Britain’s housing market is cooling rapidly as a result of tougher Bank of England mortgage market requirements, high prices and the uncertainty caused by the coming general election. The prospect of higher interest rates at some point in 2015 is also dampening demand.
Figures from the British Bankers’ Association showed a sharp slowdown in mortgage approvals, while Nationwide building society has reported a drop in lending volumes.
The BBA said that new mortgage approvals hit a 17-month low of 37,076 in October. That total was down nearly a quarter from January’s 76-month high of 48,649. It was also down 16% year on year.
However, a house price crash is unlikely, according to new forecasts.
Halifax’s forecasts for 2015 point to a further rise in values of 3% to 5% next year, despite uncertainty about the general election.
Earlier this month Halifax reported that house prices fell during October and recorded their smallest quarterly increase in nearly two years. The October survey by the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors found that buyer inquires shrank for the fourth month running.
Half-year results from Nationwide building society added to the gathering evidence of a weakening market, with net lending down by 2bn to 3.6bn in the six months to 30 September – although lending to landlords rose slightly.
The society, which reported a doubling in pre-tax profits and higher savings inflows, said part of the reason net lending was down was tougher competition from other major mortgage providers, such as Halifax and Santander.
via The Guardian
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