Your current location is:{Current column} >>Text
UK housing market seen facing further 'mini
{Current column}41818People have watched
IntroductionBy Suban AbdullaLONDON (Reuters) - British property market activity stalled in October and house pri ...
By Suban Abdulla
LONDON (Reuters) - British property market activity stalled in October and Global Forex Trading Service Providershouse price growth slowed to its lowest quarterly level since February 2020 due to a disastrous "mini-budget" and a cost-of-living crisis, a survey released on Monday showed.
Zoopla's house price index said the October slowdown was in part due to the economic plan set out in September by then prime minister Liz Truss, which triggered a sell-off in bond markets.
The spike in mortgage rates in the aftermath of the Truss plan led to a sharp decline in housing activity that real estate group Zoopla said was "more pronounced in new buyer demand than sales agreed".
Buyer demand fell 44% year-on-year in October, while sales volumes were down 28% compared to a year earlier, but on par with the pre-pandemic period, Zoopla said.
Zoopla said it expects mortgage rates to return towards the 4-5% level at the start of 2023 after the cost of 5-year fixed loans eased from a peak above 6% last month.
In annual terms, house price inflation slowed to 7.8%, with quarterly growth at 0.7%, the lowest rate since February 2020.
Zoopla predicts British house price growth to head towards 0% and possibly enter negative territory next year.
"While the outlook for house prices is weak, we see a shift to more needs driven motivations to move in 2023 and beyond which will support sales volumes," Richard Donnell, executive director at Zoopla said.
A rapid rent surge will add to cost of living pressures and add "continued impetus" to first-time buyer demand, he added.
Despite the shocks, the slowdown in the property sector is a "shake-out" rather than the start of a crash, Zoopla said.
A separate survey published on Friday showed property demand has shifted from buying to renting amid financial uncertainty.
Statement: The content of this article does not represent the views of FTI website. The content is for reference only and does not constitute investment suggestions. Investment is risky, so you should be careful in your choice! If it involves content, copyright and other issues, please contact us and we will make adjustments at the first time!
Tags:
Related articles
Stocks and gold cheer U.S. inflation picture, while dollar slides By Reuters
{Current column}By Amanda CooperLONDON (Reuters) -Global shares rose on Thursday, while the dollar held near two-mon ...
Read moreDow futures rise 135 pts; Bank of America earnings boost sentiment By
{Current column}By Peter Nurse -- U.S. stocks are seen opening with gains Tuesday, with investors boosted by heal ...
Read moreCrude oil rises ahead of API inventory data By
{Current column}By Peter Nurse -- Oil prices rose Tuesday, continuing the recent positive tone ahead of an industr ...
Read more
Popular Articles
- 4 big analyst picks: Wall Street cheers Molson Coors after Q1
- Asian stocks hit by recession fears, Alibaba leads tech rout By
- Apple opens first India store as fans show off vintage devices, take selfies By Reuters
- California jury finds Tesla Autopilot did not fail in crash case By Reuters
- S&P 500 flounders on tech wreck as economic concerns weigh By
- 'Era has passed' as Beijing subway drops mandatory COVID mask rule By Reuters
Latest articles
-
Central banks, earnings dampen stocks' upbeat mood By Reuters
-
Natural gas ends a shade up as trades ponders direction amid storage build By
-
Chinese GDP, Netflix earnings, U.K. unemployment
-
At China's largest trade fair, exporters worry about world economy By Reuters
-
Gold rises amid bets on Fed pause in June, debt ceiling in focus By
-
Buffett boosts stakes in Japanese trading houses, may invest more By Reuters