The number of residential
property transactions in Mid Sussex will be 14.8 per cent lower in 2018,
compared to 2017.
According to my research,
the seasonally adjusted statistics for our local authority
area suggest with the number of properties already sold in 2018, and the number
of properties currently under offer or sold subject to contract (allowing for
property sales to fall through before exchange of contracts) we, as an area,
will end the year 14.82 per cent lower compared to 2017.
So why are transaction numbers so important to Mid
Sussex homeowners, Mid Sussex landlords and potential first-time buyers?
Many economists and property market commentators believe
transaction numbers give a more precise and truthful indicator of the health of
the property market than just house values. In the six years before
the Credit Crunch in 2007/8, the average number of completed property
transactions in the local area (the local authority covered by Mid Sussex)
stood at 3,253 per year; yet
in the three years following the Credit Crunch, on average, only 2,045 homes were
changing hands per year in the area.
Roll
the clock forward to more recent times and last year, in 2017, 2,665 homes
changed hands (i.e. transacted and sold)
in the area, not far off the local authority’s 23 year overall average of 2,840
homes per year.
In the past, a reduction in the number of properties
selling has often been believed to be the first signal of a down turn in the
housing market as a whole. Although, the down turn of the credit crunch years
(2007/2008) was more a free-fall than a subtle down turn. Look at the graph and
the ‘so-called’ halcyon days of the 2000 to 2006 property market were a roller
coaster when it came to the number of transactions. House prices were rising in
the six/seven years before the credit crunch (2000 to 2006), albeit, the rate
of growth of Mid Sussex house prices did slow in late 2005 and 2006 (which does
fit in nicely with the graph).
In other articles, I have mentioned the change in the
number of houses for sale today compared to last year and further back.
Although, the market has seen in recent months (i.e. the short term) an increase in the number of properties for
sale, fundamentally, in the medium term, there has been an underlying trend in
the reduction of properties coming onto the market for sale in Mid Sussex (and
nationally) and this has been one of the main drives behind the lack of
properties selling. Mid Sussex people aren’t moving as much as they were 30
years ago meaning fewer houses are selling each year.
However, this short-term increase in properties for
sale hasn’t been even across the board. In certain sectors of the Mid Sussex
property market, there is a glut of properties on the market at the moment and
so prices and values are dropping on those types as sellers compete for the
limited amount of buyers; yet there are other sectors of the Mid Sussex
property market where there is a dearth, a shortage of property, and buyers are
fighting tooth and nail with silly offers to try and secure the sale. This
means, there are some bargains for you Mid Sussex buy to let landlords. If you
look hard enough, you could spot the same trends I have seen in Mid Sussex and find
the individual property micro markets that fall into that first sector (with
its glut).
So, if you want the inside track on the Mid Sussex
property market, whether you are a landlord of ours or another agent, I am more
than happy to guide you in the right direction if you drop me a line or an email.
So, to conclude, I believe we will finish on 2,270
housing transactions by the end of the year in the area; not too far off last
year’s figure or the long-term 23-year average. Looking at the short term
future, now it’s true some (not all) but some potential purchasers of property
in Mid Sussex may be exhibiting more caution because of concerns that the Bank
of England will continue to put up interest rates– to which I reply – yes of
course they will when they are only ultra-low at 0.75%. Anyway, that is the
reason why 90%+ of new mortgages over the last nine months have been on a fixed
rate. Also, if they do go up a few percentage points – they are nothing
compared to the 12%, 14%, even 15% mortgage rates many of my landlords saw in
the early 1990’s.
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