House prices rise in February following four months of falls

First time buyers rushed to beat March stamp duty deadline, while transactions were 10% higher than in January, reveals the latest LSL Property Services/Acadametrics Scotland House

Related topics:  Legal
Millie Dyson
18th April 2012
Legal
House Price: £145,860
Index: 197.8
Monthly Change: 0.1%
Annual Change: -1.6%

Richard Sexton, director of e.surv chartered surveyors, part of LSL, comments:

“The impending end to the stamp duty holiday galvanized the first time buyer market in February, and reversed four consecutive months of falling house prices. More buyers decided buying now was preferable to forking out an extra £1,600 after the end of the tax break.

“But the panic to beat the stamp duty deadline was not the only factor behind the recovery in February. Banks and building societies had been tentatively increasing their lending to lower income borrowers, and introducing more mortgages which require smaller deposits.

"This has gone some way to banishing the concern that the increase in activity in February was largely artificial, and that prices will fall away again as the rush to beat the tax break subsides. And, broadly speaking, mortgages have become more affordable than they’ve been at any point since the downturn, which should soften the blow of the stamp duty holiday ending. Demand is still healthy, despite tepid economic growth, and that should help support house prices.

“However, in the longer-term, the outlook is much murkier. The fortunes of the housing market remain inexorably tied to fallout from the European financial crisis, which could hinder banks and building societies’ ability to satisfy the high demand for mortgages. And the national average price may be masking more worrying, and volatile, regional disparities.

"If you delve beneath the headline figures, it is clear the housing market is still suffering in the majority of local authority areas. Prices actually fell in two-thirds of all localities in February, highlighting that the recovery of house prices is still on dicey ground.”

Dr Peter Williams, housing market specialist and Chairman of Acadametrics, comments:

"Following four months of falling house prices, the seasonally adjusted average price of a house in Scotland rose by £208 in February. Whilst only a marginal (0.1%) rise, it brought to an end a series of small monthly falls which began in November 2011.

"Transactions rose, too. At 4422 for the month, these were up 407 over January. Both the rise in the number of sales and the average price occurred against the grain of the February housing market in Scotland. Whilst, in England & Wales, January is normally the quietest month, in Scotland it is February that has seen the fewest sales in seven of the last eight years. Whereas a February transaction fall of -12.3% would be normal, the sale of 4422 properties resulted from the sales of an extra 880 houses - a rise of 22% over the past norm.

"As occurred in the market south of the border and shown by the LSL/Acadametrics E&W House Price Index, the influence of government was at work. The March end of the stamp duty tax holiday for first time buyers brought both the small increase in demand and, in turn, the end to the downward trend in prices.

"Despite the overall rise in average prices in Scotland, prices fell in February, in fact, in 21 of the 32 local authorities. To understand these movements, it is necessary, as always, to investigate transaction numbers and prices at property type level.

"What about the 29.4% rise in the average price in the Orkney Islands? This was influenced by the sale of one property at £300,000 and another at £405,000. Given that only 30 sales of houses worth £300,000 or more have taken place in the Orkney Islands in the last 12 years, we may regard the February boost as an effect of chance.

"At £145,860, the average price still hovers close to a level last seen in December 2009. Despite the month’s overall average house price increase, the average price in almost all local authorities has fallen over the past year, much in line with the fall for Scotland as a whole.

"Excluding the smaller areas, which are likely to reflect apparent price volatility resulting from low transaction volumes, Aberdeen stands out with a counter-trend price rise of 2.2%. The average house price in Scotland fell -1.6% compared with a year ago. "
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