With only around 1 in 4 Huddersfield house sellers actually selling their home in the last month, Huddersfield sellers and buyers will need to continue to be pragmatic if the surprisingly strong current levels of activity in the Huddersfield property market are to be sustained.
To start, we had the once in a lifetime event of the credit crunch
in 2008, we then had another once in a lifetime event with the Brexit vote in
2016 and now the mother of all ‘once in a lifetime’ events, Coronavirus in 2020
– three once in a lifetime events in the space of 3 Olympic Games!
The doom-mongers forecast that the British property market would
drop like a lead balloon on the scale of
the 1989 housing crash (where property values dropped by 30.87% in a couple of
years) but would be nothing compared to the tsunami that was Covid. Yet in the
first 100 days of the property market coming out of lockdown, behavioural and
economic changes mean that many Huddersfield homebuyers are now even more
dedicated to moving home and the Huddersfield property market is doing quite
well.
Going into
lockdown, the effect on activity in the Huddersfield property market during
those two months was expectable and predictable as it was placed in suspended
animation during April and May. When the Huddersfield property market re-opened
in mid-May, nobody predicted what happened next. Of course, many of us in the
property industry estimated some release of pent-up demand from the Boris
Bounce, yet nobody anticipated such a ricochet in activity in the Huddersfield
property market.
This is
particularly interesting when one considers GDP dropped by 20.4% in Q2 2020
(fascinating when compared to notable historic times when it dropped by 13.8%
in WW2 and 16.7% in WW1), yet amidst the largest contraction in the UK economy ever
in a single quarter, what wasn’t expected was an increase of potential property
buyers and sellers wanting to move post-lockdown.
Some have
cited this boost to the property market on a number of factors. Firstly, we
have had the Stamp Duty Holiday, others have pointed at the never seen before
0.1% Bank of England base rates making mortgages cheap, then we had the
furlough scheme which protected so many jobs and finally, the pent-up demand
from the Boris Bounce.
Yet, when
one actually talks with Huddersfield buyers and sellers, whilst all of them
cite one or two of the above reasons, all of them mention and talk about how
the lockdown has made them re-evaluate and reconsider how they want to live,
their work-life balance and where they want to live. This is also reflected
with tenants changing their requirements when looking for a property to rent (so
Huddersfield landlords – be aware of this).
Demand for
apartments in the centre of Huddersfield has eased off, whilst demand for
property with a good-sized garden or other outside space has increased. One
question we get asked all the time is also the broadband speeds, although they
are quite decent in Huddersfield (the average broadband in our local Council
area being 42.4 Mbps download and 9.3 Mbps upload).
So, with
record numbers of Huddersfield properties coming on to the market – is it boom
time for Huddersfield homeowners?
Of the 566 properties that have come
onto the market in Huddersfield over the last month, only 137 of them have
agreed a sale (a percentage of 24.2%)
That means
around 3 in 4 Huddersfield people that have placed their property onto the
market have not found a buyer yet.
Yes, the Huddersfield
property market is good, yet the number of people who have placed their
property on the market has also gone up. Huddersfield estate agents have never
been so busy putting property on the market and I feel sorry for the chap who
is putting up all the for-sale boards – his wife hasn’t seen him in daylight
for weeks!
But that
does mean you are in competition with so many other properties on the market (the
number of properties coming on to the market typically at this time of the year
is about a third to half less). The Stamp Duty boost ends in March 2021, so
that means you need to have found a buyer by November at the very latest. By
overegging your asking price, to test the market, might mean you will lose out
on this hiatus and could end up missing the boat!
The prices being achieved for the Huddersfield
properties that have been selling have been fair and realistic and have stood
up much better than many were originally predicting.
Yet as the
country looks forward, given the ambiguous nature of the outlook for the
British economy and the possibility that Covid-19 may be with us for a little
while yet, I must implore Huddersfield property sellers to be realistic with
their asking price so a greater number of you who want to make the move, are
able to do so.
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