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Written by rosalind renshaw

Asking prices for properties new to the market have shot up to hit an all-time record high for March, boosted by buy-to-let investors “piling into the market”.

Rightmove said this morning that the average new asking price is £239,710 – 1.7% higher than last month and just beating the previous record in March 2008 of £239,655.

Asking prices are now 1.2% higher than this time last year, and compare with the lowest March asking price of £218,081 in 2009.

The figures, published two days before the Budget, may give Chancellor George Osborne some last-minute food for thought.

Miles Shipside, Rightmove director, said: “In today’s turbulent world where economic crises seem more likely to reappear than disappear, any market upturn will take longer to build home-mover confidence to the point that it starts to feed through to actual transactions.

“Even those who truly believe that the market has turned a corner may be unable to do anything about it due to lenders’ cautious risk profiling, a significant factor limiting the speed and strength of the recovery.

“However, with new sellers asking more than ever before as we enter the traditionally busy spring market, and an expectation among home-movers of price stability or growth, there is now a bedrock upon which confidence and momentum appear to be building.”

According to Rightmove, there has been a 12% month-on-month increase in new seller numbers, but unsold stock per estate agency branch is virtually unchanged at 65 properties, suggesting that more properties have either been sold or removed.

The site says this bodes well for transaction numbers this year – although volumes look to be boosted by buy-to-let activity. Rightmove also says that the average time on the market has fallen from 90 days last year to 80.

Shipside added: “Whilst it is too early in the year to make estimates about full year transaction volumes, agents are reporting more properties being sold subject to contract.

“However, these prospective buyers still have to complete the potentially treacherous journey through to successful completion. A sense of urgency has previously been sadly lacking, but there’s nothing like a few ‘Sold’ boards appearing on local streets to motivate buyers to make a decision about which they had previously been prevaricating.

“More limited inventory for sale by agents means less choice for buyers and is usually a forerunner of increased property prices.

“Some of the price gains made in the first half of the year often fall away in the second half, but this year it is possible that the air of optimism will result in those gains being retained.”

Shipside said that there are currently “blindingly” good returns on the right buy-to-let investment, and that investors are “piling” into the market as a result. Cheap borrowing means they can get immediate returns – and a much better deal than putting money into a bank.

London, as usual, tells a slightly different story. Although new asking prices have shot up in the capital to stand at £496,298, up 1.9% from last month and an astonishing 9% rise since this time a year ago – sellers are dwindling, down 12% on March 2012.

The shortage of supply means that average asking prices are now £41,338 higher than a year ago. In Kensington and Chelsea, the average new asking price is now just over £2.3m, and in Westminster is more than £1.5m.

Comments

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    Whats ment by turning a corner. I left agency years ago when I went into selling hotdogs and made more money.

    • 04 May 2013 07:00 AM
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    Jonnie

    Thanks for the 'welcome back' - but I never went away! Haven't been posting much, though - picking my moments, I guess...

    How's things in your neck of the woods? Be good to get some REAL views from those on the coalface who are actually selling property, instead of Mr Shipside's secondhand spin.

    I'm surprised that RR hasn't jumped on this one - his latest merde de taureau blog post is all about Rightmove. You should read it - it's a hoot! (but then isn't everything the man types?)

    No doubt he will surface... ;o)

    • 22 March 2013 21:16 PM
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    PeeBee

    good to hear from you, been a while

    Jonnie

    • 21 March 2013 21:33 PM
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    "had rates stayed around 5.75% the uk housing bubble would have burst spectacularly probably 50%"

    dave...dave...dave,

    You know what - I reckon you're a bl00dy genius at predicting what WOULD, COULD, or SHOULD have happened, IF circumstances were vastly different from reality.

    Such a pity, therefore, that NOTHING you suggest WILL happen ever does - because consistently getting it wrong in the real world is why people ridicule you.

    Still - being a genius in alternative realities is an achievement, I suppose...

    • 19 March 2013 22:14 PM
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    Great news for the industry, lets hope it continues.

    • 19 March 2013 20:34 PM
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    I don't think anyone could have been insightful enough to predict 0.5% base rates and £375 billion QE along with bank bailouts

    its been pure luck

    had rates stayed around 5.75% the uk housing bubble would have burst spectacularly probably 50%

    anyone who thinks there are no consequences to propping markets up is likely to be proved wrong

    • 19 March 2013 16:38 PM
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    For a bloke who ought to have a finger on the indusrty pulse how come you you are only just getting around to mentioning the things George Daws was trying to explain to the HPC crowd over two years ago.?

    The HPCers sniffed at the 5-6% average BTL yield, Japan Dave in particulaar Poo Pooed the notion that investors piling into the market two years ago was a fundamental reason why the crash wouldn't happen. Seems George Daws has either got a crystal ball or a inciteful understanding of the market.

    • 18 March 2013 14:57 PM
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    @GTM I agree its agents piling up the price merely to obtain business. I bet there will be a lot of reductions as the corporates don't give a rats about the price only the instruction.

    • 18 March 2013 12:54 PM
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    Asking prices up and sale values steady (outside the nation's city state). Another recipe for long drawn out marketing with its necessary costs which the agent has to pay, swopping around agents and eventual sale at less than would have been achieved if the house had been placed on the market at the correct price initially.

    • 18 March 2013 10:52 AM
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