The housing market gained further
momentum in July, according to the latest RICS residential survey results,
which signal an ongoing recovery in sales activity. Survey respondents say the
Stamp Duty holiday, introduced from the 8th July, is playing a significant role
in lifting demand.
A headline net balance of +75% of
survey participants noted an increase in new buyer enquiries over the month.
This marks the second consecutive report in which demand has rebounded firmly
following the lockdown-induced slump seen from March to May. Similarly, new
listings rose sharply, evidenced by a net balance of +59% of respondents
reporting a rise (up from a reading of +41% in June). Alongside this, a net
balance of +57% of respondents nationally saw a rise in agreed sales over the
month, up from +43% last month. Furthermore, a positive reading was returned
for the agreed sales indicator across all parts of the UK. Looking ahead, near
term expectations are signalling continued growth in sales at the headline
level over the next three months. However, further out, twelve-month sales
projections remain negative. Indeed, a net balance of -10% of respondents
foresee sales tailing off over the year ahead, as caution remains on the likely
reaction across the market once the furlough scheme is phased out in October
and the Stamp Duty holiday expires after March 2021.
Turning to house prices, the
survey’s headline gauge of price growth moved out of negative territory for the
first time since March. Across the UK in aggregate, a net balance of +12% of
respondents reported an increase in house prices during July, a noticeable
turnaround on the reading of -13% registered in the June results. When
disaggregated, prices rose to a greater or lesser extent in virtually all
regions/countries covered. London represents the sole exception, where a net
balance of -10% of respondents cited a decline (albeit this is significantly
less negative than the reading -54% posted beforehand). As to the future, at
the national level, a net balance of +8% of contributors expect prices to increase
over the next twelve months. As such, this latest reading is consistent with a
flat to marginally positive outlook for house prices in the year ahead. (Financial Reporter)
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