Over
the last six months, the Huddersfield Property Market has been flourishing. As
soon as an estate agents ‘For Sale’ flag went up, neighbours would be checking
out Rightmove to see the internal pictures and compare the asking price to
their own home (go on .. admit you do that too – every Huddersfield
homeowner does). Flabbergasted by optimistic asking price tags, those same Huddersfield
homeowners stand open-mouthed to see a sold slip added to the board a few weeks
later.
Property values in Huddersfield are 7.6
per cent higher than
a year ago.
The
newspapers are full of stories of this mini property market boom, which has
been fuelled by the Stamp Duty Tax cut, which ends on the 31st March
2021. Not only has it pushed up values in Huddersfield, but it has also
theoretically brought forward house moves from 2021 into 2020.
The
most up-to-date transaction figures (i.e. the number of people moving home)
endorse it too. In the UK, 137,200 property sales/transactions took place in
December, the highest number of sales/transactions in December since 2006 (when
it topped 149,200 transactions, only for it to fall to 32,700 transactions in
December 2008 at the height of the Credit Crunch).
The
exact figures from the Land Registry for Huddersfield won’t be available for
another six weeks or so, yet in December 2019, 292 properties changed hands in Huddersfield.
Looking at anecdotal evidence of for sale board changes, my database and the
portals, I believe we will end up around 394 to 409 Huddersfield property
sales/transactions for December 2020.
So,
how does all this compare to other years?
The number of UK transactions continued to be relatively
stable between November 2019 and March 2020. That decreased by around half in
April/May 2020 compared to April/May 2019, triggered by economic impacts
relating to the public health restrictions introduced. Since the first lockdown
was lifted in the late spring, sales/transactions have increased steadily
upwards each month, mirroring the relaxing public health restrictions for the
property market during the summer and autumn of 2020 and introducing Stamp Duty
Tax Holidays.
Before
we all get the Champagne corks flowing, what the December national figures (and
the corresponding provisional Huddersfield stats) don’t tell us, is that April
to December 2020 transactions ended the year 13.7 per cent down compared to
April to December 2019 transactions — the lowest since 2012. Don’t get me
wrong, 13.7 per cent is impressive given that we are in the middle of a
recession and even more remarkable considering there was a 48.7 per cent fall
in transactions in 2008 (compared to 2007) when the Credit Crunch hit.
The
biggest question though, is, how much of the urgency since the summer to buy property
can be credited to the …
·
existing pent-up demand that built up in
2018/9 and was starting to be released in the ‘Boris Bounce’ in
January/February 2020
·
new demand from home workers looking for
bigger properties
·
people moving out of the big city
centres
·
the Stamp Duty Tax cut
— or
a mixture of all four?
Nobody can categorically know whether
the UK property market would have ricocheted as quickly without the Stamp Duty
Tax cut.
Talking
to many buyers, sellers, agents and solicitors in the Huddersfield property
market over the last three or four months, the anecdotal evidence I have
collated from those people seems to imply that the outbreak of activity in the Huddersfield
property market has mainly been put down to the lifestyle factors (bigger house
with office space etc) and pent-up demand, meaning the Stamp Duty Tax Holiday
is seen as the icing on the cake for most people. Yet, there will be some
buyers, whose motivation has been purely to save money on the tax duty. Overall
though, in the vast majority of house purchases, this allows us to be
reasonably hopeful about what will happen once the Stamp Duty Tax Holiday is
withdrawn on the 31st March.
However,
some newspapers are preaching a story that the property market will collapse
without a Stamp Duty Tax Holiday extension. Nobody can argue that a phased
withdrawal from the Stamp Duty Tax Holiday would be better than some
homebuyer’s sales falling through, when the tax holiday finishes in late March.
Even if your motivation isn’t to save money on the tax holiday, it could be the
motivation of a buyer in your chain – meaning it becomes your issue. Nobody
knew in July, when the tax holiday was announced, that we would get another two
national lockdowns with the inevitable delays from remote working by
solicitors, mortgage providers and local authority search departments. My
advice to all people currently sold subject to contract is to ask the question,
“What if we don’t complete the sale by the end of March?”. Better to sort it
now than have a nasty surprise in the last week of March.
All
property taxation is long overdue for reform, from Stamp Duty to Council Tax.
When Margaret Thatcher tried to change local Rates to Poll Tax in the late 1980’s,
those who are old enough can remember the Poll Tax Riots, hence the nervousness
of any party since to make any changes. There is no way the Government will
abolish Stamp Duty when it raises between £11bn to £13bn a year, yet with all
the upheaval we have experienced in the last year, there could be an appetite
to change the way property is taxed.
The
Government has already spent £271bn on interventions due to the pandemic and
needs every penny so that it can start to repay those debts over the coming
decades.
I
have a feeling most Huddersfield property buyers and sellers would compromise
on the price they pay for their next home to cover the cost of the Stamp Duty Tax
after April, rather than lose the chance of owning the forever home they longed
for during the first lockdown.
Therefore,
don't be alarmed when we see property values ease slightly in Q3 2021 when the
price paid for property reflects the lower price to account for the Stamp Duty
that will need to be paid from the 1st April.
If
you are a Huddersfield homeowner or Huddersfield buy to let landlord and you
would like a chat about where you and your Huddersfield property stands in the
current Huddersfield property market, don’t hesitate to give me a call or drop
me a line.
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