Scotland Times

Thursday, Apr 25, 2024

UK enjoys property sales boom amid Covid-19 pandemic

UK enjoys property sales boom amid Covid-19 pandemic

Britain’s real estate market defies predictions of a house price crash despite coronavirus crisis
Hard-to-sell homes are being snapped up by the hundred as Britain’s booming property market maintains a year-long breakneck sales record.

In areas of high demand, even the most knocked-about and idiosyncratic houses are spending just days on the market once buyers, desperate to grab something, see that predictions of a house price crash are proving off the mark.

“Homes that look like the last turkey in the Christmas shop window are flying off the shelves at the moment,” said property agent Henry Pryor.

While the property merry-go-round screeched to a temporary halt during the first lockdown early last year, the pause did not last. With sales barely slowing over the summer, the data is clear: along with technology, real estate has emerged as one of the pandemic’s boom sectors.

Andrew Wishart, property economist at consultants Capital Economics, said: “With the amount of secondhand stock on the market currently extremely limited, house prices could continue to surprise on the upside.”

There is always the possibility that places like Cornwall and towns along the south coast are in a bubble and prices are about to burst, said Pryor, “but the banks and local agents seem convinced that the momentum will keep prices on the up for a long time yet”.

Mortgage lender Nationwide said its measure of annual house price increases chalked up its second-biggest monthly rise in 15 years in August, putting to bed fears that the end of the government’s stamp duty tax break, which prompted a fall in the number of homes changing hands during July, would bring the market to a juddering halt.

Prices were up 11% on a year ago, said Nationwide, and remain about 13% above pre-pandemic levels, according to official data.

Adding to the feverish activity, which has seen some English agents adopt the well-worn Scottish system of sealed bids amid claims of gazumping, new home builders have battled steel and timber shortages and an exodus of staff following Brexit to construct new homes. Many have seen their profits soar.

Britain’s biggest homebuilder Barratt Developments reported a near doubling of profits over the last year to £812m on Thursday, and said viewing requests for new homes over the next six months were “strong”.

While homeowners may cheer rising prices, the charity Housing Justice said the boom encouraged private landlords to sell up and leave tenants looking for another place to live, and would only add to the longstanding problems facing homeless people and those in the private rented sector.

Wishart said the end of the furlough scheme on 30 September, which is expected to push unemployment higher, posed only a small risk to rising prices.

“The end of the repossessions ban and closure of a mortgage payment holiday scheme had “failed to trigger an increase in homeowner distress,” he said, adding that the only trap-door for prices was an interest rate rise by the Bank of England, which at the moment seems far in the distance.

In May 2020, it was a very different story. The first lockdown meant buyers could no longer view properties except online, sellers took their homes off the market and sales collapsed.

Two months later Rishi Sunak responded to calls for government support by extending the help-to-buy scheme for first-time buyers and cutting stamp duty on homes worth less than £500,000.

Figures for August 2020 revealed a spectacular turnaround. Mortgage approvals jumped from 66,300 in July to 84,700, according to Bank of England figures, their highest level since October 2007.

Recent analysis of the government’s actions by the Resolution Foundation thinktank argued that the £4bn stamp duty subsidy was wasted on sparking a market to life that had already begun to recover and was always going to enjoy stellar growth.

It said ultra low interest rates, the demand for more spacious properties during the pandemic and the pent up savings of those kept in work by the furlough scheme was enough to spur buying activity without extra incentives from the Treasury.

“It’s true that when the first lockdown was eased, most property analysts were gloomy about the prospects for the market, thinking people would hunker down,” said Pryor. “But by June 2020 it was clear that the British obsession with location, location, location was alive and kicking, it was just they now wanted a different location.”
Newsletter

Related Articles

Scotland Times
0:00
0:00
Close
UK Island Orkney council to look at proposals to become territory of Norway
Woman Awarded Over £100,000 After Being Fired for Transgender Tweet
A provocative study suggests: Left-Wing Extremism and its Unsettling Connection to Psychopathy and Narcissism
A Real woman
Brand new security footage has just been released to the public showing the Active shooter Audrey Elizabeth Hale drove to Covenant Church School in her Honda Fit this morning, parked, and shot her way into the building
China's foreign ministry branch in Hong Kong urges British gov't to stop the biased and double standards Hong Kong report
Double standards: UK lawmakers attack EU chief over Ireland claims
Democracy? Not for UK. UK PM rejects Scottish independence referendum, cancel democracy in BVI
UK urged to brace for economic storm
Women's own body dissatisfaction appears to influence their judgment of other women's body sizes
Prince William To Move Family Into Cottage Near Queen Elizabeth II
BOOOOOOS: Tony Blair receives royal honour
Captured Britons sentenced to death in Ukraine
Barbados PM Mia A. Mottley among Time Magazine’s 100 Most Influential People
Today's headlines
"Just One Of the Boys In School:" Years That Shaped Prince Charles
BVI Premier Rubbishes Claim Of Causing COI Delay
Comments on "Human Intelligence in a Digital Age" - A brilliant Speech by MI6 Chief Richard Moore, and the elephants neglected in the room
Bitcoin: BoE Deputy Gov wants to cancel democracy and protect the banks with regulations which infringe on people’s freedom, independence and benefits they get from their own money.
What are the Pandora Papers?
Taiwan-China relations at their 'worst in 40 years'
The attempt to hold Epik.com accountable for the content of its clients' websites is like blaming Gutenberg for the NYT's fake news that dragged the US into the pointless war against the nuclear weapons Iraq never had
×