From talking to most of the Huddersfield
estate and letting agents and our own findings, it might surprise many of you
that new enquiries from homebuyers, tenants, landlords and home sellers have
been at record levels since lockdown was lifted from the property market in
mid-May.
There are a number of reasons
for this. Firstly we had the pent-up demand for Huddersfield property from the
Boris Bounce in January and February. Next, many Huddersfield people were
planning to move this spring yet were prevented doing so because of lockdown, and
finally, surprisingly, an advance wave of home movers seeking to bring their Huddersfield
moving plans forward because of a fear of a second Covid-19 wave later in the
year.
So, what does all that look
like and how does it compare to the last 12/18 months?
Data from Yomdel, the live
chat and telephone answering service for a quarter of UK estate and letting agents,
is able to track objective and more current information from across the UK on
what is really happening. Each week, they are dealing with thousands of enquiries
including:
·
Seller enquiries
(i.e. house sellers looking to put their property on the market)
·
Buyer enquiries (i.e.
people looking to view a property on the market with the intention of buying
it)
·
Landlords
enquiries (i.e. landlords looking for tenants for their rental property)
·
Tenant enquiries
(i.e. people looking to view a property on the market with the intention of
renting it)
They have created a rolling weekly
average of those enquiries for the whole of the UK for the 62 weeks before the
country went into lockdown. Then they compared that 62 week average with
specific time frames, namely the 10 weeks of the run up to the General
Election, the 8 weeks of Post Boris Bounce in January and February 2020, the
weeks of lockdown in March, April and early May and then finally, from mid-May,
the post lockdown.
You might ask why tracking estate
and letting agency enquiries is so important?
Enquiries in letting and estate
agencies are the beating heart of the property market – they are the ECG
machine of the estate and letting agency. Of course house price data has it’s
place and is lauded by the national press as the bellwether of the property
market, yet it takes 6 to 9 months for the effects of what is happening today
to show in those house price indexes, whilst these enquiries are what is
happening now.
Have a look at the data in
the graph and table, it can be seen in the 8 weeks up to the General Election,
every metric was down. Next, the post Boris Bounce saw house seller and house
buyer leads increase yet note how low tenant enquiries were (hardly any
change from the run up to the election), everything dipped during lockdown
as expected, yet look at all the metrics post lockdown … amazing! (e.g. if a
number in the graph/table below is say -25%, that means its 25% below the
rolling 62 week average, yet if it were +20%, then that would mean it would be
20% more than the rolling 62 week average)
|
General Election Run Up
|
Post Boris
Bounce |
Lockdown
|
Post Lockdown
|
Seller Enquiries
|
-27.0%
|
20.6%
|
-41.9%
|
94.3%
|
Buyer Enquiries
|
-19.9%
|
12.9%
|
-9.3%
|
163.7%
|
Landlord Enquiries
|
-10.9%
|
1.0%
|
-27.6%
|
78.5%
|
Tenant Enquiries
|
-34.9%
|
-27.2%
|
-23.1%
|
92.5%
|
The numbers speak for themselves!
So, what is happening in the Huddersfield
property market? Well, there is plenty of activity in the Huddersfield property
market, yet that doesn’t mean everything is back to normal. Enquiries
are an important metric, yet another way to judge the health of the property
market is to look at the number of property transactions (i.e. people moving).
Now the Land Registry data isn’t quite as exhilarating,
yet it is less volatile. Nationally, it shows that property transactions were
at their lowest level since its records began in April 2005. The seasonally
adjusted estimate of UK residential property transactions in April and May 2020
was 90,210, 53.4% lower than the 193,500 transactions of April and May 2019.
Again though, this was because of the restrictions on moving during Covid-19.
The stats for Huddersfield are still to be released yet rest assured I will
share them in due course.
Looking again at what is happening now, when I look at the
number of properties for sale…
255 Huddersfield properties have come onto the
property market in the last 14 days alone, and of those, 37 are already sold
subject to contract
So, what of the future of the post-lockdown Huddersfield
housing market? While a stern recession
seems almost guaranteed, a housing market crash is not. Many newspapers are
predicting property values to fall in 2020, then rise reticently from the ashes
in 2021. The fact is, nobody knows. The property market is driven a lot by
sentiment. Buying a home is not like buying stocks and shares – it’s a home to
live in … and those Huddersfield landlords who are looking for an investment
opportunity, often let their heart rule the head (again sentiment) when
investing in property.
Property always has, and always will
be a long-term investment. Many of you Huddersfield people reading this,
especially potential Huddersfield first time buyers, have been putting off
buying your first home because of Brexit, now its Covid-19, and in a few years,
it will be something else. There will always be ‘something else’… and you could
get to your 50’s and 60’s, still renting, waiting for the ‘next thing’ to pass
before you buy … and end up buying nothing.
Nobody knows what the months or years ahead
will bring ... yet what I do know is, people will always need a place to live.
Please let me know your thoughts in the comments. Tell us what your experiences
are as a Huddersfield landlord or homeowner, tenant or buyer so we can all
learn from each other.
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