Yorkshire Post

UK’s house prices hit are cord high

Values driven higher as locked- in hunt for space

- GREGWRIGHT DEPUTY BUSINESS EDITOR Email: greg. wright@ jpimedia. co. uk Twitter: @ yorkshirep­ost

BUSINESS: UK house prices have hit a new record high of £ 227,826 on average in October after annual growth in property values reached its fastest rate since 2015.

House prices increased by 5.8 per cent annually in October, marking the fastest year- on- year growth rate since January 2015, Nationwide Building Society said.

UK HOUSE prices hit a new record high of £ 227,826 on average in October after annual growth in property values reached its fastest rate since 2015.

House prices increased by 5.8 per cent annually in October, marking the fastest year- on- year growth rate since January 2015, Nationwide Building Society said.

Prices increased by 0.8 per cent month on month. There have been signs that many buyers are currently looking to beat the stamp duty holiday deadline, which expires on March 31 2021.

Activity has also been boosted by buyers searching for homes with more space during the coronaviru­s crisis – and Bank of England figures released this week showed home- buyer mortgage approval numbers climbed to a 13- year high in September.

But concerns have been raised that potential buyers may simply pull out of transactio­ns in early 2021 if it looks like they will not meet the stamp duty deadline.

NAEA ( National Associatio­n of Estate Agents) Propertyma­rk and others have been calling for action to stop a cliff- edge situation next year, which they argue could be done through an extension of the deadline and a smoothing of the end of the holiday.

Robert Gardner, Nationwide’s chief economist, said: “The outlook remains highly uncertain and will depend heavily on how the pandemic and the measures to contain it evolve, as well as the efficacy of policy measures implemente­d to limit the damage to the wider economy.

“Behavioura­l shifts as a result of Covid- 19 may provide support for housing market activity, while the stamp duty holiday will continue to provide a near- term boost by bringing purchases forward.

“However, activity is likely to slow in the coming quarters, perhaps sharply, if the labour market weakens as most analysts expect, especially once the stamp duty holiday expires at the end of March.”

Mark Harris, chief executive of mortgage broker SPF Private Clients, said: “The stamp duty holiday has clearly stimulated the market, combined with the impact of Covid and the desire for people to move somewhere with more outside space.

“The end of the stamp duty deadline is a concern, and needs looking at by the Government, although it is focusing buyers’ minds on getting deals done in the short term.

“The problem borrowers face is lenders’ service levels, with some struggling with the rise in demand.”

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