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UK house prices pick-up in July

Sold sign next to houseImage copyright PA

The year-on-year rise in UK house prices accelerated in July, a major lender has said, with the cost of the average home at £217,010.

The Nationwide Building Society said that the annual growth in house prices rose from 2% in June to 2.5% in July.
However the lender said little had changed in terms of the fundamental balance between buyers and sellers.
The future performance of the economy, jobs, and the level of interest rates would be key to the market, it said.
House prices rose by 0.6% between June and July, the lender said.
The Nationwide, which bases the findings on its own mortgage data, said that it expected house prices to rise by 1% over the course of 2018.
“For the past decade we have ridden a rollercoaster of rising and falling prices, but right now it seems to tick up a little one month and tick down a little the next,” said Sam Mitchell, chief executive of online estate agents Housesimple.com.
“On the ground there has been a noticeable increase in properties being listed, and there are still enough sales progressing that the market hasn’t ground to a halt, but they are progressing at a steady rate.
“We should bear in mind that we are in the traditionally quiet summer period for the property market, and the weather has been so un-British like that most people have been outside making the most of it, rather than viewing properties.”

Rate rise impact?

There has been considerable speculation about the possibility of the Bank of England announcing a rise in interest rates on Thursday.
In general, a move in the Bank rate from 0.5% to 0.75% would only have a “modest impact” on households, according to Nationwide’s chief economist Robert Gardner, with those on a variable rate mortgage seeing their monthly bill rise by about £16.
However, there are some households squeezed by debt for whom a rate rise would have an impact, he said.
“For those, some of whom will be on variable rates, any rate rise will be a struggle, even though the impact on the wider economy and most households is likely to be modest,” he said.

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Source: BBC

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