11/19/2009 (2:39 pm)
U.K. Consumers Predict House Prices Will Rise, Rightmove Says
U.K. house prices will rise in the next year, according to a majority of consumers in a survey last month by Rightmove Plc.
Fifty-four percent of respondents expect average house prices to be higher in 12 months, the U.K.’s biggest property Web site said in an e-mailed statement today in London. In the first quarter, more than 68 percent of consumers polled forecast lower prices in a year’s time.
House prices are rebounding from a rout that shaved about 20 percent off average values as demand for new property outstrips supply. Bank of England policy makers said this month that the outlook for the housing market’s recovery depends on the availability of mortgage finance.
“Those surveyed may feel that prices will increase, but that does not necessarily mean that they are willing or able to purchase themselves, especially given the tight lending criteria required to access the best rates,” Miles Shipside, commercial director of Rightmove, said in the statement loans until payday.
The Bank of England said last week the outlook for the housing market “will depend, in part, on the supply of mortgage credit.” While U.K. mortgage approvals climbed to their highest level for 18 months in September, they’re still only half what they were when the credit crisis started in September 2007.
Prices rose for a third month in October after they had dropped as much as a fifth from 2007, Hometrack Ltd. said earlier this month.
Rightmove said more than 68 percent of respondents described now as a good time to buy while 5 percent said it was a good time to sell. The poll of 34,056 people was conducted from Oct. 5 to Oct. 19.
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