Values of apartments in Aylesbury have
increased by 12.84% over the past year, which is proportionally 10% more than
the Aylesbury average rise of 11.63%. The last time flats/apartments in Aylesbury
out performed all the other types of property, by such a gulf, was back in the spring
of 2005. For comparison, the other property types performed as follows ..
·
Detached homes rose by 11.78%
·
Semi-detached homes rose
by 11.15%
·
Terraced/Town-Houses rose
by 11.30%
This moderately increasing rate of property
value growth is opportune – but no one should confuse it with a strong and
vigorous healthy Aylesbury property market. Instead, it is somewhat an
indicator of the long-lasting lack of property on the market. In fact, I have
spoken about the lack of homes for sale in Aylesbury on a number of occasions
in my Aylesbury Property Blog and whilst it isn’t as bad as it was 12 months
ago – choice is quite limited for buyers.
The average property value in Aylesbury
now stands at £380,700.
When split down into property types ..
·
Aylesbury Apartments
at £201,600
·
Aylesbury Detached at £608,800
·
Aylesbury Semi-Detached at
£342,000
·
Aylesbury
Terraced/Town-House at £287,800
So why have Aylesbury apartments performed so
well, and is it just an Aylesbury thing? Well in part the apartments have been
pulled along by the lack of two bedroom houses. But when I scrutinised the
figures for the rest of the UK, it appears that apartments are currently
leading the pace in a clear majority of the country. Of the 379 local authority
areas in the UK, the value of apartments is rising faster than detached,
semi-detached and terraced houses in 320 of them.
So, should Aylesbury apartment owners be
getting out the Champagne? Well, I would keep it on ice as the Land Registry
figures are notorious for short term fluctuations. It’s hard to have faith in the
fact that Aylesbury house values rose rapidly last month given that, in the
last six months, the Land Registry has frequently made downward revisions to
their first published House Price Index figures.
Thankfully, the bigger picture from the Council
of Mortgage Lenders (CML) stated that home buying activity last month was up 2%
over the same month in 2016 – not bad as we have had the Autumn, Winter and now
Spring since Brexit. The CML stated first time buyer’s levels of affordability was
being squeezed and that the average amount borrowed by those first-time buyers
dropped slightly last month, but the overall amount borrowed (by all buyers)
was an impressive 12% higher than the same month in 2016.
So, what next for the Aylesbury Property
market? I believe the uplift in the values of apartments is a short-term blip.
The real issue is with the way wage growth might not keep up with inflation as
the effects of 2016 exchange rate sucks in inflation (meaning real wage growth
stagnates). This will mean buyer demand growth will be curtailed and with
property values already so full, I believe a renewed hastening in house price
growth is unlikely.
I believe we are starting to return to the housing
market we saw in the mid 1990’s, Steady demand – nothing silly when it comes to
house price growth. Therefore, I believe, with what is happening around us –
this isn’t a bad thing at all.
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