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UK house prices see 'strong' rise | UK house prices see 'strong' rise |
(about 1 hour later) | |
House prices were "unseasonably strong" in September, shrugging off August's rate rise, the Nationwide says. | |
The building society's housing survey found that prices rose by 1.3% during the month, lifting the annual rate of growth to 8.2%. | |
The gain - the fastest annual growth rate since February 2005 - means the average UK property now costs £169,413. | |
The three-monthly trend showed prices up 2.2% in the three months to September, on the previous quarter. | |
Supply 'squeezed' | Supply 'squeezed' |
Demand in the housing market remained "firm", said Fionnuala Earley, Nationwide's group economist. | |
Fewer sellers willing to put their properties on the market is adding to already squeezed supply - which increases price pressure Fionnuala Earley, Nationwide | |
"Just like the weather, the housing market was unseasonably warm in September as August's interest rate hike did nothing to cool the rate of house price inflation," she said. | |
"Buyer interest remains robust as estate agents continue to report strong enquiries. | "Buyer interest remains robust as estate agents continue to report strong enquiries. |
"However, fewer sellers willing to put their properties on the market is adding to already squeezed supply - which increases price pressure." | |
New mortgage approvals are still rising, indicating strong demand in the pipeline. | |
And the Nationwide also pointed to the continued activity of buy-to-let landlords as another factor keeping the market going. | |
Parental help | |
This latest survey confounds widespread predictions that house prices would slow down as the year wore on, especially in the wake of August's rise in interest rates. | |
With the average house now costing - according to the Nationwide - nearly £13,000 more than at this time last year, house prices have continued to outstrip the increase in most peoples' take-home incomes. | |
The building society suggests that many first-time buyers are being helped to get a foot on the property ladder by their parents remortgaging their own properties to cash in on rising house prices and giving their offspring a deposit. | |
Each month almost as many people remortgage their homes - borrowing more while staying put - as borrow to actually move house. | |
The Nationwide calculates that when they do this they typically increase their mortgages by about 10%. | |
Doing so even on a house first bought just two years ago would typically raise an extra £11,500 per borrower, paying for most of an average first-time buyer's deposit. | |
Even so, the rising burden of mortgages, utility bills and an other possible rate rise in November - widely predicted by City economists - may eventually cool down the market. | |
"A growing number of people have missed mortgage payments recently," said Howard Archer of Global Insight. | |
"Even a relatively small overall increase in interest rates could ultimately have a clear dampening impact on housing market activity." |
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