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BackUK House Prices Stall for Second Month Amid Rising Interest Rates
UK House Prices Stall for Second Month Amid Rising Interest Rates
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Guardian UK4d agoReal_estate2 min readUnited Kingdom

UK House Prices Stall for Second Month Amid Rising Interest Rates

Quick Look

  • UK house prices saw no growth for the second consecutive month in June, with average prices falling slightly.
  • Rising interest rates, influenced by the war in Iran, have dampened buyer demand, leading estate agents to predict a quiet summer.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

UK house price growth has stalled for two consecutive months due to rising interest rates, influenced by the war in Iran, which has reduced homebuyer demand. Mortgage rates remain significantly higher than before the conflict.

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UK house price growth stalled for a second consecutive month in June as rising interest rates triggered by the war in Iran hurt homebuyer demand and agents warned of a summer slump.

The average price of a typical UK home edged down to £277,484 last month from £278,024 a month earlier, after a 0.6% month-on-month fall in May, according to the lender Nationwide. Economists had forecast a small monthly rise of 0.1% in June.

“There is the familiar pre-summer push from families wanting to be settled before the new school year, but the mood is steady and selective rather than booming or stalling,” said Amy Reynolds, the head of sales at the London estate agency Antony Roberts. “We expect a quieter, price-sensitive summer, with activity firming again in the autumn once buyers have more clarity on rates and the geopolitical noise has died down.”

While mortgage rates have dipped slightly in recent weeks, after the price of oil returning to pre-conflict levels, they remain well above what was on offer in the market before the Iran war began.

On Tuesday the average two-year fixed mortgage rate stood at 5.53%, up from 4.83% at the start of March, according to Moneyfacts. The average five-year fixed-rate mortgage was also 5.53%, up from 4.95%.

“Nationwide’s figures reflect a softening housing market,” said Gareth Lewis, the deputy chief executive of the specialist lender MT Finance. “We are seeing valuers cautious on value while buyers are looking for a steal and prepared to negotiate hard on price.”

The second consecutive month of flatlining house price growth – last recorded by Nationwide across March and April last year – hit shares in housebuilders.

Barratt Redrow shares fell 1.6% in early trading on Wednesday, while Persimmon dipped 0.5% and Berkeley fell 1.4%.

However, Nationwide said that on an annual basis the price of a typical house had increased by 2.2% in June, up from 1.7% in May.

In addition, Nationwide data showed an increase in annual house prices in the second quarter in all regions of the UK.

The strongest growth was in Northern Ireland, with the price of an average home up 8.6% year on year in the second quarter. Scotland and Wales recorded a 3.5% increase, while London prices edged up 1.6%.

Robert Gardner, the chief economist at Nationwide, said that easing oil prices could mean the Bank of England may not have to raise interest rates as expected, which could bring down mortgage prices. Brent crude was $73 a barrel on Wednesday, down from a peak of more than $120 this year.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Quieter, price-sensitive summer in the housing market.

    Likely

  • Activity firming again in the autumn.

    Likely

Open Questions

  • Will interest rates continue to rise?
  • How long will the housing market slump last?
  • Will housebuilders' shares recover?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Guardian UK.

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