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Due to a technical problem on Wednesday Jan
16, we are upgrading the news management system by a Canadian
software company, which will be
completed in coming days.
It has taken longer than
anticipated. That is one of the drawbacks of outsourcing. C'est
la vie - even Google News updating falls behind at times!
Business
News Headlines to Jan 16 2008
Today's News Links
Click for Monday's stories and links from Jan 17 2008
UK house prices fell
for a third month in January to the lowest level since December 2005
UK house prices fell for a third
month in January and values will continue to drop this year unless
the Bank of England cuts interest rates further, Rightmove Plc said.
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0.8% (£1,968) average asking price fall this
month reduces the annual rate of increase to 3.4%, its lowest
since December 2005
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Third consecutive monthly fall, though signs of
price stabilisation as majority of price drop is due to the rush
of smaller properties to the market in mid December to beat
their HIPs deadline
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Early January shows signs of market recovery
despite time on the market and stock levels hitting record highs
in December
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Active start to New Year as buyer interest
spurred by lower prices and falling interest rates
Miles Shipside, Commercial
Director of Rightmove comments: “Some homebuyers are
now able to find properties that have fallen into their
affordability zone, and are bagging what they see as bargains
against previous prices. Some properties have had their prices
dropped by 10% or more and are now within reach, satisfying some of
the pent-up demand from previously disenfranchised buyers.”
As well as lower prices, further cuts in interest
rates are critical to continued improvements in affordability and
the recovery of the housing market from a difficult year end
position.
Time on the market peaked at a record high of 98
days in December, though it has declined to 95 days in the first
weeks of January. The previous high was 93 days in January 2006.
Average property stock per estate agency branch ended the year at
63, some 20% higher than the 52 properties of a year ago. Continued
action is required by the banking sector to improve liquidity, along
with further reductions in interest rates, adding pressure to
lenders to pass on the benefits to borrowers in terms of lower
mortgage rates and greater availability of funds.
Estate agents report a positive upturn in new
movers and activity levels. The high number of potential homemovers
looking is borne out by the number of visits to Rightmove, up nearly
20% on the first two weeks of last year. Last Monday was the busiest
day on record, with over a million visits, viewing 20.9 million
pages. The growth of households and ongoing desire to get onto the
property ladder underpins demand, and there are sellers keen to
sell.
Those who have owned their property for a few
years are still benefiting from a substantial equity growth and, if
buying again, are able to negotiate corresponding reductions.
Rightmove measured 28,318 properties coming onto the market in the
first full week of January, and in addition the final HIPs deadline
for two or fewer bedroom properties boosted listings in
mid-December. This HIP avoiding surge exacerbated the price fall by
circa 0.7% as they tended to be cheaper-than-average properties
making up a greater proportion of the new listing mix. We estimate
HIPs distortion to average prices will have worked its way out of
the system by next month. However, there are some big regional price
fluctuations this month due to the combination of local corrections
and the aforementioned HIP exaggeration effect.
The drop in the annual rate of increase from 4.8%
to 3.4% has resulted in the lowest yearon-year figure for two years,
mirroring the 2005 property market downturn. An unsustainable mini
recovery was then triggered by falling interest rates and a City-led
London-centric boom supporting buyer confidence. A sustainable
recovery to a volume sales market requires a return of more first
time buyers or buy-to-let investors, and a lessening of the costs
for existing home owners to trade up. The price re-adjustments we
have seen over the last few months appear to be assisting, and with
a flat price rise forecast for 2008, affordability should continue
to improve as average wages rise and interest rates fall."
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