Posts with tag: average asking price

Average Asking Price Hits Record High

Published On: September 21, 2015 at 3:55 pm

Author:

Categories: Landlord News

Tags: ,,,

Average Asking Price Hits Record High

Average Asking Price Hits Record High

Property asking prices in England and Wales have soared to a record high of £295,000, reveals research by Rightmove.

If house prices in London continue to rise at the current pace, the average home in the capital could cost £1m by 2020, adds the property portal.

Head of Rightmove, Miles Shipside, comments on the findings: “High demand, lack of suitable supply and increasingly stretched affordability are leading to some extremes in market forces in different sectors and parts of the country.”

The average increase of 0.9%, or £2,550, this month was the highest for September since 2002.

Outside London, the average asking price is £294,834. In the capital, which has experienced a 9.5% rise over the last year, the typical property has an asking price of £620,003.

Shipside says this “illustrates the desperate need for more building and more affordable housing in and around the capital”1.

Some counties in the south, such as Hertfordshire, Berkshire, Cambridgeshire and Essex, witnessed greater growth than London.

However, the North East, North West, Yorkshire and the Humber, the West Midlands, East Midlands and Wales saw monthly declines.

1 Shaw, V. (2015) ‘Asking price of average home hits a record £295k’, Metro, 21 September, p.32

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Balancing the North-South Divide will Solve Housing Crisis

The director of Home.co.uk believes that balancing the north-south divide will solve the housing crisis currently experienced in the south of England.

The property search engine found that the gap between asking prices in the north and south is so wide that it completely contradicts Chancellor George Osborne’s idea of a northern powerhouse.

According to the Home asking price index, prices in the north of England dropped in every region between July 2008 and July 2015. The North East experienced the greatest falls, with a 6.45% decline.

Balancing the North-South Divide will Solve Housing Crisis

Balancing the North-South Divide will Solve Housing Crisis

Over the same period, asking prices in the North West decreased by 5.72% and by 4.56% in Yorkshire and the Humber.

These figures contrast dramatically with the housing boom in London and the south of England.

In the past seven years, asking prices in the capital soared by 44.9% and by 24.71% in the South East.

Osborne vowed to back a northern powerhouse, by boosting infrastructure, employment and the building sector.

However, his latest Budget revealed further welfare cuts, including a reduction in working tax credits.

Director of Home, Doug Shephard, comments: “It seems an appalling injustice that post-crisis economic measures have effectively meant austerity for the north and stimulus for the south and London. The north-south divide has been greatly exacerbated in recent years.

“There is no housing crisis in the north and there would not be in the south if workers weren’t forced to up sticks and move south to earn a living.”1

Asking prices in the East of England rose by 14.98%, by 9.82% in the South West, 6.72% in the East Midlands and 3.05% in the West Midlands between July 2008 and July 2015.

Meanwhile, Scotland and Wales experienced declines, of 4.56% and 5.72% respectively, over the last seven years.

The full index can be found here: http://www.home.co.uk/asking_price_index/Mix-Adj_Methodology.pdf

1 http://www.propertyindustryeye.com/15115/

Average Estate Agent Fee is 1.3% for 15th Consecutive Month

Published On: July 20, 2015 at 11:14 am

Author:

Categories: Landlord News

Tags: ,,,

Average Estate Agent Fee is 1.3% for 15th Consecutive Month

Average Estate Agent Fee is 1.3% for 15th Consecutive Month

The UK’s largest conveyancing firm, Myhomemove, has revealed that the average estate agent fee in June was 1.3%, for the 15th consecutive month.

When the rate first dropped in April 2014, the average fee would have been £2,925.

Last month, this had increased by £83, due to rising house prices. As inflation is at 0%, this is a net gain.

June’s house price fall was unexpected and now the housing market is continuing its recovery with a 6.4% monthly increase, to £235,992.

From January to June this year, property prices have risen by 2.9% on average and annually by 5.5%.

These prices are based upon completed house prices, not asking prices.

The average fee does not include online and hybrid agent fees.

The average time to receive a mortgage offer has grown by another half day, to 49 days. This is around a week quicker than last year.