House price inflation in UK cities is running at 9.4% annually and set to grow another 10% next year.
The forecast comes from Hometrack, which says that Glasgow, Manchester and Liverpool are currently recording their highest rates of annual house price growth since 2007 at 8.3%, 7% and 5.1% respectively.
However, their performance is nothing like London’s.
In Glasgow and Manchester, house prices have been recovering only in the last three years; in Liverpool, house prices went on falling until early 2012 and are still 13% below peak.
By contrast, in London house prices are up 70% since 2009.
The Hometrack city index monitors house prices in 20 cities, and found the highest rate of annual growth in Oxford at 12.8%, followed by Cambridge at 10.7%.
It found only one city, Aberdeeen, where house prices have tailed off over the last year, by 0.8%.
In another housing market report out today, agents Your Move and Reeds Rains said rents dipped in October to stand at £806 per month across England and Wales.
That is down from September’s all-time high of £816.
Despite the monthly fall, annual rent inflation is now 4.7%.
A third report, on house building, said that 135,050 homes have been built over the last year, up 17% compared with the previous 12 months.
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