House prices down 13.3 per cent in one year

Friday 13th March 2009, 12:42PM GMT.

House prices down 13.3 per cent in one yearHouse prices fell by one per cent in February, bringing the average price of a home in England and Wales to 13.3 per cent lower than this time last year.

According to the Financial Times House Price Index (FTHPI) released today, all ten regions showed prices falling on a monthly and annual basis, with the south-east witnessing the sharpest annual fall.

The FTHPI found London prices have been falling rapidly in recent months, with the south-east recording the sharpest annual fall of 13.8 per cent, and London 12 per cent.

All of the 108 districts and counties in England and Wales saw price reductions, with price falls ranging from 16.8 per cent in Ceredigion to 0.8 per cent in Poole. However, the research also indicated price falls were slowing.

Dr Peter Williams, chairman of Acadametrics, said: “The average house price is now £200,947, back to the March 2006 level, three years ago.

“More positively, the FTHPI index suggests that price falls are slowing. In this downturn November 2008 recorded the highest monthly drop at 2.2 per cent. Since then, the rate of decline has eased each month, with February 2009 at one per cent down.

“A proportion of the 2.6 million households who bought homes in the last three years (including nearly one million first-time buyers) will be feeling quite exposed. Given the scale of house price inflation in this decade, this fall is not a serious problem for most households. For most, the solution will simply be to sit it out.”


  1. 1
    Kathryn

    If you are a seller that decides to “sit this out” I hope you don’t mind sitting for a very long time. Sensible lending is here and here to stay the UK can’t afford not to return to sensible lending, that is the kind of lending that was around prior to 2000 and the subsequent ludicrous 190% inflation in property prices. The FSA have said mortgages must be regulated on loan to income ratios and the Rock and many others are lending now at 3.5 one wage. Property prices are going to have to fall at least 40% in order to fall in line with incomes, this being the level they would have been at if not for the failure to regulate lending at sensible levels. The good people of the Uk can’t have it both ways. They cannot blame the government for bringing the UK to the brink of bankruptcy through irrepsonsible overlending and then ask them to PLEASE continue the madness, the UK can’t afford it. The UK borrowed 6 billion in 2001 to finance our inflating property bubble. The UK had to borrow over 750 billion in 2007 to prop up the just about to pop property bubble.
    The UK WILL NEVER GO BACK TO LENDING IRRESPONSIBLY…the good people of the UK don’t seem to have got this yet. Do your maths. Up to 2000 loan to income ratios had been 3.5 or lower , property prices HAVE TO FALL IN LINE WITH INCOME the UK can’t afford for them not to.

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