So, let’s look at the headlines for the Stoke-on-Trent
property market...
In the last month, Stoke-on-Trent property values dropped by 0.1%, leaving them, year on year 6.2% higher, whilst interestingly, Stoke-on-Trent asking prices are down 1.1% month on month. All three statistics go to show the Stoke-on-Trent property market has recovered well after the summer lull, which was worsened by the uncertainty surrounding the EU vote back in June. Irrespective of all the issues, the average value of a Stoke-on-Trent home now stands at £143,100.
Generally, Stoke-on-Trent asking prices
continue to hold up well, as asking prices are 4.9% higher year on year. At this
time of year, asking prices tend to drop on the run up to Christmas and
locally, they have dropped by 1.1% this month (November 2016), although this
compares well with last year’s drop in Stoke-on-Trent asking prices, as we also
saw asking prices drop by 1.1% in November 2015.
Now it’s true to say, after chatting with
fellow property professionals in Stoke-on-Trent, all of us have seen the number
of property sales fall slightly, suggesting a slowing market, but it is very
early days and it could be the time of year. Also, the numbers are limited, so
it’s interesting to take note from a recent survey by the Royal Institution of
Chartered Surveyors, stating new buyer enquiries and new instructions are
falling at the same rate, suggesting that there will not be a downward pressure
on property values.
Looking at the
figures for the UK (as we can’t just look at Stoke-on-Trent in isolation),
property values are generally rising slower than a few years ago, but on a
positive note, there's still growth across the UK. You
see, slowing property value growth isn't solely Brexit related, but after a
number years of double digit rises in property values, affordability has
weakened and cooling price growth is widely seen to be a natural
correction of the market.
On the other
hand, interest rates being at a record low of 0.25% are helping the property market. The cut in interest rates in the late summer was the medicine
for the post-Brexit worry and will, as a consequence, ensure that the UK
economy continues to be underpinned by buoyant property prices.
So, what will happen in 2017 in the Stoke-on-Trent
property market?
Some say until we know what type of exit the
UK will make from the EU it is hard to evaluate the outcome. Although, I
believe, the whole Brexit issue is a sideshow to the main issue in the UK (and Stoke-on-Trent)
housing market as a whole. As I have mentioned time and time again over the last
few months, the biggest issue is demand outstripping supply when it comes to
the number of households required to house us all. Stoke-on-Trent has an ever-growing
population: with immigration (we still have at least two years of free movement
from EU members into the UK), people living longer and the fact we need thousands
of additional households as the country has nearly 115,000 divorces a year
(where one household becomes two households).
These are interesting times ahead!
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