage. Low mortgage rates and low deposit mortgages should continue to help the sector in 2020.

Nitesh Patel from Yorkshire Building Society, says: “We expect the number of first-time buyers to continue to rise in 2020, but at a slower rate than in recent years.”

High house prices compared with incomes could still be a barrier to some aspiring first-time buyers. According to Nationwide Building Society, by the end of 2019, earnings typically equated to around five times house prices for the typical first-time buyer – close to 2007’s record high ratio of 5.4.

Nitesh says: “In regions where wage growth has outpaced house price growth in recent years, including many parts of the North, Wales and Scotland, we’re likely to see a faster increase in first-time buyers.”

VICKY SHAW asks experts to predict trends for home prices, rents and first-time buyers

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 ??  ?? As rents climb, there has been a rise in the number of first-time buyers
As rents climb, there has been a rise in the number of first-time buyers
 ??  ?? The greater certainty around Brexit may increase activity in the short term, but that could falter as the process grinds on
The greater certainty around Brexit may increase activity in the short term, but that could falter as the process grinds on

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