Property Investment News and Analysis from Dominic Farrell.
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View Article  Rightmove predicts housing 'soft landing'

Rightmove, the UK’s biggest property website, moved to dispel fears surrounding the housing market today by insisting that, while price growth was slowing, there was no reason to panic.

Ed Williams, group managing director, said that, although affordability was becoming more of a problem for potential homebuyers, the housing market ...   more »

View Article  Gloomy outlook for regional house prices but London roars on

House prices are rising at the slowest rate for more than a year, with some regions suffering a highly unusual sustained drop in property values, according to authoritative government figures.

Property prices rose by only 0.1pc in July, taking the annual inflation rate down from 9.1pc to 8.8pc, according to ...   more »

View Article  House price growth slows to 0.1%

House price inflation eased last month to its slowest pace in a year, new data showed today, suggesting that five interest rates rises in a year are taking their toll on the housing market.

Figures from the Land Registry showed that house price growth in England and Wales slowed in ...   more »

View Article  House prices suffer worst fall since 1987

NEW YORK (Reuters) - House prices suffered their worst decline since at least 1987 in the second quarter from a year earlier as the housing downturn has deepened, according to the S&P/Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price Index.

The national index, which dates from 1987, fell 3.2 percent to 183.89 last ...   more »

View Article  Figures show buy-to-let market is weathering interest rate storm

The buy-to-let market held up in July, despite the increased cost of borrowing, according to Paragon's buy-to-let index.

Increasing property prices and higher borrowing costs mean that the mainstream mortgage market has slowed down, but as the demand for property has remained strong, landlords have been able to raise rents ...   more »

View Article  Asian subprime fears grow, Europe calmer

LONDON/SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Three Asian banks' heavy exposure to the limping U.S. home loan sector reinforced global credit jitters on Friday but Germany and Italy saw no signs of new problems.

Shares in Singapore's DBS Group Holdings, state-controlled Bank of China and its Hong Kong subsidiary, BOC Hong Kong, all ...   more »

View Article  Buyers 'pick home in 17 minutes'
UK homebuyers spend on average just 17 minutes looking at a new property before deciding to buy it, according to a survey for bank ING Direct.

That is less time than the 54 minutes they take to pick out the new curtains.

Speaking to 1,000 people who bought homes over ...   more »

View Article  Buy-to-let: What all landlords need to know

For many years, buy-to-let seemed to be a dream investment – and for many people, it was. The deal was simple: get a cheap mortgage deal, buy a place anywhere you like from Clapham to Cleethorpes, select one of the many grateful tenants, and while you let the rent roll ...   more »

View Article  Surge in US home repossessions

The number of home repossessions in the US soared in July, figures suggest, underlining the woes facing the sector.

 

There was a 93% jump in filings for repossessions on the same month a year ago, and a 9% rise on June's figure, property firm RealtyTrac said.

 

The figures ...   more »

View Article  Rate increases start to bite

Research from the Building Societies Association has uncovered a dramatic drop in mortgage lending figures.

 

Building society gross advances amounted to £4,465m in July 2007, compared to £4,888m in July 2006.

 

Net Advances were £598m in July 2007, versus £1,662m in July 2006. Approvals were £4,014m in July ...   more »

View Article  Home information packs are dealt new blow by lenders

The government's troubled implementation of home information packs suffered another setback last night after it emerged that some mortgage lenders are refusing to accept a crucial part of the reports.

Solicitors, mortgage lenders and even some Hips providers warned that many homebuyers would have to pay at least another £200 ...   more »

View Article  Property returns fall to lowest for 12 years

Solid evidence of a slowdown in the commercial property market emerged yesterday as figures showed the lowest monthly return from the sector for 12 years.

Average total returns - rent plus capital growth - were 0.2 per cent in July, according to figures from Investment Property Databank, the research company ...   more »

View Article  Societies losing mortgage share

The pace of approvals for mortgages rose last month, despite a surprise drop in lending by building societies. The British Bankers’ Association said that mortgage lending by its members rose by £5.7 billion in July, up from £5.4 billion the previous month.

However, lending by members of the Building Societies’ ...   more »

View Article  Loophole 'makes Hips redundant', says RICS

A report claiming to have found a loophole in rules governing Home Information Packs (Hips) today has sparked fresh controversy over the beleaguered scheme.

The report from the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) said that new regulations published by the Department for Communities and Local Government (DCLG) on Monday ...   more »

View Article  Banks get tough on subprime mortgages

Homebuyers will face higher interest rates and tougher tests for a mortgage if they have a poor credit history, as banks tighten their lending rules in the face of the global credit crunch.

A number of home mortgage lenders, including Edeus, Kensington, DB Mortgages and Merrill Lynch’s Mortgage PLC, are ...   more »

View Article  First-time buyer demand 'drops'

The number of people looking to buy a house for the first time has fallen at its fastest rate in more than three years, a report says.

 

Inquiries from new buyers plunged in July, while the number of unsold properties rose, The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) said. ...   more »

View Article  Euro area GDP up by 0.3% for Q2 2007

According to an estimate release by Eurostat, the Statistical Office of the European Communities, GDP grew by 0.3% in the euro area during the second quarter of 2007. GDP grew in the EU27 countries by 0.5% for the same period.

