UK election dampens outlook for house prices: Rics
[LONDON] British property surveyors are their most downbeat about the short-term outlook for house prices since just after last year's Brexit vote, with next month's national election adding to caution among buyers in a market that is already slowing.
The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors said its measure of how prices are likely to perform in the next three months dropped to +4 from +11, its lowest reading since July, although it still showed expectations that prices will rise.
Rics' main house price index - which measures how widespread price rises have been over the past three months - held at +22 in April, unchanged from March which was the lowest reading since September. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast a slight fall to +20 in April.
"Recent and forthcoming tax changes (are) having a material impact on transaction levels, particularly at higher price points. Uncertainty relating to the forthcoming general election is also highlighted by some respondents as a reason for inertia," Rics chief economist Simon Rubinsohn said.
Britain's economy defied forecasts of a recession - and the prediction of a fall in house prices made by former finance minister George Osborne - after the vote in June 2016 to leave the European Union.
Conservative Prime Minister Theresa May has taken the opportunity to call an early election for June 8 and opinion polls have suggested she is likely to win it easily.
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Nonetheless, since the start of the year the economy has slowed. Mortgage lenders Halifax and Nationwide have reported month-on-month falls in house prices and the slowest annual price growth in nearly four years at less than 4 per cent.
As well as the recent pinch of higher inflation on spending power, the sheer pace of past house price rises has put a strain on the housing market. In the year before the referendum, official data showed house prices increased by 9.4 per cent, the joint-fastest rise since 2007.
Rics said enquiries from new buyers fell noticeably for the first time since just after the referendum, and there was also a drop in new property coming on to the market, continuing a sluggish pattern seen for several months.
Rics said its members were more upbeat about the longer-term outlook for house prices, with a large majority expecting prices to rise over the next 12 months, chiefly because of the persistent shortage of homes coming on the market.
"An acute shortage of stock remains a key factor underpinning prices," Rics said.
REUTERS
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