Nationwide Real House Price Index now up 7 consecutive months

Posted on 9 October 2009 by Ray Boulger

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Nationwide’s “Real” House price Index increased by 0.9% in September, almost the same as August’s 1.0% rise. The seasonally adjusted figure for September was very similar at + 0.9%, leaving the cumulative difference between these two figures for the first 9 months of this year at 1.6% (see table below). Both figures must come in line at the end of any 12 month period and the seasonally adjusted figure next month is likely to be adjusted upwards by 0.3-0.5% from the real figure.

This is the seventh consecutive month the real house price index has increased since bottoming out in February

October tends to be one of the peak months for housing transactions and if that trend is repeated this year it will be a good test for the market to see if the index continues rising on greater activity. The longer prices keep rising the more people who have been unable to sell at the lower prices due to having insufficient equity for the deposit on a new property will be able to move. This will help levels of activity but most of these sellers will also be buyers and so the impact on prices of these extra properties coming on the market is likely be modest.

The table at the end of this post is self explanatory and, based on the Nationwide House Price Index, I now expect house prices to record an increase of 7.5% in 2009, rather than falling 5% as I predicted at the end of last year. I also expect prices to keep rising next year, but at a slower pace. In particular there is an obvious incentive for buyers in the £125,001 - £175,000 range to buy this year in order to avoid paying stamp duty land tax. Although the impact of this is unlikely to be large there will be some purchases this year which otherwise would not have taken place until next year.

Although mortgage supply is still constrained, especially at the higher LTVs, this week we have at last started to see some real competition from lenders, albeit primarily for lower LTV business. Woolwich, Northern Rock, Abbey, Alliance & Leicester, Principality and Coventry have all announced cheaper deals and Northern Rock has today upped its game further with the announcement of 3 and 4 year fixed rate intermediary exclusives up to 70% LTV from Monday. The 4.89% fixed rate to 31/12/13 is market leading and the 4.39% fix to 31/12/12 is extremely competitive. Cheaper mortgage rates should help to sustain the housing market, although if house prices continue rising at the current rate the Bank of England will start to get worried.

This activity in the mortgage market has been encouraged by 3 month Libor stabilising just above Bank Rate at 0.55% and swap rates continuing to fall sharply following the MPC’s decision in August to extend Quantitative Easing by £50bn. 2 year swaps hit a new all time low of 1.75% this week and 5 year swaps closed today at 3.16%, compared to 3.75% the day before the August MPC meeting.

The following table gives a clear picture of the recent trends:

The Nationwide House Price Index – The Real Figures and the Seasonally Adjusted Ones

Month

Average price (£)

Real Change

Seasonally Adjusted Change

Difference

2008

Jan

180,473

- 0.9%

- 0.6%

+ 0.3%

 

Feb

179,358

- 0.6%

- 0.9%

- 0.3%

 

Mar

179,110

- 0.1%

- 1.2%

- 1.1%

 

Apr

178,555

- 0.3%

- 1.2%

- 0.9%

 

May

173,583

- 2.8%

- 3.0%

+ 0.2%

 

Jun

172,415

- 0.7%

- 1.3%

- 0.6%

 

Jul

169,316

- 1.8%

- 2.0%

- 0.2%

 

Aug

164,654

- 2.8%

- 2.0%

+ 0.8%

 

Sept

161,797

- 1.7%

- 1.8%

- 0.1%

 

Oct

158,872

- 1.8%

- 1.4%

+ 0.4%

 

Nov

158,442

- 0.3%

- 0.1%

+ 0.1%

 

Dec

153,048

- 3.4%

- 2.6%

+ 0.8%

2009

Jan

150,501

- 1.7%

- 1.1%

+ 0.6%

 

Feb

147,746

- 1.8%

- 1.8%

nil

 

Mar

150,946

+ 2.2%

+ 1.2%

- 1.0%

 

Apr

151,861

+ 0.6%

 - 0.3%

- 0.9%

 

May

154,016

+ 1.4%

+ 1.3%

- 0.1%

 

Jun

156,442

+ 1.6%

+ 1.0%

- 0.6%

 

Jul

158,871

+ 1.6%

+ 1.4%

- 0.2%

 

Aug

160,224

+ 0.9%

+ 1.4%

+ 0.5%

 

Sept

161,816

+ 1.0%

+ 0.9%

 - 0.1%

Price Changes

Over

Real Changes

Seasonally adjusted changes

The last year

Nil

Nil

2009

+ 5.7%

+ 4.1%

The last 6 months

+ 7.2%

+ 5.9%

The last 3 months

+ 3.4%

+ 3.7%

The last month

+ 1.0%

+ 0.9%

 

 


Categories: Property market, Bank of England, Mortgages, Interest rates


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