UK house prices ‘on track’ to rise this year

house pricesUK house prices remain on track to edge higher this year, according to Knight Frank, as a mortgage pricing war and expectations of another Bank of England interest rate cut in the final quarter of the year rekindle the property market.

After a year of sustained price falls in 2023, the estate agency updated its forecast for UK house prices in May to rise by 3% in 2024, up from an earlier estimate of a 4% drop.

Against a backdrop of falling inflation and growing anticipation of interest rate cuts, it said that it expected an increase in transactions.

In the three months since its last housing market forecast in May, there has been a general election and a rate cut, and this is helping to support confidence in the housing market.

“Our forecasts appear on track but the first Labour government in 14 years and the first rate cut since March 2020 have clearly changed the mood music,” said Tom Bill, head of UK residential research at Knight Frank.

“We have left our numbers unchanged for now but will reassess them after the Budget on 30 October,” he added.

So, how has the landscape in the UK property market altered over the last 90 days?

Knight Frank says that the mainstream sales market has been impacted by the rate cut more than the change of government.

Following the drop to 5% from 5.25% and lower-than-expected inflation data, SONIA five-year swap rates fell towards 3.5% in August. Financial markets were pricing in a further cut in November.

It will lead to a “meaningful increase” in the number of lenders offering sub-4% mortgages this autumn said Simon Gammon, head of Knight Frank Finance. As a result, demand and sales volumes will be stronger in the final months of this year than in 2023.

HMRC data shows that the number of transactions was 19% below the five-year average (excluding 2020) in 2023, largely due to stubbornly-high inflation and fast-rising borrowing costs.

In terms of prices, the Halifax and Nationwide indices registered growth of just over 2% in July, meaning our 3% forecast for the year looks like it should be met if not exceeded.

Nationwide also showed growth of 1.6% in Greater London in the year to June, which means prices in the capital are fast-approaching our 2% forecast for 2024.

The prospect of the Budget means the outlook in prime markets is hazier.

The decision to charge private schools VAT from January rather than September next year has created a mood of wariness ahead of 30 October.

The measure by itself will not have a dramatic impact in prime property markets, but together with other potential tax rises, it may keep demand in check, according to Bill.

He continued: “Given the government’s pledge not to raise income tax, VAT or National Insurance, speculation has centred on capital gains tax, inheritance tax and pension tax relief among others.

“Changes will also be made to rules surrounding non doms, the 74,000 individuals living in the UK who do not pay tax on their non-UK income.

“How pre-existing overseas trusts are treated for inheritance tax purposes will be a particular focus for those wondering if large numbers of them will leave the UK.”

Knight Frank’s prime central London (PCL) forecast is therefore subject to a bigger revision than our other projections later this year. The annual decline was -2.4% for the third successive month in July, which we forecast will narrow to -1% by December.

Bill said: “Any impact would be less marked in prime outer London (POL), where we forecast an increase of 2% this year. Average prices in POL rose 0.6% in the six months to July, putting them on track for a low single-digit increase in 2024 as demand strengthens this autumn.

“Prime country prices continue their descent from the highs of the pandemic and the so-called ‘race for space’.

“Our forecast of -2% for 2024 is broadly on track, though it may prove overly-negative as demand strengthens in the final months of the year. The annual decline recorded in June was -3%.”

Knight Frank adds that its forecasts for rents in 2024 also appear broadly on track, if you ignore the uncertainty surrounding the Renters Reform Bill.

In PCL, the agency forecast growth will fall to 2% this year as supply increases from the lows of the pandemic. The increase was 0.9% in the six months to June.

Meanwhile, rental values in POL increased 0.7% in the six months to June. Our forecast is 2.5% for the whole year.

In the wider UK market, annual growth was 8.6% in July and falling, which means it should end the year close to our 6% forecast.

Again, the agency says it will reassess the numbers after the Budget (once it knows more about the government’s plans for the lettings industry).

For now, only two things are certain, Bill explained:

“First, the Labour government will introduce their own version of the Conservative Party’s Renters Reform Bill during this Parliament. Second, it has been talking tougher on landlords.

“Measures could include making it harder to evict tenants and tighter rules around green credentials for lettings properties, according to recent press reports. Meanwhile, capital gains tax could also rise in October’s Budget.

“If enough landlords sell because the new rules are too financially punitive, it will increase upwards pressure on rents, which our forecasts would reflect.

“We therefore expect the next three months to provide more clarity about the longer-term future for the UK housing market than the last three.”

 

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3 Comments

  1. Commentator91

    @CharlieLamdin……!

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  2. Rosebush

    As most small private landlords make almost no profit on their rentals due to s24 I fear that any increase in CGT will kill the rental sector even for those landlords with no mortgage. Many rely on the sale of their property to boost their pensions after Labour destroyed the pensions of millions self employed. Any increase in CGT will make buy to lets unviable and just not worth the hassle. We are all waiting to find out if the “hardship” clause will be introduced and exactly what this will mean for landlords because, of course, evictions will mean the tenant is “worse off” than the landlord especially if the landlord wants to sell for financial reasons.

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  3. jan-byers

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