This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/business/8549000.stm
The article has changed 4 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 1 | Version 2 |
---|---|
UK house prices 'dropped by 1.5%' | UK house prices 'dropped by 1.5%' |
(about 1 hour later) | |
UK house prices recorded their first monthly fall since June with a 1.5% drop in February, the Halifax has said. | UK house prices recorded their first monthly fall since June with a 1.5% drop in February, the Halifax has said. |
The drop was caused by the end of stamp duty relief, the poor weather and more properties being put up for sale. The average home is now worth £166,587. | The drop was caused by the end of stamp duty relief, the poor weather and more properties being put up for sale. The average home is now worth £166,587. |
The Halifax said that prices were still 4.5% higher than a year earlier, but the market had slowed in recent months. | |
The icy weather has been widely noted as a major factor in the latest round of data about the UK housing market. | The icy weather has been widely noted as a major factor in the latest round of data about the UK housing market. |
The survey found that prices are also a full 8% higher than the lowest point of the market in April 2009. | |
Lending slows | |
Weather conditions slowed activity, with many potential homebuyers less tempted to look around homes or finding it difficult to travel. | |
The end of the temporary stamp duty relief was also regarded as a factor in the slowdown. | |
The stamp duty threshold dropped back to £125,000 on 1 January, after the threshold was at £175,000 for just over a year. | |
Both these issues were cited ast week by the Nationwide building society , which said that prices had fallen by 1% in February. | |
Mortgage lending also suffered at the start of the year. Recent figures from the Council of Mortgage Lenders also showed that gross lending for home loans fell by 32% in January compared with December, reaching a 10-year low of £9.1bn. | |
The Bank of England also reported a 17% fall in the number of mortgages approved for house purchase during January. | |
But the Halifax, which is now part of the Lloyds Banking Group, also pointed to a rise in the number of people putting their home on the market as a factor affecting prices. | |
"An increase in the number of properties available for sale has helped to reduce slightly the imbalance between supply and demand," said Martin Ellis, Halifax housing economist. | "An increase in the number of properties available for sale has helped to reduce slightly the imbalance between supply and demand," said Martin Ellis, Halifax housing economist. |
Economy worries | |
The low supply of quality properties on the market was regarded as a key issue when prices were rising throughout the second half of 2009. | |
Figures from the Land Registry for properties in England and Wales - which lag behind other data but are considered the most comprehensive - showed that prices had risen for eight months in a row until the start of February. | |
There is huge uncertainty over mortgage finance, interest rate hikes and over people's job certainty James Moss, Curzon Investment Property | |
However, the three-month on three-month figures from the Halifax show that the underlying rate of house price inflation had slowed in February. | |
Prices were 1.8% higher quarter-on-quarter, compared with a 3.2% increase in January, it said. | |
The state of the economy also remains a key factor in people's decisions about whether to move home, according to James Moss, director of Curzon Investment Property. | |
"There is huge uncertainty over mortgage finance, interest rate hikes and over people's job certainty. None of this is helped by the possibility of a hung parliament," he said. |