A little bit of good news this week on the Huddersfield Property Market
as recently released data shows that the number of first time buyers taking out
their first mortgage in 2017 increased more than in any other year since the
global financial crisis in 2009. The data shows there were 668 first time buyers in Huddersfield,
the largest number since 2006.
I expect in 2018
that this increase of first time buyers will level out and maybe dip slightly
as, nationally, figures demonstrate that first time buyer’s average household
income was £40,691 and this represented 17.3% of their take home pay. Although,
it might surprise readers that it is actually cheaper to buy than it is to rent
at the ‘starter home’ end of the housing market. Many of you can remember
mortgage rates at 12% ... even 15%. Today, at the time of writing this article,
I found on the open market, 189 first time buyer mortgages at 95% (meaning only
a 5% deposit was required) with 3 year fixed rates from a reputable High Street
bank at 2.49% ... they even did a 3 year fixed rate 100% mortgage for 2.89%!
Interestingly, looking
at the other end of the market, the buy-to-let investment in Huddersfield was
subdued, with only 137 buy-to-let properties being purchased with
a mortgage. However, I must stress, whilst there is no hard and fast
data on the total numbers of landlords buying buy-to-let, as HM Treasury
believes only 30% to 40% of buy-to-let property is bought with a mortgage. This
means there would have been further cash only buy-to-let purchases in Huddersfield
– it’s just that the data isn’t available at such a granular level.
In terms of the
level of mortgage debt in Huddersfield, looking specifically at the HD1 to HD5
postcodes, you can see there has been a slight decrease in borrowing over the
last few years.
This is pleasing
to see, as new mortgage debt is created by first time buyers, buy-to-let
landlords and home movers themselves, that is being roughly equalled by the
amount being paid off with mature mortgaged homeowners in their 50’s and 60’s
finally paying off their mortgage.
So, what does all this mean for the Huddersfield Property Market? Well, the stats paint a picture, but they
don’t inform us of the whole story. The upper end of the Huddersfield property
market has been weighed down by the indecision around the
Brexit negotiations and rise in stamp duty in 2014, when made it considerably
more expensive to buy a home costing more than £1m. The middle part of the Huddersfield
property market has been affected by issues of mortgage affordability and lack
of good properties to buy, as selling prices have reached the limit of what
buyers can afford under existing mortgage regulations. The lower to middle Huddersfield
property market was hit by tax changes for buy-to-let landlords, although this
has been offset by the increase in first time buyers.
If you are in the market and selling now and want
to ensure you get your Huddersfield property sold, the bottom line is you have
to be 100% realistic with your pricing from day one and you might not get as
much as you did say a year ago (but the
one you want to buy will be less – swings and roundabouts?). I know it’s
not comfortable hearing that your Huddersfield home isn’t worth as much as you
thought, but Huddersfield buyers are now unbelievably discerning.
So, if you are thinking of selling your Huddersfield
property in the coming months, don’t ask the agent out a few days before you
want to put the property on the market, get them out now and ask them what you
need to do to ensure you get maximum value in the shortest possible time. I,
like most Huddersfield agents, will freely give that advice to you at no cost or
commitment to you.
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