The Guardian Australia

UK house prices fall at fastest pace since 2020 amid fallout from mini-budget

- Kalyeena Makortoff Banking correspond­ent

UK house prices have fallen at their fastest rate for two and a half years as the fallout from Liz Truss’s disastrous mini-budget put buyers off according to Nationwide, which warned inflation and rising interest rates would weigh on the market in the coming months.

The price of an average home dropped 1.4% to £263,788 in November, according to the lender’s house price index, accelerati­ng a slowdown that saw prices fall 0.9% in October. It was the third monthly fall in a row, and the biggest drop since June 2020.

On an annual basis, annual house price growth slowed sharply to 4.4% in November, from 7.2% a month earlier.

The slowdown in November illustrate­d the lasting impact of September’s mini-budget, which spooked markets and increased borrowing costs. While government borrowing rates have eased since then, average fixed mortgage rates are still hovering at about 5% and have continued to weigh on demand.

“While financial market conditions have stabilised, interest rates for new mortgages remain elevated and the market has lost a significan­t degree of momentum”, Nationwide’s chief economist Robert Gardner said. “Housing affordabil­ity for potential buyers and home movers has become much more stretched at a time when household finances are already under pressure from high inflation.”

Nationwide said a larger proportion of people have been priced out of the market and have needed to borrow more money to buy a home.

Surging inflation hit 11.1% in October – its highest level since 1981 – on the back of surging energy bills, which has reduced the spending capacity of UK households, including prospectiv­e homebuyers.

The slowdown in house prices indicates that the market has cooled relative to the strong growth observed during the pandemic, when in the “race for space” people sought larger homes after UK-wide lockdowns.

Nationwide warned on Thursday that the housing market was unlikely to recover those losses anytime soon, as policymake­rs at Threadneed­le Street ratchet up interest rates further in an attempt to combat climbing prices.

“The market looks set to remain subdued in the coming quarter,” Gardner said. “Inflation is set to remain high for some time and [the] Bank rate is likely to rise further as the Bank of England seeks to ensure demand in the economy slows to relieve domestic price pressures.

“The outlook is uncertain, and much will depend on how the broader economy performs, but a relatively soft landing is still possible.”

However, Gardner said homeowners were still in a relatively strong position, despite the oncoming recession and prospect of higher rates, given that about 85% of mortgages were on fixed-term home loans.

 ?? Photograph: Jill Mead/The Guardian ?? On an annual basis house price growth has slowed to 4.4%.
Photograph: Jill Mead/The Guardian On an annual basis house price growth has slowed to 4.4%.

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