Gulf Today

UK house price rally to end next year but no big crash expected

Inflation has soared in Britain and so the Bank of England is pressing ahead with a series of interest rate increases just as the economy slips into a recession. That has put a bigger hole in the wallets of indebted consumers

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British house prices will fall in 2023, puting an end to years of bumper rises, but a large crash was unlikely despite the cost of living crisis and increased borrowing costs puting a lid on buyers’ ability to fund purchases, a Reuters poll found.

As in much of the world, inflation has soared in Britain and so the Bank of England is pressing ahead with a series of interest rate increases just as the economy slips into a recession. That has put a bigger hole in the wallets of indebted consumers.

House prices fell for the first time in 28 months in October, according to a survey from the Royal Institutio­n of Chartered Surveyors which also showed a measure of expectatio­ns for house prices in 12 months’ time slumped.

They will fall 4.7% next year nationwide, marking the first annual drop in over a decade, having likely risen 6.3% this year, according to the Nov. 8-24 poll of 20 housing market specialist­s.

“There is a rebalancin­g but nothing like we saw ater the global financial crisis. Supply is still relatively tight so that is helping support prices,” said Chris Druce at estate agency Knight Frank.

During the financial crisis house prices fell around 19% from peak to trough but have since roughly doubled, according to Land Registry data.

UK housebuild­er Taylor Wimpey Plc said earlier this month it would build fewer homes this year than originally planned while bigger rival Persimmon Plc has said it expects 2023 land additions to be significan­tly lower, both likely affecting supply.

Prices will stage a modest recovery and increase 1.0% in 2024 - far behind expectatio­ns for general inflation - and then rise 3.5% in 2025.

When asked about the chance of a price crash within a year nine of 16 respondent­s said it was high or very high. Seven said it was low or very low. However, many of those who said the chance was high noted it would be more a correction than a crash.

“We see a one-year correction in 2023, with the economic performanc­e and job numbers a litle beter than expected. 2023 will be a very difficult year but life will feel semi-normal in 2024,” said Tony Williams at consultanc­y Building Value.

The BOE has raised Bank Rate from a pandemicer­a record low of 0.10% to 3.00% in under a year and is set to add another 50 basis points next month, another Reuters poll predicted, making borrowing even more expensive.

When asked how much prices would fall from peak to trough the median response was 10% but that would still not be enough to make housing affordable - as a group, analysts said prices would need to fall 15% to do so.

Peak-to-trough forecasts were in a 2.0% to 17.5% range.

Rating the value of national house prices on a scale of 1 to 10 from extremely cheap to extremely expensive, the median response from analysts was 8, up from August’s 7 estimate. In London it was an unchanged 8.

In London, usually bolstered by foreign investment and a dearth of supply, the median forecast showed prices would fall 7.0% next year. They will then flatline in 2024 and rise 4.0% in 2025, according to the poll.

Forecasts for next year were in a wide range, from a 12.5% drop to a 4.0% rise, highlighti­ng uncertaint­y in the market.

“Prices have further to fall in London due to exacerbate­d affordabil­ity issues. New builds are also likely to plummet in London as build cost inflation and reduced developmen­t finance starts to bite,” said Mark Farmer at Cast Consultanc­y.

Separately, the UK and Singapore on Friday announced an agreement to boost their financial technology sectors, seeking to remove trade barriers and encourage cooperatio­n.

The news marks Britain’s latest commercial agreement outside Europe following its departure from the European Union at the start of last year.

Friday’s memorandum of understand­ing “will come into effect next week once formalitie­s have been completed on both sides”, the UK government said in a statement ater talks in the city state.

The deal extends a 2016 accord, which establishe­d a so-called “fintech bridge” of cooperatio­n between regulators and businesses.

And it follows a partnershi­p, inked in 2021, to further discuss areas like sustainabl­e finance, innovation, and in particular the burgeoning fintech industry.

“This (memorandum) will increase the cooperatio­n and sharing of informatio­n on emerging trends in the fintech sector,” the statement added.

“It will also break down barriers to trade for UK and Singaporea­n fintechs, boosting growth and investment opportunit­ies.”

Andrew Griffith, a junior Treasury minister working for finance minister Jeremy Hunt, added that Friday’s news was “crucial”. “The uk and Singapore are among the world’s leading jurisdicti­ons for fintech investment -- and today’s announceme­nt will only accelerate growth and innovation in our respective sectors,” he added.

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House prices fell for the first time in 28 months in October.
↑ House prices fell for the first time in 28 months in October.

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