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House prices UK: Rishi Sunak's policy sparks 'reacceleration' of prices


05-16-2021

HOUSE prices in the UK look set to continue rising after Rishi Sunak's extension of coronavirus support schemes.


By CHARLIE BRADLEY


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At the end of April, it was reported UK house prices rose by 7.1 percent compared with a year prior. The figures came from Nationwide, and prompted one analyst to suggest the market is "on the boil". Nationwide said increased savings during lockdown meant some first-time buyers would be better placed to afford a home. Lucy Pendleton, from independent estate agents James Pendleton, said: "This market is on the boil.

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"Silly season might be just around the corner. That's when a seller's market becomes entrenched against a backdrop of very high demand and you start to see open houses for properties that are nothing special and a return of gazumping."

Recent research by Rightmove found the average time to agree a sale in March was 51 days, well down on the 61 days recorded a year earlier.

Experts had predicted that house price growth could slow once the government’s coronavirus financial support schemes and the stamp duty cut come to an end, but the schemes’ recent extensions have given pause for thought.

House prices uk: Sunak has extended the stamp duty holiday
House prices UK: Sunak extended stamp duty holiday (Image: getty)

House prices uk: Sunak has extended the stamp duty holiday (Image: getty)


The estate agency Savills now says it believes house prices will rise by 4 percent in the remainder of the year, just months after predicting that values would remain flat in 2021.

Lucian Cook of Savills told Which: "By extending both the stamp duty holiday and the furlough scheme in the Budget, the Chancellor has significantly reduced the downside risks in the mid-year, while a recovering economy should support price growth towards the year end."

Chancellor Rishi Sunak introduced a stamp duty exemption on the first £500,000 of property purchases last year after home sales collapsed during the initial months of the pandemic.

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House prices uk: House prices could rise in 2021

House prices UK:

House prices uk: House prices could rise in 2021 (Image: getty)


It was supposed to expire in March, but Mr Sunak extended it in his Budget until June, when the threshold will be lowered to £250,000 until September, before returning to £125,000.

In response, Nationwide chief economist Robert Gardner said: "Just as expectations of the end of the stamp duty holiday led to a slowdown in house price growth in March, so the extension of the stamp duty holiday in the budget prompted a reacceleration in April."

He added that while the housing market seemed set to remain "buoyant", it still has an uncertain future.

Mr Gardner continued: "If unemployment rises sharply towards the end of the year as most analysts expect, there is scope for activity to slow, perhaps sharply."

House prices uk:

House prices uk: Many say the prices won't stay this high (Image: getty)

House prices uk: Many say the prices won't stay this high

House prices uk: House prices saw a big year on year rise in April (Image: getty)

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Howard Archer, chief economic advisor to the EY ITEM Club, said: "We believe the strength of the housing market is excessive relative to the economic fundamentals, and the level of prices will ultimately prove unsustainable."

Guy Harrington, chief executive of residential lender Glenhawk, also said the current prices won't last forever.

He told iNews: “The honeymoon won’t go on forever.

“The longer the current unsustainable levels of house price growth continues, the sharper and more painful the eventual correction will be.

"The stamp duty holiday and higher household savings because of the restrictions might paint a positive picture till Autumn, but we will see reality set in once the support schemes end and the scale of slowdown then might catch many by surprise.”

www.express.co.uk/

 

 

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