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A limited drip feed of new homes to buy or rent and forthcoming tightening of mortgage lending criteria may hold back the resurgent residential market in London, it is claimed. Demand is still outstripping supply in both sales and lettings now that the political uncertainty of the past few months is over, according to research from London estate agency Chestertons. The firm’s latest prime residential sales report says that despite the uncertainty in the lead up to the general election at the beginning of May, the demand for new homes remained robust in the first three months of the year and continued to outstrip modestly improved supply. Demand for new-build homes from overseas also remained high. Prime central areas resales experienced a marginal return to capital value growth of up to 0.7% for the first time since the first quarter of 2014, although the north and east of the city, led by Canary Wharf, saw above average value growth of 1.4% in the first three months of the year. ‘We experienced a fairly subdued six months in the run-up towards the election, with fears of a mansion tax which could have wiped up to a quarter of a million pounds off the value of properties in the £2 million plus bracket had it been introduced, clearly having an impact on buyers in prime London markets,’ said Nick Barnes, Chestertons' head of research. ‘Furthermore investors, institutions and landlords were in many cases reviewing their holdings in the event of major changes to taxation and lettings regulation being brought in by a Labour led administration. The Conservatives' slim majority has calmed such fears and enquiries have been strong since the morning of 0 May, up by more than 15% on the pre-election period,’ he explained. But he pointed out that there are still challenges that need addressing if the upturn in confidence is to be sustained. ‘The first major challenge is to revitalise supply of good quality homes of all shapes and sizes into both the sales and lettings markets. Politicians at the national and local level must now step up to deliver more land for development, while finding new ways to incentivise house builders and easing the planning regulatory burden to get more homes into the system,’ said Barnes. ‘The raft of policies aimed at getting more people on to the housing ladder that the Tories pledged in their manifesto also have a key part to play, especially as anticipated tightening of mortgage lending criteria may actually make home ownership less accessible for many,’ he explained. ‘Any future rises in the base rate of interest will of course also have a significant impact, while the expiry of the mortgage guarantee portion of the Help to Buy scheme in early 2017 could also have a detrimental effect. Still more needs to be done to incentivise builders and developers. It will be interesting to see what the Chancellor George Osborne announces in his July Budget to… Continue reading →
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