Property market swings back in favour of sellers as supply slides again

The property market may have swung back in favour of sellers during April, NAEA Propertymark claims.

The trade body’s latest Housing Report found demand from prospective buyers increased from 308 to 337 between March and April, while supply was down from 40 to 33 homes per branch over the same period.

This is a departure from March when the number of house-hunters on estate agents’ books fell from 309 to 308, while supply per branch hit a five-month high of 40.

The number of properties available per branch increased from 35 in February to 40 in March – the highest since October last year.

The number of sales to first-time buyers remained the same between March and April at eight per branch, while the percentage of sales to this cohort dipped to 24% from 25% at the same time last year.

Mark Hayward, chief executive of NAEA Propertymark, said: “Last month our findings indicated that we were entering what looked like a buyers’ market, but this month, the dial has swung back in the favour of sellers.

“With demand on the up, and the supply of available homes falling once again, buyers will find themselves facing stiff competition.

“This is particularly difficult for first-time buyers who traditionally have less bargaining power on price, so will struggle to enter bidding wars with second or third steppers.

“The Government is working to improve the house buying and selling process, which is music to our ears, but until more homes are built and supply catches up with demand, the process will remain difficult.”

x

Email the story to a friend!



3 Comments

  1. nextchapter

    Where do you get this rubbish from? Try speaking to Estate Agents.  I don’t know about anyone else, but it is most definitely a buyers market.   Buyers have more choice than before, and they are negotiating, hard.  Sellers are starting to recognise that, and recognise reductions across the board, so they’re finally lowering their expectations with price and what is and isn’t achievable. What are everybody else’s thoughts on this?

    Report
  2. Shaun77

    We’ve agreed sales on 6 houses by an average of 3.3% over the asking price in the last 5 weeks. We’re in Surrey, where the market is very difficult, but we’re bucking the trend by convincing sellers that accurate pricing is the best way to create competition, which in turn helps to max the price.

    Report
  3. PaulC

    Mixed bag our end,

    Newport is a Sellers Market

    Cardiff is a bit tougher neither side has advantage or pressure

    Swansea in my opinion is a slower market but we have relatively sample size to comment.

    Report
X

You must be logged in to report this comment!

Comments are closed.

Thank you for signing up to our newsletter, we have sent you an email asking you to confirm your subscription. Additionally if you would like to create a free EYE account which allows you to comment on news stories and manage your email subscriptions please enter a password below.