The Scotsman

Property activity at lowest level in ten years

● RICS Scotland says Brexit uncertaint­y is fuelling shortfall

- By JANE BRADLEY Consumer Affairs Correspond­ent jane.bradley@scotsman.com

A lack of properties going up for sale, fuelled by Brexit uncertaint­ies, has created the lowest levels of activity in the Scottish housing market in more than a decade.

The Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors( R IC S) Scotland report said new instructio­ns north of the Border suffered the poor est reading since March 2009. However, prices continued to rise, with Scotland one of only two UK regions to report an increase.

This comes as a separate report from Halifax showed that the average UK house price now stands at £236,619, following a 1.1 per cent monthly rise in April.

New buyer interest across Scotland has deteriorat­ed so far in 2019, with a net balance of -26 per cent of respondent­s reporting a decline in demand. On the back of this, the survey’ s indicator on newly agreed sales turned negative, with a net balance of -19 per cent more chartered surveyors reporting a drop in transactio­ns during April.

Chartered survey or Peter Dr en nan, spokesman for Allied Surveyors Scotland, said: “Quieter, but limited supply meaning prices holding up, especially at mid-market levels. The underlying shortage [of properties] continues.”

Scottish house prices remained firm in April, with a net balance of 28 p er cent more respondent­s reporting an increase. However, the regional breakdown across the UK shows prices under pressure in London and the south east, while the south west has now consistent­ly fallen for the past six months.

Only Northern Ireland and Scotland continue to buck the trend, with respondent­s reporting a further rise in prices.

Simon Rubin sohn, RICS chief economist, said: “Across the UK, although there are signs of greater realism on pricing from vendors, there is little conviction in the feedback from respondent­s to the survey that activity in the housing market will pick-up anytime soon.”

In the Scottish lettings market, tenant demand continues to climb while landlord instructio­ns continue to dwindle, extending a run of successive quarterly declines dating back to the beginning of 2016.

Rents are projected to rise to by around 2 per cent at the UK level over the coming 12 months, with grow th accelerati­ng to average 3 per cent a year over the next five years.

Russell G alley, managing director at Halifax, said: “The index has seen a weaker pace of growth over the last three years, which is consistent with the easing of transactio­ns volume sand housing market activity reflected in R IC S, Bank of England and HMRC figures.”

 ?? PICTURE: JOHN DEVLIN ?? 0 Fewer homes on the market due to Brexit fears means Scottish sale prices are increasing
PICTURE: JOHN DEVLIN 0 Fewer homes on the market due to Brexit fears means Scottish sale prices are increasing

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