Before I can predict what will happen over the next five years to Bingham house prices, firstly I need to look at what has happened over the last five years. One of the key drivers of the housing market and property values is unemployment (or lack of it), as that drives confidence and wage growth – key factors to whether people buy their first house, existing home owners move up the property ladder and even buy to let landlords have an appetite to continue purchasing buy to let property.
When the Conservatives came to power in May 2010, the total
number of people who were unemployed in town stood at 1,389 (or 2.8% of the
working age population in Bingham parliamentary constituency). Last month, this
had dropped to 704 people (or 1.4% of the working age population).
As the Bingham job market has improved with better job
prospects, salaries are rising too, growing at their highest level since 2009,
at 3.4% per year in the private sector (as recently reported by the ONS). That is why, even with the turbulence of the
last few years, property values in the Bingham area are 6.66% higher today than
they were five years ago.
Many home occupiers have held back moving house over the
past seven to eight years following the Credit Crunch, but with the outlook more
optimistic, I expect at least some to seize the opportunity to move home,
releasing pent up demand and putting more stock onto the market. With a
more stable economy in the town, this will, I believe, drive a slow but clearly
defined five year wave of activity in home sales and continued house price
growth in Bingham.
I forecast that the value of the average home in Bingham will increase by 18.2% by 2021.
I forecast that the value of the average home in Bingham will increase by 18.2% by 2021.
18.2% might sound optimistic to some, but according to Land
Registry, values are currently rising in Bingham at 4.3% year on year, I
believe my forecast to be fair, reasonable and a reflection of both positive
(and negative) aspects of the local property market and wider UK economy as
whole.
It wouldn't be correct not to mention those
potential negative issues as I do have some slight concerns about the future of
Bingham housing market. The number of
properties for sale in Bingham is lower than it was five years ago, restricting
choice for buyers (yet the other side of the coin is that that keeps prices
higher). Interest rates were being predicted to rise around Easter 2016, but now
I think it will be nearer Christmas 2016 and finally the new buy to let taxation
rules which are being introduced between 2017 and 2021 (although choosing the
right sort of property / portfolio mix in Bingham will, I believe, mitigate
those issues with the next taxation rules).
I am telling the landlords I speak to, that with interest
rates at their current level 0.5%, the cash in your Building Society Passbook
is going to grow so slowly that it might as well be kept under their bed.
Property prices, by contrast, have rocketed over the years, even after the
property crashes, far outstripping bank accounts and inflation.
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