UK house prices are on the longest losing streak since crisis

Bloomberg

UK house prices fell for a fifth month in a row in July, the longest stretch of declines since the financial crisis.
Values fell 0.2 percent from June, bringing the average price for a home to $386,000, Acadata said in a report. London remains a “mixed picture,” with the number of sales in the second quarter falling by 7 percent from a year earlier and prices declining in almost two-thirds of the capital’s boroughs.
The British housing market is weakening after a three-decade boom amid slower economic growth, uncertainty created by Brexit and inflation outpacing wage growth over much of the past year.
London, where the average house price is more than double the national average, has been hit harder than the rest of the country. At the national level, annual price growth has slowed to 1.6 percent, the least in six years, and sales have declined by 6 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis, Acadata said. The Bank of England’s interest-rate increase in August is expected “to result in a further reduction in housing market activity,” the report said.

BOE Hike
The central bank hiked rates for only the second time since the financial crisis this month, and said that London’s property market is seeing weakness due to the UK’s decision to leave the European Union and changes in migration.
Policy maker Ian McCafferty said last week that the capital is seeing “significant change as a result of uncertainty around Brexit,” weighing on home prices and rents.
Looking at regions on a three-month growth average, there’s evidence to support that BOE view, the report said. The West Midlands region is seeing the fastest growth, while the Southeast and East of England are seeing the slowest.
A separate report from Visa and IHS Markit showed that consumer spending fell 0.9 percent in July from a year earlier. While hot weather helped boost spending on food and days away, surveys show that retailers are concerned rate hikes will hit already-fragile consumer confidence.

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