The UK housing market remains in decline but there are some signs of stabilisation, with an improvement in new buyer inquiries and sales last month, according to surveyors.
Many told the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (Rics) that a return of optimism, and lower than expected interest rates, had given the housing market some hope for the coming months after a sluggish start to the year.
The Rics monthly survey measures the proportion of surveyors who reported a rise in new buyer inquiries from those saying they fell. It showed a net balance of -29% last month – up from -45% in January. While this still points to a drop in demand, and is the 10th consecutive negative reading, it is the smallest decline since July.
The new sales indicator also improved in February, from a net balance of -36% to -26%. However, the average time taken to complete a transaction continues to rise and is now approaching 19 weeks.
“Increasing numbers of properties are coming to the market, providing buyers with more choice for the first time in over two years,” said Kenneth Bird, a chartered surveyor at Renton & Parr in Wetherby, West Yorkshire.
Ben Hudson, of Hudson Moody in York, said sales were returning as interest rates did not appear to peak as high as predicted last year.
Mortgage rates rose to about 6.5% in October after the Liz Truss government’s disastrous mini-budget but have since been reduced to between 4% and 5%.
The Bank of England last month raised its base rate for the 10th consecutive time, to 4%, but its governor, Andrew Bailey, last week signalled they may have peaked. Financial markets are still pricing in two more rises to about 4.5%, however, in contrast with last autumn’s forecasts that borrowing costs would peak between
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