The average house price in the UK dropped by 0.2% between April and May this year, according to the latest House Price Index from Nationwide.
On an annual basis, house price growth dropped from an average of 0.9% in April, to just 0.6% in May. This slight decrease took the average house price to £214,946 last month.
Robert Gardner, the Chief Economist at Nationwide, explains the figures: “Annual house price growth remained below 1% for the sixth month in a row in May, at 0.6%.
“Survey data suggests that new buyer enquiries and consumer confidence have remained subdued in recent months. Nevertheless, indicators of housing market activity, such as the number of property transactions and the number of mortgages approved for house purchase, have remained broadly stable.
“Housing market trends are likely to continue to mirror developments in the broader economy. While healthy labour market conditions and low borrowing costs will provide underlying support, uncertainty is likely to continue to act as a drag on sentiment and activity, with price growth and transaction levels remaining close to current levels over the coming months.”
He looks into conditions for prospective first time buyers: “First time buyer numbers have continued their steady recovery in recent quarters, reaching 359,000 in the 12 months to March, just 10% below 2006 peaks. The trend is partly due to robust labour market conditions, with employment rising at a healthy rate and earnings growth slowly gathering momentum.
“Low borrowing costs have also provided important ongoing support. Even though house prices remain high relative to average incomes, the cost of servicing the typical mortgage as a share of take-home pay has remained close to or below long-run averages in most parts of the country.
“The main exception is in London, where a period of rapid house price growth in the three years to 2015 means that monthly mortgage payments would also be unaffordable for a large proportion of the local population.
“Outside of London and the South East, raising a deposit appears to be the main challenge for most prospective first time buyers.
“Even in Scotland and the north, where property appears most affordable, it would still take someone earning the average wage and saving 15% of their take-home pay each month more than five years to save a 20% deposit. In Wales and Northern Ireland, it would take prospective buyers nearly seven years, and almost eight for people living in the Midlands.
“Reflecting the trend in overall house prices, the deposit challenge is most daunting in the south of England, where it would take an average earner a decade or more to amass a 20% deposit.
“Again, the pressures are most acute in the capital, where someone earning an average income would take more than 15 years to save a 20% deposit on the typical London property (even longer than was the case before the financial crisis, when it would have taken over ten years).”
But Government schemes and family support are helping to ease deposit constraints. Gardner says: “In recent years, a growing proportion of first time buyers have been drawing on help from friends and family, or an inheritance to help raise a deposit.
“In 2017/18, almost half of first time buyers had some help raising a deposit, either in the form of a gift or loan from family or a friend, or through inheritance, up from around a quarter in the mid-1990s and 35% of buyers in 2015/16.
“The Government’s Help to Buy equity loan scheme has also been an important source of support for first time buyers, by easing deposit constraints.
“Those buying with Help to Buy accounted for 14% of first time buyer transactions in England in 2018, and almost 40% of private new build homes were bought under the scheme last year, although the proportion varies across the country.
“Help to Buy Wales accounted for over 40% of private new build completions in the principality in 2018. Meanwhile, Scotland saw c.2,300 sales in 2017/18 through the Affordable New Build Scheme, approximately 17% of private new build completions, where the lower proportion largely reflects the narrower scope of the scheme.”
Market trends are also providing a tailwind, he explains: “The interest rates charged on mortgages where the borrower puts down a smaller deposit have also declined relative to those with larger deposits in recent quarters.
“This trend is also likely to be allowing some borrowers to enter the market sooner, as there is less of a cost advantage to waiting to accrue a larger deposit.”
Guy Harrington, the CEO of residential and commercial lender Glenhawk, gives his thoughts on the index: “Slowing growth is a trend we will likely see for some considerable time. There are a number of factors dragging on the housing market; not only do we now have a leadership battle in Government, but also the potential of a general election, compounded by Brexit. Despite this unsettling backdrop, a combination of the low interest environment, ongoing Government support, sluggish house price performance and willing lenders presents a great opportunity for buyers.”