House prices put on 1.6%
The latest property index from Halifax shows UK house prices increasing by 1.6% in September, easing the annual rate of fall to 7.4%.
Last month, the typical UK home cost £163,533, a figure similar to that recorded in mid-2005.
The lender says the value of the average property rose for the third consecutive month and for the fifth month so far this year, putting on 1.7% in total since the end of 2008 and 5.9% since reaching an April 2009 nadir.
Taking the three-month-on-three-month measure, the average value of a home increased by 2.8% in the third quarter of 2009, representing the first quarterly rise since the same period of 2007 and the biggest quarterly increase since the first three months of that year.
Increased demand and a low level of properties available for sale are behind the surge, together with “marked improvement in affordability due to the reduction in both property prices and interest rates since mid-2007″.
However, Halifax cautions that rising unemployment and low earnings growth are likely to “constrain” the market in the months ahead.
In addition, the overall improvement in the housing market is tempting would-be home movers to market their properties.
This could “curb the pace of house price growth evident in recent months”, Halifax observes.
By way of comparison, Nationwide recently announced that the average value of a UK home rose by 0.9% in September, marking the fifth consecutive monthly increase and taking the year-on-year rate of change out of negative territory for the first time since March 2008.
The average property price now stands at £161,816, compared with £160,224 in August, according to Nationwide.
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