Well the dust has settled and the General Election seems a
distant memory, we can get back to a more normal property market, or that is
what the London
based ‘Fleet Street’ journalists would lead you to believe. You see I have been talking to many fellow
property professionals in Huddersfield (solicitors, conveyancers and one the
best sources of info – the chap who puts all the estate agent and letting
boards up in Huddersfield, and all of them, every last one of them told me they
didn’t see any change over April in business, compared to any other month on
the lead up to the Election itself.
I am now of the
opinion that maybe in the upmarket areas of Mayfair and Chelsea, the market
went into spasm with the prospect of a Labour/SNP pact with their Mansion Tax
for properties over £2,000,000, but in little old Huddersfield and the
surrounding villages, there haven’t been any properties sold above £2,000,000
mark in the last 7 years.
In a nutshell, the General Election in Huddersfield
didn’t really have any impact on people’s confidence to buy property. As I write this article, of 850 properties
that have come on to the market in Huddersfield
since the 2nd of April, 151 of them have a buyer and are sold
subject to contract, that’s over one in six (17.76% to be precise).
I think that things are starting to change in the way people
in Huddersfield (in fact the whole of the
country as I talk to other agents around the UK ) buy and sell property. Back in the 1970’s, 80’s and 90’s, the norm
was to buy a terraced house as soon as you left home and do it up. Meanwhile, property prices had gone up, so
you traded up to a 2 bed semi, then a 3 bed semi and repeated the process,
until you found yourself in a large 4 bed detached house with a large
mortgage.
Looking into this a little deeper like I have said in
previous articles Huddersfield people’s
attitude to homeownership itself has changed over the last ten years. The pressure for youngsters to buy when young
has gone as renting, not buying, is considered the norm for 20 something’s.
This isn’t just a Huddersfield thing, but a national thing, as I have noticed
that people buy property by trading up (or down) because they need to, not
because ‘it’s what people do’. This does
means there are a lot less properties on the market compared to the last
decade.
A by-product of less people moving is less people selling
their property. My research shows there are a lot fewer properties each month
selling in Huddersfield compared to the last decade. For example, in February 2015, only 83
properties were sold in Huddersfield . Compare
this to February 2002, and 152 properties sold and the same month in 2003, 157
properties. I repeated the exercise on
different sets of years, (comparing the same month to allow for seasonal
variations) and the results were identical if not greater. So what does this all mean? Demand for Huddersfield
property isn’t flying away, but with fewer properties for sale, it means
property prices are proving reasonably stable too. Stable, consistent and
steady growth of property values in Huddersfield ,
year on year, without the massive peaks and troughs we saw in the late 1980’s
and mid/late2000’s might just be the thing that the Huddersfield
property market needs in the long term.
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