UK house prices
'pick up' in July
House price growth picked
up in July and the overall
market remains "fairly
buoyant", according
to the Nationwide.
The building society's latest
housing survey found that
prices rose by 0.8% last
month, up from 0.3% in June,
pushing the annual growth
rate to 5.9%.
The rise means the average
UK property now costs £167,733.
The three-monthly trend
showed that prices rose
by 1.2% in the three months
to July compared with the
previous three months.
'Looser constraints'
With house prices continuing
to rise, Nationwide group
economist Fionnuala Earley
said that the problem of
affordability "had
not bitten as sharply as
we had expected".
This may be as a result
of looser constraints on
mortgage lending, or financial
assistance from parents
to help their children buy
properties.
Rising prices had also
given the buy-to-let market
a boost, Ms Earley said,
with would-be first-time
buyers who are priced out
of the market being forced
to rent.
"Additional demand
for homes has increased
tenant demand and landlords'
incentives to invest,"
she said.
But Ms Earley warned: "While
affordability may not be
biting so hard now, like
a guard dog's bark, it cannot
be ignored indefinitely."
Mortgage approvals
Demand for properties
remains strong
On Monday the Bank of England
(BoE) said that new mortgage
approvals reached a five-month
high in June.
In total, 120,000 new mortgages
were approved in June, up
3,000 on May's figure.
Analysts suggested that
this underlined the strength
of the UK mortgage market.
So far this year, UK house
price growth has outstripped
most forecasts.