I do like to have a coffee at Coffeevolution on Church Street in Huddersfield.
Whilst in there, a suited gentleman approached me and asked if I was the person
who wrote the newsletters about the Huddersfield property market. We ended up
having an interesting chat about the local property market, as he was concerned
his daughter would never be able to buy her own property, a place in Huddersfield
she herself can call home.
My latest analysis,
using the Land Registry and Office of National Statistics, shows that overall,
month on month, Huddersfield property values increased by 0.1%. The year on
year figures showed the value of residential property in Huddersfield has
increased by 1.3% in the year to the end February 2016, taking the average
value of a property in the council area to £115,100.
It gets even
more interesting when we look at the last few months’ figures and see the
patterns that seem to be emerging.
·
January 2016 - a rise of 0.1%
·
December 2015 - a drop of 0.2%
·
November 2015 - a rise of 0.5%
We have talked
in many recent articles about the lack of properties being built in Huddersfield
over the last 30 years. This lack of new building has been the biggest factor
that has contributed to Huddersfield property values still being 105.82% higher
than in 1995. At the risk of repeating myself, until the Government addresses
this issue, and allows more properties to be built, things will continue to get
worse as the UK population grows at just under 500,000 people a year (which is a
combination of around 226,000 people because of higher birth rates/people
living longer and 259,000 net migration) whilst the country is only building
152,400 properties a year – no wonder demand is outstripping supply.
Another reason intensifying the current level of property values in Huddersfield,
is the fact that people aren’t moving home as much as they used to, meaning
fewer properties are coming onto the market for sale, so in consequence, there
is a lack of choice of property to buy, meaning people thinking of moving are discouraged
from putting their property on the market ... thus perpetuating the problem, as
the scarcity of possible properties to buy in order to move also deters people
from offering their home for sale. This unevenness between demand from would-be
purchasers and the number of properties coming on to the market for sale is
causing pressures in Huddersfield (and the rest of the UK).
So what of the future of the Huddersfield property market and this man’s
daughter? I firmly believe the property market in Huddersfield and the country
as a whole is changing its attitude about homeownership. Back in the 1960’s,
70’s, 80’s and 90’s, getting on the property ladder was everything. Since the
late 1990’s, we as a country (in particular, the young) have slowly started to
change our attitude to homeownership. We are moving to a more European model,
where people choose to rent in their 20’s and 30’s (meaning they can move
freely and not be tied to a property), then inherit money in their 50’s when
their property owning parents pass away, allowing them to buy property
themselves ... just like they do in Germany and other sophisticated and mature
European counties, meaning his daughter will end up owning property, just later
in life than we did. So, whatever the vote on the 23rd of June, if you think
about it, we might be more European than we think!
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