Rightmove: this isn’t really a house price rise
Sarah Coles, head of personal finance at Hargreaves Lansdown, comments on the publication of the Rightmove latest monthly House Price Index, showing this isn’t really a house price rise.
Key points from publication:
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- The average asking price of newly listed properties rose 0.4% in the month to September.
- It’s still down 0.4% in a year to £366,281, but Rightmove estimates that asking prices will fall just 2% this year.
- However, this isn’t a measure of selling prices. More than a third (3%) of properties have had price cuts – the most since 2011. The average cut is £22,700 or 6.2%.
Sarah Coles says:
“This isn’t a house price rise.
“It’s an indication of how desperate sellers are to defy the miserable realities of the housing market right now.
“Sky-high mortgage rates mean demand has dropped like a stone, house prices have fallen, and sales have dried up.
“However, not all sellers are prepared to accept it right now – so asking prices are up over the past month.
“Reality lurks in the fact that over a third of people have chanced their arm by setting an overly optimistic asking price – and then been forced to cut it.
“An average drop of 6.2% highlights the gulf between optimism and reality.
“This mispricing is gumming up the works, so sales are sluggish – down around a fifth (18%) in a year.
“It means homes are taking 57 days to find a buyer, up from 35 in the same month a year earlier.
“It’s perfectly understandable.
“When we’ve seen prices rise so far and so fast, there’s the temptation to cling to the hope that they’ll keep doing so – at least until you’ve had the chance to sell.
“In reality, however, prices have turned, and if sellers don’t realise this up-front, they’re likely to sell for less in the end.
“They’ll waste the initial interest in their property, because buyers will baulk at the price.
“They’ll then have to cut – at least once – which buyers may read as off-putting levels of desperation.
“Being too optimistic can be an expensive mistake in a market like this one.”
Kindly shared by Hargreaves Lansdown