Judith Heywood, Deputy Property Editor
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Bleak forecasts for the housing market were further underlined yesterday as data from a leading mortgage lender showed that house prices were continuing to fall throughout the country.
The latest figures from Nationwide revealed that prices have declined by 0.5 per cent in December - the second consecutive monthly fall – to an average of £182,080. Prices are now growing at 4.8 per cent a year, down from 6.9 per cent a month ago. In December 2006 house-price inflation was at 10.5 per cent.
The latest research confirmed that the “flight to quality” prediction by estate agents was under way, as good-quality properties in popular locations held their value at the expense of other areas. A list of hotspots for 2007, compiled by Nationwide, showed that the best-performing towns in England were Oxford and St Albans, both up by 13 per cent. Reading and Bristol rose by 12 per cent.
But some Northern cities, where a glut of apartment schemes have been built on industrial land, are underperforming. Prices have fallen in Newcastle by 3 per cent and Sheffield and Birmingham by 1 per cent.
Fionnuala Earley, the chief economist at Nationwide, said that prices looked like they had farther to fall.
Agents and owners, who are bemoaning the disappearance of buyers, had been hoping for a repeat of 2005 when prices languished for several months, prompting fears of a slump, but rallied from August 2005.
But Ms Earley said: “It seems unlikely that there will be a big recovery in activity and prices mirroring the 2005 experience. This time around lower interest rates are more likely to stabilise market activity rather than reignite it.”
Nationwide gave warning that the first cut in official interest rates in two years, which came earlier this month and reduced the base rate by a quarter point to 5.5 per cent, was unlikely to be enough to lure out nervous buyers. It expects the Bank of England to cut rates by a further half percentage point, or more, next year.
Ms Earley said that even this might be insufficient. The full implications of the US sub-prime problems, which curtailed the availability of credit in Britain, may yet be felt, she added.
Nationwide predicted at the end of last year that house prices would grow by 5 to 8 per cent in 2007. Ms Earley said that “most indicators now show that demand is responding to the pressures of weak affordability, past increases in interest rates and the lower house price expectations that we had expected to take hold earlier in the year”.
Higher-risk borrowers are finding it more difficult and more expensive to secure mortgages, with lenders reluctant to help those with a poor credit rating or with a small deposit. But rising house prices have made decent deposits more difficult to achieve. The Nationwide data shows that, even as the market slows, the average house price costs £8,334 more than 12 months ago.
Last week the rival lender Halifax revealed that the number of first-time buyers was at its lowest level since 1980. But Nationwide believes that the situation may ease later in 2008.
Nationwide has predicted that house prices will be flat next year across Britain - including in the Midlands and East Anglia. It expects prices to fall by 2 per cent in the North and 1 per cent in Yorkshire and the Humberside, Wales and the South West. But it predicts that prices will rise by 1 per cent in Greater London and the South East next year.
The lender expects Scotland to be the great outperformer next year, with prices tipped to rise by 4 per cent. Although prices have risen as much as 25 per cent in a year in Aberdeen, the region remains among the most affordable in Britain. Yet, Northern Ireland, where prices have risen by 32 per cent in the past year in Belfast, is tipped to fall by 5 per cent next year.
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A £400K mortgage -interest only at 5% - would cost circa £1,700 a month to service. A £800K mortgage would cost circa £3,400 a month to service which means that the opportunity cost on buying is circa £2,900 a month or £35K a year!!!! Is Davie P sure that the rent is not £500 a week? This would indicate that the price of the property would need to halve for rental yields to make sense.
Paul, Little Sutton,
This makes me realise that house prices and house price speculation is driven not by true values. They are forced by the media (who receive their evidence from estate agent or mortgage backed firms) and that includes the BBC (as they are political pawns), the banking industry (not only are third world countries in the hands of the banking industry, but now every single person with a mortgage in the western world) and the government (it is in their interest to generate expendable assets in the form of house price wealth as it drives up the economy). So who suffers and where does the money come to support house price growth? A large proportion of injection of capital (and it will be capital, not credit this year) comes from the first time buyer, who deludely hands over capital to stoke house price growth. Once this disappears, then things will tighten up.
I for one, have invested my money in lottery tickets, it's a safer bet at the moment.
Professor B. Oe, London, UK
The only reason houses are not selling is shown in the graph you printed today. Property has been pushed up-and-up by greed driven estate agents banks and building societys and speculators. Now they are unaffordable they expect the government to reduce interest rates. This will make the matter worse. Debt the new religion of the UK.
Frederick, London, UK
and were do we get £400 k mortgages for £500 pm
ianharris, staines,
If you can get a £400K mortgage for £500 per month take it. Better still buy glasses!
David P, Borders, Galashiels,
A house on our road is on the market for sale at £825k or for rent at £500pm. By my reckoning £500pm would buy a 400k mortgage, so you can effectively rent for half the price of buying. So what iis the point of buying? Does this mean prices need to halve? I don't think we'll be buying for years.
Davie P, London ,