 

In the first quarter of 2007, growth rates were ...   more »

View Article  Buy-to-let sector remains buoyant

Borrowers took out 171,800 new buy-to-let mortgages, worth £21.2 billion, in the first half of 2007, according to data released by the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML). By the end of June, the number of buy-to-let loans outstanding had reached a record 938,500. The value of outstanding loans totalled £108 ...   more »

View Article  Inflation falls on food price war

Weaker food prices helped the UK's rate of inflation to fall below analysts' forecasts to 1.9% in July.

 

The Consumer Prices Index (CPI) dropped sharply from June's level of 2.4%, raising hopes that further rises in interest rates will not be needed.

 

It is the first time ...   more »

View Article  Wall St slides on credit turmoil

Stocks slid on Friday, pummelled by mounting fears about the widening fallout from losses stemming from U.S. sub-prime mortgages and their likely impact on corporate profits and the economy.

Major central banks -- including the U.S. Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan -- injected additional ...   more »

View Article  Higher interest rates putting a break on lending

Consecutive interest rate rises are starting to have a slowing effect on consumer borrowing, the Building Society Association reports.

The Building Society Association (BSA) has reported that building society lending figures for June 2007 were significantly down on the previous year.  Building society gross advances amounted to £4,650m in June ...   more »

View Article  Hawkish inflation report is seen as rate rise signal
Homeowners could see their mortgage payments rise again after the Bank of England signalled yesterday it may need to raise interest rates to 6% to ensure inflation remains under control.

Analysts said the increase could come sooner rather than later after the Bank's governor, Mervyn King, stressed that the turmoil ...   more »
View Article  Latest report is further sign of HIP’s inadequacy, according to NAEA

The government received yet more criticism of its home information pack (HIPs) initiative today, this time in the form of a report published by the National Audit Office on the implementation of the Packs.

Peter Bolton King, Chief Executive at the National Association of Estate Agents (NAEA), commented on the ...   more »

View Article  Half of all first time buyers opt to live near the office

Most first time buyers choose an easy commute over living close to friends and family. As property prices continue to escalate, first time buyers face making more sacrifices with many opting for convenience for work over their social life, according to research by Alliance & Leicester Mortgages.

Half of first ...   more »

View Article  House price growth is ‘slowing’

Halifax’s monthly price index has shown that house price growth has begun to decline. House prices increased by 0.7% in July. This is the fourth consecutive month that house prices have grown by less than 1.0%, confirming that house price inflation is slowing.

House prices increased by 1.3% between April ...   more »

View Article  Bank of England signals interest rate rise
The Bank of England has indicated that interest rates will have to reach 6pc if inflation is to be kept under control over the next two years.

The news will come as a blow to homeowners who will be coming off their two-year fixed mortgages over the next six months ...   more »
View Article  UK consumers to be hit by mortgage shock, Morgan Stanley warns

Consumer spending will "slow sharply" in the second half of this year as the effects of five interest rate hikes in the past year finally begin to be felt, according to a new report from Morgan Stanley.

The investment bank believes that the proliferation of fixed-rate mortgages has been limiting ...   more »

View Article  Fed set to leave US interest rates unchanged

US interest rates are widely expected to remain on hold, despite mounting fears about the state of the economy.

While analysts predict the US Federal Reserve is will leave rates at 5.25% for a 13th month, they also believe the bank will note recent market worries.

Concerns over the economy's ...   more »

View Article  US economic woes hit oil prices

Oil prices fell in Asian trade, extending last week's decline that was prompted by poor US economic data. US crude slid as much as $1.12 - 1.5% - to $73.63 a barrel in rocky trade.

It comes after US oil fell $1.38 to $75.48 a barrel on Friday after the ...   more »

View Article  Average house price to reach 300,000 pounds by 2012

House prices could rise by 40 percent during the next five years to an average 300,000 pounds because of a shortage of land on which to build new properties, a housing group said on Monday.

The National Housing Federation, which represents non-profit housing associations, warned that young first-time buyers will ...   more »

View Article  CML records rise in arrears

The Council of Mortgage Lenders has published its half-yearly data on mortgage arrears and possessions.

According to the report, the number of mortgages in arrears of three months or more at the end of June rose to an estimated 125,100, up 4% compared with the end of December but 3% ...   more »

View Article  Home repossessions soar as higher rates bite

The number of people losing their homes because of bad debt hit an eight-year high in the first half of 2007 as rising interest rates push more and more borrowers over the edge despite double-digit house price growth.

But economists said the situation in Britain was unlikely to add significantly ...   more »

View Article  Interest rates held at 5.75 per cent as house prices 'grind to a halt'

The Bank of England today kept interest rates on hold at 5.75 per cent as house price growth continued to cool to less than 1 per cent in four months to just under £200,000.

July was the fourth month in a row that house prices have risen by less than ...   more »

View Article  D-day for home information packs

Home Information Packs (Hips), paid for by house sellers, have been introduced in England and Wales.
The packs - intended to speed up sales - contain title deeds, local searches and an energy performance certificate, and cost about £400-£700 to compile.

Initially, only properties with four or more bedrooms will ...   more »