This August 7, 2013 article by the Property Wire claimed that house prices in greater London are set to grow by 6.9% this year with annualised rate of 3.2% over the next five years.
The growth will come as the UK government’s Help to Buy scheme is
extended to all home buyers from next year bringing more financed buyers
to the market without an equivalent increase in stock, according to
real estate firm Cluttons.
In its third quarter Residential
Property Forecasts report it points out that the consequence of this
pace of uplift in house prices will push ownership in and around London
out of reach of yet more households.
Even in London where
earnings tend to grow slightly ahead of the national average, it is
unlikely that average earnings will keep pace with this rate of house
price growth over the next two years as the economy struggles back to
strength.
The position is more acute in prime central London where
Cluttons has revised its forecast of 5% house price growth to 8.4% this
year with an annualised average of around 4% to the end of 2018.
Credit
ratings agency Fitch has also warned that Help to Buy could
artificially push up house prices without increasing the number of homes
built, which corroborates Cluttons' expectations of affordability
re-emerging as the central issue for buyers given that mortgage lending
has improved.
The upturn in prices has caused a return of bidding
wars in the capital which has tempered the capacity of first time buyers
to enter the market. Greater acceptance of buy to let mortgages for
those wishing to rent and buy or rent further from London has further
reduced the availability of stock traditionally available to first time
buyers.
‘Improved
consumer confidence, an easing in mortgage credit and the raft of
government policy intervention measures to bolster new buyer demand will
drive further capital growth and this has led us to revise our forecast
to 8.4% price growth this year,’ said Sue Foxley, head of research at
Cluttons.
‘The prospect of rising base rates over the medium term
proffers a further concern with the ratio of residential values to gross
earnings already over seven in London. With few signs of a dramatic
increase in supply that would have the potential to change the balance
of this equation, the rental market will inevitably move up the agenda
for London’s households and policy makers,’ she explained.
Cluttons
also reports that rental demand in Central London remains strong but
individual and corporate rental budgets are subdued which is translating
into RPI, nil or slightly negative rental growth.
Cluttons
forecasts London rents to grow by 3% this year, with an annualised
average of 4% per annum to the end of 2018 which is in line with long
term average earnings growth for London.
Article Source: http://www.propertywire.com/news/europe/greater-london-house-prices-201308078090.html
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