Over
2015 the east oi England is the region expected to see the greatest
rise in prices, at four per cent, along with the south east, south west
and north west.
In
London, which saw the strongest growth in 2014, house price growth is
set to be the most subdued - prices in Greater London are set to rise by
1.5 per cent, by 2 per cent in central London and a meagre 0.5 per cent
in Prime Central London in 2015.
Overall transaction growth is expected to be modest over the next two years.
The stamp duty reforms will have two effects, claims Fionnuala Earley, research director at Hamptons International.
“First,
to give buyers more to spend and second, to make it slightly easier for
them to pass affordability tests. Both of these should boost
transaction numbers and price growth, but this is likely to be a short
term effect as prices adjust, eroding the benefit of the tax cut. The
largest effect is likely to be felt in the first half of 2015,
mitigating some of the usual slow down we’d expect in the run up to an
election” she says.
She
says that London is going to be subdued, reflecting affordability
concerns and the expectation that recent price growth is unsustainable,
especially in the face of low wage inflation.
“The
changes to stamp duty will prove a drag on house prices above £1m as
vendors have to adjust their expectations. This will add downward
pressure to prices in that bracket” predicts Earley.
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