Housing market is losing momentum

The average price of a residential property in England and Wales is now £314,643, according to the e.surv Chartered Surveyors’ House Price Index for October.

The data shows that on average property prices in England and Wales increased 0.9% in October, while there was an average annual increase of 4.4%.

Greater London was the region with the highest monthly growth at 2.5%.

Richard Sexton, director at e.surv, commented: “House prices continued to rise month-on-month through October, however the momentum has slowed significantly. Between September and October, average house prices increased by 0.9%, the slightest monthly increase since prices began to rise in June this year.”

Despite the slowed growth, average property values still stand at 4.4% higher than this time last year, according to Sexton.

He continued: “This increase is still thought to be largely buoyed by the purchase of the bigger, and often more expensive, homes – activity which has been encouraged further by the stamp duty holiday in England.

“The resilience of the housing market through the crisis has been astounding, as shown by the continual rise of prices since June. The first national lockdown, which left many in England and Wales almost totally confined to their current homes, certainly seems to have re-focused the minds of a lot of consumers onto the property market.

“At e.surv, our present focus is centred on providing an effective and safe service within England’s lockdown regulations, as well as supporting the market in Wales as it exits the fire break. We will continue to act with the utmost consideration for the safety and wellbeing of our customers, colleagues and the wider public as we continue to navigate the pandemic.”

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One Comment

  1. EAMD172

    I wish they would provide the maths behind their statistics. Average house prices are either £235k, £250k or now £314k. Depends on whose date you look at. ‘Average house price of all the properties we have surveyed’ might be useful as all the properties that haven’t been sold like FTB homes that are sticking as their are few good mortgage deals for them aren’t included in their stats. Whilst ‘bigger more expensive homes’ skew the figures. This just means that using their stats next year will show a decrease if Boris gets 95% loans moving again. I wish they would compare flats with flats, 2 bed house, with 2 bed house etc. The only house price index that is mathematically accurate is the Land Registry as it takes into account ALL sold properties not just some of them.
    https://landregistry.data.gov.uk/app/ukhpi

     

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