Homes harder to sell as high mortgage rates frustrate buyers
BBC News ·

Three in five homes listed for sale since January remain on the market, according to property portal Zoopla, as high mortgage rates frustrate potential buyers. …
Three in five homes listed for sale since January remain on the market, according to property portal Zoopla, as high mortgage rates frustrate potential buyers. A lack of demand from buyers, as well as some high asking prices from sellers, have left homes in some areas unsold. Agreed sales were 7% below last year, Zoopla said, but the picture varied across the country with sales down 12% in Wales and 11% in the East Midlands. First-time buyers were most exposed to high mortgage rates, although there are now signs of greater competition among lenders who are lowering rates. A jump in mortgage rates in April - prompted by financial upheaval caused by the US-Israeli war with Iran - added an average of £125 a month to a typical mortgage at its peak compared with January. In London, the peak saw £232 a month added to the average first-time buyer's costs. The average two-year fixed rate jumped from 4.83% at the start of March to a peak of 5.90% on 12 April, according to the financial information service Moneyfacts. It has since dropped to 5.54%. The increase was a major factor in pushing down demand from buyers in the UK by 15% compared with a year earlier, according to Zoopla's report which considers the market to the end of May. However, in the north east of England mortgage costs for first-time buyers were only £66 a month higher over the same period. "The national picture can only tell you so much," said Richard Donnell, executive director at Zoopla. …
Original source: BBC News
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UK · Wales · London · England · East Midlands