This news on August 13th, 2013 by Reuters showing the survey chimes with data from mortgage lenders showing returning confidence in the property market.
(Reuters) -
British house prices are rising at their fastest pace in seven years,
according to an industry survey on Tuesday which may add to concerns
that government lending incentives are creating a new property bubble.
The Royal Institution of
Chartered Surveyors' seasonally adjusted house price balance jumped to
+36 in July from +21 in June and just +5 in May. That was the best
reading since November 2006 and one of the sharpest improvements over a
three-month period since the survey began in 1978.
The
survey chimes with data from mortgage lenders showing returning
confidence in the property market. Halifax last week reported annual
house price inflation jumped to 4.6 percent in the three months to July
and was likely to rise further in the coming months.
Government data released on Tuesday showed that efforts to boost the housing market
were proving popular with buyers. It said 10,000 new homes had been
reserved by buyers since April under the first phase of its Help To Buy
scheme.
Britain's central bank
indicated last week that it was likely to keep interest rates at a
record low for at least another three years. Combined with government
initiatives to lower the cost of mortgage finance and to help people
onto the property ladder, that could sustain the upward momentum in
house prices for some time.
Prices
are now rising in all regions of the country, suggesting confidence is
rippling out from London and the South East, RICS said.
The balance on a national basis turned positive in March.
In
another sign that market confidence is returning, the balance measuring
new buyer enquiries rose for a sixth consecutive month to 53, its
highest level in four years.
The
strength of the property market will fuel criticism of the second phase
of the government's housing stimulus scheme, due to come into force next
January, which will offer state mortgage guarantees.
The
International Monetary Fund has already warned the scheme will push up
prices rather than increase supply, but finance minister George Osborne
insists the scheme will go ahead and run for three years, as planned.
The
Bank of England will also be watching house prices closely. Governor
Mark Carney sounded fairly relaxed about property inflation when he gave
his first press conference last week, but the bank's commitment to keep
rates at record low is contingent on inflation expectations and
financial stability remaining anchored.
(Reporting by Christina Fincher and William James; Editing by Catherine Evans)
Article Source: http://uk.reuters.com/article/2013/08/13/uk-britain-property-rics-idUKBRE97B0XK20130813
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