House prices dipped by 0.8 per
cent in March according to the Land Registry - a marked contrast to figures produced by Nationwide earlier
this week.
The data shows an annual
price increase of 5.3 per cent taking the average property value in England and
Wales to £178,007 compared with the peak of £181,049 in November 2007.
Almost inevitably London
homes have seen the biggest increase in average value over the last 12 months -
up 11.3 per cent - while perhaps equally predictably the north east of England
saw the only annual price fall with a decrease of 2.9 per cent.
The north east also saw
the largest monthly price decrease with a fall of four per cent.
Recent figures from
estate agents showing transaction volumes falling sharply have been confirmed
by the registry, which says the number of completed house sales in England and
Wales dropped 18 per cent in March to 53,168.
The number of properties
sold in England and Wales for over £1m dropped by 19 per cent to 851, from
1,049 a year earlier. This prompted a Savills buying agent - Guy Meacock of
Savills’ Prime Purchase off-shoot - to describe there being “panic in the
housing market” as a result of recent stamp duty changes and a possible mansion
tax.
The Land Registry data
shows that the annual rate at which prices are growing also slowed for the
seventh consecutive month to stand at 5.3 per cent, the lowest level since
February last year.
http://www.estateagenttoday.co.uk/2325-house-price-dip-prompts-market-panic-claim
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