Introduction: UK house prices rise in April after seven consecutive falls
Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the world economy and the financial markets.
UK house price growth picked up in April, building society Nationwide reports this morning, with the first monthly increase in seven month.
Average house prices rose by 0.5% last month, Nationwide’s data shows, following seven consecutive falls going back to last September.
The average price increased to £260,441, up from £257,122 in March.
This has lifted the annual rate of house price growth to -2.7%, from -3.1% in March (the biggest fall since 2009), as calm returned to the markets after the chaos of last autumn’s min-budget.
Robert Gardner, Nationwide’s chief economist, reports there were “tentative signs of a recovery” in the market last month, although this still leaves prices 4% below their August 2022 peak.
Gardner explains:
“Recent Bank of England data suggests that housing market activity remained subdued in the opening months of 2023, with the number of mortgages approved for house purchase in February nearly 40% below the level prevailing a year ago, and around a third lower than pre-pandemic levels.
However, in recent months industry data on mortgage applications point to signs of a pickup.
Last month, Rightmove reported that asking prices were at record levels:
Gardner says the recent pick-up in UK consumer confidence may be helping the housing market, but cautions that….
….any upturn is likely to remain fairly pedestrian, as it will take time for household finances to recover, since average earnings have been failing to keep pace with inflation, and by a wide margin over the last few years.
Mortgage interest rates are also likely to act as a headwind. While they are well below the highs seen in the wake of the mini-Budget last year, rates are still more than double the level prevailing a year ago.
Also coming up today
Britain’s biggest supermarkets are facing calls for the UK’s competition watchdog to investigate claims of profiteering amid the cost of living crisis, as food price inflation soared to a record high in April.
Overnight, Australia’s central bank has surprised investors by raising interest rates again.
The RBA board raised its cash rate 25 basis points to 3.85% at its monthly meeting on Tuesday, defying investors who had bet the central bank would extend its pause for a second month.
Higher interest rates lift profits at banks….. such as HSBC, which has reported a three-fold jump in earnings in the last quarter, On a constant currency basis, HSBC’s profit before tax increased by $9.0bn to $12.9bn, leading the bank to launch up to $2bn of share buybacks and a 10 cent-per-share dividend.
BP has defied an easing in energy prices to post one of the largest first-quarter profits in its history, reigniting a debate over windfall gains by oil and gas firms.
The energy giant said its underlying profits hit $5bn (£4bn) in the first three months of the year, outstripping analysts’ forecasts. More on this shortly…
The latest factory PMI reports will show how manufacturers in the UK and the eurozone fared in April. That follows a surprise contraction in China’s factory output, reported on Sunday.
We get the latest eurozone inflation report this morning, with prices expected to have risen by 7% in the 12 months to April, up from 6.9%. Core inflation could stick at 5.7%, worryingly high for the European Central Bank.
The agenda
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7am BST: Nationwide house price index for April
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9am BST: Eurozone manufacturing PMI for April
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9.30am BST: UK manufacturing PMI for April
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10am BST: Eurozone core inflation rate on April
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3pm BST: US Factory Orders for March
Key events
UK housing market ‘may have troughed’, but affordability still very challenging
Today’s Nationwide house price data is another sign that weakness in the housing market “may have troughed”, reports Martin Beck, chief economic advisor to the EY ITEM Club.
Beck says:
“One month does not make a trend and, given the degree of volatility in house price measures, April’s rise in the Nationwide gauge could prove short-lived. But it’s consistent with other signs that weakness in the market may have bottomed out. The Halifax measure of prices rose in each of the first three months of 2023. While mortgage approvals were still very low in February, they increased for the first time since last summer.
And survey evidence on new buyer interest and the availability of homes for sale has recently shown signs of life. On top of that, the economy may be turning a corner, aided by falling energy prices, with job creation continuing at a solid pace and consumer confidence recovering.
But, house prices remain very high on most measures of affordability, Beck points out:
Mortgage rates have seen a significant rise over the last year, with the average rate on a new mortgage increasing to 4.26% in February from 1.60% 12 months earlier. Borrowing costs could increase further if, as the EY ITEM Club expects, the Bank of England raises interest rates again this month.
And while the prospect of rapidly falling inflation should reduce financial strains facing households, real incomes are likely to still fall over most of this year. Therefore, the risk of a sustained correction in house prices hasn’t gone away.”
Hopes that the Bank of England may soon stop raising interest rates are supporting demand for home purchases, reports Victoria Scholar, head of investment at interactive investor:
Over the past eight months, the housing market has been attempting to regain a sense of normality after the chaos around September’s mini budget which sent mortgage rates soaring and potential homeowners fleeing from the market.
With mortgage rates since easing, the Bank of England near the peak of the rate hiking cycle, consumer sentiment improving, and inflation seen easing this year, mortgage applications have started to pick up again with buyers cautiously coming back.
