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Housing market confidence falls again
13/05/2008
House price falls are being reported by a balance of 95.1 per cent of chartered surveyors as confidence in the property market declines.
The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (Rics) housing market survey reveals the widespread slowdown in UK property with just one per cent of surveyors seeing prices rise.
The number of new buyers also fell with a balance of 68 per cent of charters surveyors seeing a fall in the number of new buyer enquires compared with 51 per cent in January.
In response the number of completed sales per member in the last quarter fell to 18.3, from 22.2 in March.
However, Rics is warning that while its figures show the breadth of the market slowdown, it is not showing how far house prices are falling.
Indeed, the body reports the weakness in the housing market is not being driven by new properties coming onto the market.
With homeowners sitting out of the market amid the credit crunch making raising finance harder, the number of unsold properties on Rics members' books fell to the lowest level this year.
Rics spokesperson Ian Perry said: "Although most surveyors are now seeing price declines, the extent of the fall, is at this stage, quite modest. The real issue is the collapse in the number of housing transactions. This has very real implications, not just for the property industry but also the high street and the wider economy.
"Sellers of white goods are likely to suffer if this low level of turnover persists for much longer.
"This is a key reason why the Bank of England should act at its next meeting by cutting the base rate."
Amid the property slowdown the Rics data reveal the level of distressed sales either repossessions or sales from those attempting to avoid repossession has yet to rise as mortgage arrears remain low.
Data on expected prices, however, was particularly depressing hitting the lowest level since recorded started in 1998.
Except for East Anglia, the south-east and north-west, confidence deteriorated further across all regions in England and Wales. No surveyors from Yorkshire and Humberside and the East Midlands expected prices to rise over the next three months.
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