UK PROPERTY SUPPLY STAGNATES AS NEW PROPERTIES COMING ONTO THE MARKET RISE JUST 0.5% IN APRIL

UK PROPERTY SUPPLY STAGNATES AS NEW PROPERTIES COMING ONTO THE MARKET RISE JUST 0.5% IN APRIL
  • Off a cliff: New property listings in Inverness in April down 29.1% on March
  • London:  New property listings fall in the Capital by 0.8% in April vs March
  • London: Property supply in the borough of Bexley up 58.9% in April, but down 22.3% in Wandsworth
  • Biggest risers: Winchester sees biggest increase in property supply in April, of anywhere in the UK, up 35.6%
  • New property listings in Southport and Maidstone up a quarter (25.4% and 24.5%) last month. Cambridge listings up 17.7%

London, 19 May 2016 – The latest Property Supply Index compiled by online estate agents HouseSimple.com, reveals that property supply stagnated in April, with new property listings across the UK rising just 0.5% last month versus March. This follows property supply falling 4% in March.

To compile its Property Supply Index, online estate agents HouseSimple.com tracks the number of new properties marketed every month, in more than 100 major towns and cities across the UK and all London boroughs.

Although more than half (60%) of towns and cities actually saw an increase in supply last month, in many areas the increase was marginal; and some of the UK’s most populated towns and cities experienced large falls in new property listings in April.

Nottingham saw new property listings down almost 11% (10.7%) in April. Similarly in Glasgow and Newcastle, supply last month was down 10.5% and 8.9% respectively. New property listings in London fell by 0.8% in April versus March.

The following table shows the UK towns and cities that have seen the biggest falls in new property listings in April versus March:

Town/City Region % rise in new listings in April vs. March
Inverness Scotland -29.1%
Hereford West Midlands -22.6%
Rugby West Midlands -19.2%
Chichester South East -18.6%
Ipswich East -16.9%
King’s Lynn East -16.5%
Barnsley South Yorkshire -16.3%
Hemel Hempstead East -15.4%
Telford West Midlands -15.2%
Salisbury South West -15.1%

 

Although many areas have seen constrained property supply in April, that’s not the case across the country. Winchester experienced a massive 35.6% rise in new property listings in April compared to March, while Southport and Maidstone both saw a 25% rise in the same period (25.4% and 24.5% respectively).

The following table shows the UK towns and cities that have seen the biggest rises in new property listings in April versus March:

Town/City Region % rise in new listings in April vs. March
Winchester South 35.6%
Southport North West 25.4%
Maidstone South East 24.5%
Chelmsford East 23.1%
Bradford West Yorkshire 21.2%
Swansea Wales 20.9%
Oldham North West 20.0%
Grimsby Yorkshire and the Humber 19.4%
Bedford East 18.6%
Hastings South East 18.5%

London

In April, new properties listed across the capital fell by 0.8% compared to the previous month. The borough of Bexley saw the biggest spike in supply, with new property listings up almost 60% (58.9%) in April. Separate research from HouseSimple.com, published in March, highlighted that Bexley was the only London borough where it’s possible to buy a home for less than £100,000.

The following table shows the biggest rises in new property listings in London boroughs in April versus March:

Borough % rise in new listings in April vs. March
Bexley 58.9%
Ealing 43.4%
Tower Hamlets 37.2%
Greenwich 27.6%
Barnet 25.7%
City of Westminster 18.4%
Lambeth 15.1%
Southwark 13.6%
Newham 10.0%
Harrow 6.4%

 

However, more than half of London’s 32 boroughs saw a month on month decline in supply, highlighting the ongoing shortage of new properties being marketed in London.

Alex Gosling, CEO of online estate agents HouseSimple.com comments: “Although 60% of UK’s towns and cities saw a increase in property supply in April, these rises weren’t nearly material enough to make a dent in the stock shortage. There’s simply not enough new stock coming onto the market to meet demand.

“April saw the stamp duty hike on second homes at the start of the month feed through to a massive rise in the supply of rental properties. The residential sales market could do with a similar spurt in supply. However, there is a possible knock on effect for the sales market. With an expected drop off in buy-to-let investors purchasing properties because of the 3% surcharge on second homes and buy-to-let properties, this may help to redress slightly the demand supply imbalance, offering first time buyers in particular opportunities to purchase, until the supply tap is turned on again.

“However, the Brexit vote could be the fly in the ointment. Any hope of a prolonged period of rising supply could be scuppered by uncertainty over which way the vote will go. We may well see a spike in supply in May as homeowners try to sell their properties before the vote on 23rd June, but supply could well dry up after the vote, depending on which way the British public choose to go.”

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