London house prices soar 26% in a year, fastest pace in 27 years LONDON: London house prices
soared 26 percent over the past year in the biggest annual jump since 1987, as the economic recovery and record-low interest rates stoked a boom in one of the world's most expensive property markets.
The rise, shown in a Nationwide survey on Wednesday, is expected to put pressure on the Bank of England to bring forward its
plans to raise interest rates, a move that would be the first tightening by a major central bank since the financial crisis hit.
Across Britain, house prices rose at their fastest rate in over nine years, Nationwide said, while the average London property hit a record 400,000 pounds, or $681,000 for a dollar buyer forced to grapple with rocketing prices and the strongest pound in nearly six years.
Foreign money has poured into London property, seen as an attractive bet by everyone from Russian oligarchs to U.S. technology titans, prompting a domestic scramble for homes that many locals cannot afford without potentially crippling debt.
Bank of England Governor Mark Carney has warned the housing market poses the biggest domestic risk to financial stability and signalled that Britain could be the first major Western economy to tighten monetary policy since the 2008 crisis.
Prices in the British capital are now around
30 percent above their pre-crisis highs and more than twice the level in the rest of Britain, said Robert Gardner, chief economist at mortgage lender Nationwide which collated the data.
Countrywide, house prices rose 1.0 percent in June after a 0.7 percent rise in May, taking the annual rate of increase to 11.8 percent - the biggest since January 2005, according to Nationwide.
Stricter checks on borrowers' ability to pay back mortgages were introduced in April and have weighed on the approval of home loans. Some fear these could become unaffordable when interest rates eventually rise from a record low.
Sterling [GBP/] hit a
fresh near 6-year high against the U.S. dollar. Over the past 12 months, sterling is up 14 percent against the U.S. dollar. So far this year, sterling has risen 4.5 percent on a trade-weighted basis.
Last week it said that no more than 15 percent of new mortgages could be to people seeking to borrow over
4.5 times their annual income.
Around 10 percent of loans fall into this category nationally, rising to roughly 20 percent in London. But Nationwide said this cap and new tighter affordability checks were unlikely to slow house price growth in the short run, but that the prospect of higher interest rates might.
Source: Reuters
http://www.thestar.com.my/Business/Busi ... in-a-year/
It's all about "how much you made when you were right" & "how little you lost when you were wrong"