House price growth cooler in June
The Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) has reported that the growth in house prices in June was half that of May, with demand weakening as recent base rate increases take their effect both on the pocket and psychologically.
According to the Institute’s UK Housing Market Survey, house prices rose for the 20th consecutive month in June but the rate of growth was well below the survey’s recent average of 21.6%, at 10.6%.
London saw the strongest price rises, and both Scotland and Northern Ireland were buoyant, the latter largely as a result of the recent political settlement.
During the month, enquiries from new buyer declined at the fastest pace since February 2006, falling across all regions, with the exception of Wales, the West Midlands and Scotland.
The recent mini-boom in the housing market began in 2006 and the figures from the RICS suggest that prices have finally started to cool significantly, as interest rate rises leave home movers nervous and new buyers thinking twice before buying a home.
The full effects of five base rate increases since August last year have not yet fully filter through to the housing market and as a result some analysts believe that a significant slowdown in property inflation is looking increasingly likely.
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