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House prices WILL increase this year

John Fitzsimons is confident house prices will be higher at the end of 2009 than they were at the start of the year. But is this a recovery - or just a dead cat bounce?

Another week, another positive house price index.

This time it came from Nationwide, who recorded a 1.3% increase in house prices - the third straight month in which it has reported a jump in house prices.

Indeed, over the last three months - generally seen as a better indicator of long terms trends - house prices rose 2.6%.

Despite this, according to the survey, house prices remain 6% lower than last year, though again this is still an improvement on last month, when the decline was 9.3%.  

The 'unthinkable' rise in house prices

However, for me the interesting thing is the following quote from Martin Gahbauer, Nationwide's chief economist: "For the first seven months of 2009 as a whole, prices have risen by a cumulative 1.3%, suggesting there is now a reasonable chance that prices could end the year slightly higher than where they started."

No doubt many of you disagree with this statement. We recently conducted a survey of 500 lovemoney.com readers to get your predictions for house prices over the next 12 months and found that four out of five of you (79 per cent) think that the housing market will fall over the next 12 months. In fact, over a quarter of you (26 per cent) said you think it will drop by a staggering 11 to 15 per cent.

But I, for one, completely agree with Nationwide's assessment. Despite my reservations earlier this year, I now think that house prices will finish the year up on 2008.

The recovery has some momentum

So why have I changed my mind?

Figures from the Council of Mortgage Lenders last month showed that gross mortgage lending in June jumped 17% to £12.3bn, up from £10.5bn in May. Yes, it's still very low compared to a couple of years ago, but it's certainly on the up.

There has also been positive news from the Bank of England, which reported mortgage approvals in June rose to 47,584, up from 44,169 in May, and the highest figure in over a year. It was the fifth straight monthly rise in approvals.

And the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors' monthly survey for June found that more surveyors expected price rises than falls - the first time there has been a positive balance in over two years.

This was followed by the Land Registry pronouncing house prices had risen for the first time since the start of 2008.

Even the forecasts for the number of repossessions likely to take place this year have also been slashed.

There have been positive rumblings about the housing market for some time now. Speak to an estate agent or mortgage broker, and most will be cautiously optimistic about business. Deals are starting to go through with a little bit of momentum, and hope is returning.

In other words, the housing market does seem to be recovering....

Dodgy foundations?

....BUT the scale of this recovery is significantly limited by the level of mortgage lending currently underway.

The fact remains that unless you are the most perfect of prospective borrowers, with a significant deposit and great credit rating, the mortgages available to you are pretty limited, and that's supposing you actually get past the lenders' stringent checks.  

The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors has already reported that even when a sale is agreed, 10% fall through because the buyer is unable to get a mortgage.

The Council of Mortgage Lenders has described the mortgage situation as 'stagnant', highlighting that the adjusted net lending figure for June is virtually unchanged from May, which was itself the lowest adjusted figure on record.

Indeed, it was also far from alone in attributing rises in mortgage lending figures to seasonal factors, rather than being any real sign of a permanent pick up in housing market conditions. And as soon as business does start to pick up, lenders withdraw their most competitive products. They still can't - or don't want to - lend as much as they used to.

Of course, I'm not suggesting we should go back to the way things were in 2007 - it's no bad thing that some of the practices lenders were happy to employ back then have disappeared. And accepting that some people are simply not suited to homeownership is a move to be welcomed.

Another fall to come

So, the fact remains that the foundation for this current recovery is shaky at best.

Those potential borrowers with smaller deposits, or the odd missed payment on their credit rating, are still locked out of the housing market, and it doesn't look like that is going to change any time soon.

And with unemployment expected to continue to increase, those foundations are going to come under an awful lot of pressure in the coming months.

My colleague Cliff D'Arcy wrote earlier this month about just what an impact unemployment can have on the value of a property in How job losses affect house prices, which I would certainly recommend giving a read.

While we have undoubtedly reached the bottom of this house price crash, it would take a very ambitious person to predict that there will not be a second fall next year, once the unemployment figures really hit home.

But perhaps you disagree. Perhaps you think the recovery is safe as houses - or safe as something, er, safer. Whatever you think, don't hold back! Use the comments box below to tell us what you think the future really holds for house prices...

More: Hurry! Top mortgage deals are disappearing fast | Falling fixed rates just an illusion

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  • 11 August 2009

    ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ Boring, boring, boring....same old same old, every other week!! Prices will be slightly up because the figures are disproportionate due to a higher amount of purchases being done by wealthy buyers. Also lenders like to use the stats for their own ends and often use approved mortgage applications and not actual completed purchases! Look at the volumes and you'll work out the truth behind the facts and figures. Then as I've said plenty of times this last few months, sit back and wait for house prices to adjust to realistic levels til 2011 (yup it will take that long thanks to unneeded intervention by the BoE and govt slowing down the correction in the imbalance) Be ready for a very similar boring biased article from LoveMoney on this same subject YET AGAIN in about 2 weeks. ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ

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  • 07 August 2009

    So 'House Pices are Rising' NOT really a surprise, after a period of low/even NO Sales this is a short term phenomena, Spring & Summer add to the effect. HOWEVER Job Losses, the 'Post Election Period [When all the 'Quantititive Easing' will meet a 'Time of Reckoning' and need to be paid for, together with the ongoing difficulties of being outside the Eurozone.] Again as ever the North /South Divide will mean Hartlepool might just be worst off than Brighton. This week 'Focus D.I.Y. Chain has been in trouble, Numerous Estate Agents here in the North have closed their smaller branches falling back on just one office. Even working employees are feeling the pinch, relatives of mine have had MASSIVE Cuts in overtime & special payments, [35% overall] more may be to come. Huge numbers of Graduates struggle to find work [What hope the less qualified] Recruits to the Armed Forces 'Think Twice' as news items feature coffins and disabled soldiers, these need alternate civilian jobs and add to competition for employment. On the 'Bright Side' record low mortgage rates mean some stimuli to markets, but if this ends with inflation fighting increases, Prices will sink rapidly across ALL areas.

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  • 06 August 2009

    ,,,and there was me thinking a house is something you live in! Why is it that just about anything ELSE we buy, we accept its (almost instant) depreciation, but when it comes to houses... sigh! Houses are homes first and foremost - what it may be "worth" at any point in time seems to me to be largly irrelevant!

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