Spring tends to be a seasonally busy period for housing market activity as the improved weather brightens demand and draws in more sellers ahead of the summer holiday lull.”
The BoE is widely expected to lift Bank Rate again this month, from 4.25% to 4.5%, with rates seen approaching 5% before the end of this year. But they are then forecast to drop in 2024.
Matt Thompson, head of sales at Chestertons, reports that April was a busy month.
“Savvy house hunters used the Easter holidays to continue their search online and enquire about properties to arrange a viewing as soon as possible. April has therefore been a busy month; particularly as buyers are a lot more aware of today’s competitive market conditions.
As a result, most buyers have also been preparing their paperwork as much as they could in order to make an offer and secure a property before the summer.”
‘Reverberations from the mini-Budget are fading’
April’s rise in UK house prices shows that the reverberations from the mini-Budget that shook the UK property market are fading, says Tom Bill, head of UK residential research at Knight Frank:
Price declines are bottoming out and many buyers have accepted the new normal for mortgage rates as stability returns to the lending market.
Boosted by savings accumulated during the pandemic, record levels of housing equity and a strong jobs market, activity has been solid without being spectacular this year. Supply is rising, which will increase downwards pressure on prices but the market is returning to earth rather than falling off a cliff. Properties that tick all the right boxes will hold their value but some of the pandemic froth has disappeared so asking prices will come under pressure.
Bill predicts that after a general election, successive lockdowns, a stamp duty holiday and the mini-Budget, the UK housing market should have its most predictable year since 2018.
However, we don’t expect widespread standoffs over price because of lingering economic uncertainty and a growing realisation that next year’s general election may shake things up again. Switched-on buyers and sellers are acting now while things are relatively uneventful.”
UK house prices: the key charts
Here are the key charts from Nationwide’s house price report, showing the first monthly rise in prices since last August.
Introduction: UK house prices rise in April after seven consecutive falls
Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the world economy and the financial markets.
UK house price growth picked up in April, building society Nationwide reports this morning, with the first monthly increase in seven month.
Average house prices rose by 0.5% last month, Nationwide’s data shows, following seven consecutive falls going back to last September.
The average price increased to £260,441, up from £257,122 in March.
This has lifted the annual rate of house price growth to -2.7%, from -3.1% in March (the biggest fall since 2009), as calm returned to the markets after the chaos of last autumn’s min-budget.
Robert Gardner, Nationwide’s chief economist, reports there were “tentative signs of a recovery” in the market last month, although this still leaves prices 4% below their August 2022 peak.
Gardner explains:
“Recent Bank of England data suggests that housing market activity remained subdued in the opening months of 2023, with the number of mortgages approved for house purchase in February nearly 40% below the level prevailing a year ago, and around a third lower than pre-pandemic levels.
However, in recent months industry data on mortgage applications point to signs of a pickup.
Last month, Rightmove reported that asking prices were at record levels:
Gardner says the recent pick-up in UK consumer confidence may be helping the housing market, but cautions that….
….any upturn is likely to remain fairly pedestrian, as it will take time for household finances to recover, since average earnings have been failing to keep pace with inflation, and by a wide margin over the last few years.
Mortgage interest rates are also likely to act as a headwind. While they are well below the highs seen in the wake of the mini-Budget last year, rates are still more than double the level prevailing a year ago.
Also coming up today
Britain’s biggest supermarkets are facing calls for the UK’s competition watchdog to investigate claims of profiteering amid the cost of living crisis, as food price inflation soared to a record high in April.
Overnight, Australia’s central bank has surprised investors by raising interest rates again.
The RBA board raised its cash rate 25 basis points to 3.85% at its monthly meeting on Tuesday, defying investors who had bet the central bank would extend its pause for a second month.
Higher interest rates lift profits at banks….. such as HSBC, which has reported a three-fold jump in earnings in the last quarter, On a constant currency basis, HSBC’s profit before tax increased by $9.0bn to $12.9bn, leading the bank to launch up to $2bn of share buybacks and a 10 cent-per-share dividend.
BP has defied an easing in energy prices to post one of the largest first-quarter profits in its history, reigniting a debate over windfall gains by oil and gas firms.
The energy giant said its underlying profits hit $5bn (£4bn) in the first three months of the year, outstripping analysts’ forecasts. More on this shortly…
The latest factory PMI reports will show how manufacturers in the UK and the eurozone fared in April. That follows a surprise contraction in China’s factory output, reported on Sunday.
We get the latest eurozone inflation report this morning, with prices expected to have risen by 7% in the 12 months to April, up from 6.9%. Core inflation could stick at 5.7%, worryingly high for the European Central Bank.
The agenda
-
7am BST: Nationwide house price index for April
-
9am BST: Eurozone manufacturing PMI for April
-
9.30am BST: UK manufacturing PMI for April
-
10am BST: Eurozone core inflation rate on April
-
3pm BST: US Factory Orders for March