Share Prices & Company Research

Market News

01 Jul 2024 | 07:40

UK house price growth broadly stable in June - Nationwide

(Sharecast News) - UK house price growth was broadly stable in June, according to data released on Monday by Nationwide. House prices rose 1.5% on the year following 1.3% growth in May. On the month, meanwhile, prices were 0.2% higher in June, down from 0.4% growth a month earlier.

The average price of a home stood at £266,604, versus 264,249 in May.

Nationwide chief economist Robert Gardner said prices were around 3% below the all-time high recorded in the summer of 2022.

"Housing market activity has been broadly flat over the last year, with the total number of transactions down by around 15% compared with 2019 levels," he said. "Transactions involving a mortgage are down even more (nearly 25%), reflecting the impact of higher borrowing costs. By contrast, the volume of cash transactions is actually around 5% above pre-pandemic levels."

Gardner continued: "While earnings growth has been much stronger than house price growth in recent years, this hasn't been enough to offset the impact of higher mortgage rates, which are still well above the record lows prevailing in 2021 in the wake of the pandemic. For example, the interest rate on a five-year fixed rate mortgage for a borrower with a 25% deposit was 1.3% in late 2021, but in recent months this has been nearer to 4.7%.

"As a result, housing affordability is still stretched. Today, a borrower earning the average UK income buying a typical first-time buyer property with a 20% deposit would have a monthly mortgage payment equivalent to 37% of take-home pay - well above the long run average of 30%."

Get in touch today
Join Redmayne Bentley
Talk to us now about opening a new portfolio or transferring your portfolio from another provider
0113 243 6941
Get in touch today
Contact your local office
Contact your local office to find out more
The value of your investments and the income from them may go down as well as up, and you could get back less than you invested.