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First-time buyers: tell us your stories
Are you thinking about buying a home but don't know whether now is the right time?
Are you a first time buyer afraid the housing bubble will burst? If you are then we want to hear from you. Click here to e-mail us with your stories Next week on Breakfast we'll be looking at the housing market and calling in the experts to answer your questions. Here's the latest look at the housing market from BBC News Online.
The UK's housing market will "boom for at least another year", a new housing survey predicts.
Hometrack said that it now expected "significant house price rises" over the next few months and had revised its forecast of house price growth to 20% for the year 2002. It said that a continuing surplus of buyers in the market was creating excess demand for property, which would sustain the market and continue pushing up prices in future months. Some commentators have speculated that the market could go off the boil. While Hometrack is predicting slower growth in 2003, it believes house prices could rise by 8% next year, unless there is major interference in the market by the government or adverse economic factors. Rising prices The monthly survey of 4,000 estate agents revealed a further gap in supply and demand in June - and the continuing stranglehold sellers have on the market.
For example, the gap between the asking price and the price paid for properties narrowed again in June, for the sixth month in a row. In other words, more sellers were getting the price they wanted buyers paying, on average, 97.7% of the asking price. According to the survey it is taking only 2.7 weeks to sell a house, compared with more than five weeks just seven months ago. Boom areas House prices increased by an average of 2% in June. This was slightly down on May, which showed 2.6% growth, but higher than April's figure of 1.8%.
So far this year, house prices have risen by 9.8%, which is equivalent to an annual rate of 20%. Hometrack has therefore revised its forecast from 5% at the beginning of the year to 20% for 2002. John Wriglesworth, Hometrack's housing economist, said that house prices would continue to push ahead, barring any significant interest rate rise, government panic or interference with the market. "[Prices] are set to continue to rise strongly for at least another year (albeit at a slower rate).", he said. He said that a combination of positive factors in the market, such as the lowest mortgage rates for 50 years, continuing low unemployment, a rising population and an acute shortage of supply, would sustain the market. "While house prices will continue to boom, we are predicting a slowdown next year, to an annual rise of 8%, but this is still over four times the current annual rate of retail price inflation," he said.
To have your say, e-mail us at breakfasttv@bbc.co.uk |
See also:
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