Tuesday, 12 December 2017

Supply and Demand Issues mean Burgess Hill Property Values Rise by 4.8% in the Last 12 Months.



The most recent set of data from the Land Registry has stated that property values in Burgess Hill and the surrounding area were 4.8% higher than 12 months ago and 15.29% higher than January 2015.

Despite the uncertainty over Brexit as Burgess Hill (and most of the UK’s) property values continue their medium and long-term upward trajectory. As economics is about supply and demand, the story behind the Burgess Hill property market can also be seen from those two sides of the story.

Looking at the supply issues of the Burgess Hill property market, putting aside the short-term dearth of property on the market, one of the main reasons of this sustained house price growth has been down to of the lack of building new homes.

The draconian planning laws, that over the last 70 years (starting with The Town and Country Planning Act 1947) has meant the amount of land built on in the UK today, only stands at 1.8% (no, that’s not a typo – it’s one point eight percent) and that is made up of 1.1% with residential property and 0.7% for commercial property. Now I am not advocating building modern ugly carbuncles and high-rise flats in the Cotswolds, nor blot the landscape with the building of massive out of place ugly 1,000 home housing estates around the beautiful countryside of such villages as Hassocks, Sayers Common and Ditchling.


The facts are, with the restrictions on building homes for people to live in, because of these 70-year-old restrictive planning regulations, homes that the youngsters of Burgess Hill badly need, aren’t being built. Adding fuel to that fire, there has been a large dose of nimby-ism and landowner deliberately sitting on land, which has kept land values high and from that keeps house prices high.

Looking at the demand side of the equation, one might have thought property values would drop because of Brexit and buyers uncertainty. However, certain commenters now believe property values might rise because of Brexit. Many people are risk adverse, especially with their hard-earned savings. The stock market is at an all-time high (ready to pop again?) and many people don’t trust the money markets. The thing about property is its tangible, bricks and mortar, you can touch it and you can easily understand it.  

The Brits have historically put their faith in bricks and mortar, which they expect to rise in value, in numerical terms, at least. Nationally, the value of property has risen by 635.4% since 1984 whilst the stock market has risen by a very similar 593.1%. However, the stock market has had a roller coaster of a ride to get to those figures. For example, in the dot com bubble of the early 2000’s, the FTSE100 dropped 126.3% in two years and it dropped again by 44.6% in 9 months in 2007; the worst drop Burgess Hill saw in property values was just 25.08% in the 2008/9 credit crunch.

Despite the slowdown in the rate of annual property value growth in Burgess Hill to the current 4.8%, from the heady days of 19.11% annual increases seen in early 2010, it can be argued the headline rate of Burgess Hill property price inflation is holding up well, especially with the squeeze on real incomes, new taxation rules for landlords and the slight ambiguity around Brexit. With mortgage rates at an all-time low and tumbling unemployment, all these factors are largely continuing to help support property values in Mid Sussex (and the UK).

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