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Wednesday, 4th November 2009 Change Date Latest Issue

House prices inch to 7-month high

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Published Date: 12 May 2009
HOUSE prices in the Capital are at their highest level for seven months, it was revealed today.
The average Edinburgh home sold for £201,497 during April, according to the latest figures from ESPC. The figure is up from £194,683 in March, and at its highest since September. It is, however, a drop of 10.9 per cent compared to April 2008.

Chief executive of ESPC Ron Smith was cautiously optimistic. He said: "It is probably too early to talk about 'green shoots' of recovery at this stage.

"Restrictions on lending criteria and low consumer confidence will continue to dampen demand somewhat in coming months, but there is no question that the figures we have seen so far this year represent better news for homeowners than may have been anticipated.

"The average house price in Edinburgh fell sharply in the summer of 2008, meaning that house prices today are lower than they were at this time last year. Since then we have seen much more stability in prices and since last December the average price of a home in Edinburgh has consistently been in the region of £190,000 to £200,000."

While prices may have stabilised, the market is still small, with just 331 properties sold in April, two more than the previous month, and a 60 per cent drop on April 2008.

Leslie Deans, senior partner at Leslie Deans & Co estate agents, said: "This is very much in line with what we're finding. It shows that the decline which undoubtedly had taken place is bottoming out – we're noticing that and have done so now for about the last six weeks.

"We're seeing an awful lot more inquiries, viewings are up considerably and on the back of that, sales have picked up as well.

"We're finding in particular that in the south side of Edinburgh very strong demand continues for students' flats.

"Good quality bungalows across the city are once again proving to be very popular."

During April 36.8 per cent of properties sold at fixed price achieved their asking price – the highest level since June 2008, and up from just 17.7 per cent in March. The premium paid for "offers over" properties went up from 4.1 per cent in March to 4.9 per cent in April.

Scott Brown, estate agency partner with Warners, said the firm was once more having to introduce closing dates on property sales, a practice that had fallen away over the past 18 months.

He said: "Nobody is saying that the Scottish market has returned to how it was before the slump. Sales are still down at every property firm and we have seen falling house prices across the board over the past 18 months.

"However, the return of closing dates is a welcome sign that things are taking a turn for the better. There is still a lot of interest from prospective buyers for properties in Edinburgh and we have noticed that, if a home is particularly popular, the sellers are now able to set a date for offers to be received."


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  • Last Updated: 12 May 2009 10:02 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Mortgage and property news
 
1

Tuco,

12/05/2009 12:20:47
Yes, very believable.
2

,

12/05/2009 12:21:01
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
3

Bob 2,

12/05/2009 12:22:45
Chief executive of ESPC Ron Smith was cautiously optimistic. He said: "It is probably too early to talk about 'green shoots' of recovery at this stage.


Its overpriced houses that caused this in the first place....plus a feature on the TV highlighted some of the other things that had caused some of the current financial problems

100/125% mortgages
borrowing 6 times people salaries


if prices go up - First Time buyers will be pushed out of the housing market again - here go again
4

antifa,

12/05/2009 12:27:12
I'm sure the figures are accurate. The issue is: whether a mean average price from such a small number of sales means a great deal.
5

Cod,

ESPC 12/05/2009 12:30:06
Aardvarks are terrible liars.
6

antifa,

12/05/2009 12:33:31
Bob 2 - the financial crisis was caused by global banks buying up trillions of dollars-worth of securities based on US housing assets. All that was required to turn these assets toxic was US interest rates going up by a couple of points, which - following East Asian inflation - they did. It had very little to do with anything going on here. However, the impact is likely to be greater than it would otherwise be because the UK is now such a heavily indebted society. It's useful to understand the distinction between the cause of the crisis and the cause of our high level of exposure to it.
7

,

12/05/2009 12:35:26
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
8

bertiblunt,

12/05/2009 12:42:18
the chick in the photo can move in with me if she likes
9

Tuco,

12/05/2009 12:44:19
#8 hibs fans are too ugly - she wouldn't go near you.
10

Victoria Ian,

12/05/2009 12:44:27
Average over a month means nothing- typical evening news.
11

,

12/05/2009 12:52:33
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
12

bertiblunt,

12/05/2009 12:52:39
#8 i bet she would rather boaby me than you
13

antifa,

12/05/2009 13:06:39
Jam jar production is a counter-cyclical industry and there's a lot of money to be made just now. She'll be fine.
14

Tuco,

12/05/2009 13:14:49
#10 Hello Serg. You getting adventurous?
15

Tuco,

12/05/2009 13:15:15
#12 I doubt it.
16

Fred Leeson,

edinburgh 12/05/2009 15:18:17
Either she has won the lottery or is dating Allan Macgregor. No way an 18yr old can afford a £200K mortgage.
17

sceptic,

livingston 12/05/2009 15:29:51
"viewings are up considerably and on the back of that, sales have picked up as well."
Marvellous the recession is over! The evidence?
"331 properties sold in April, two more than the previous month, and a 60 per cent drop on April 2008"
18

ZipptJeffrey,

Castle 12/05/2009 17:13:23
There are lies. There are damned lies. There are statisitcs. And then there is the senile ESPC.

Supposeedly the ESPC has been employing staff who speak like the Cookie Monster on the telephone.

Punter: Sorry but you property is too dear!!
ESPC : Would you like a Cookie!?
Punter: No take ten thousand off your asking price.
ESPC: But cookie is so tasty!
Punter: Not has tasty has ten thousand off the asking price!
ESPC : C is for Cookie!!
19

Bob 2,

12/05/2009 17:48:02
6 antifa, 12/05/2009 12:33:31

caused some of the current financial problems

read my comment....caused some of the current financial problems


yet if you watched the programme that detailed some of the reasons....it was the "far easts" wealth that started caused part of the world wide financial meltdown.

Now were do we get a lot of our goods from TVs etc, the far east.

so when the money came in from the far east, the money investors looked for ways to invest....what was left the American sub prime property market.... the rest is history....


Our exposure was down to one thing Greed and Money...... remember Gordon Brown....saying how wonderful the City of London was as a Financial centre....little knowing that bankers were playing the biggest money making pyramid in the world .........the rest is history....
20

Playground Monitor,

12/05/2009 17:54:54
And how many properties were actually sold last month? Only the Hootsmon would quote alleged stats without the sample size. Utterly worthless.
21

ccc,

12/05/2009 18:40:52
Edinburgh - The place where house prices have never and will never fall. Ever.

Scotland - The place that is immune from the current crisis.

Todays news ?

Staggeringly low sales figures + no sign of the usual Spring bounce + house prices down 11% year on year + A tiny rise in average price over the busiest time of the year = Good news.

How times have changed. :)
22

Proximo,

Still in Tracker heaven... 12/05/2009 19:23:20
There used to be a clown on here who kept quoting the situation in Japan or some such place. I never used to read it properly as it was cut and pasted from somewhere, and there was too much of it, but whatever it was he was saying would happen, has it happened yet?

I know it sounds ridiculous, but I'm sure he sometimes copied stuff about how Edinburgh should 'expect house price falls of up to 90%'? So far, not even close...
23

Geed,

12/05/2009 20:42:49
This is how it works in e-berg. Q2 spike followed by 3 quarters of flat growth or deflation. Been like this for years, so even in a crash prices may well rise but they won't rise by the same amount they have in previous years. Quite simply we may see one step forward this quarter followed by 3 very very large steps back! Those that think this is the bottom...fill your boots, silly people!
24

ccc,

12/05/2009 23:03:08
#22

I think you are talking about Friend of Fernando Poo.

He is far from a clown. He knows his stuff. Unlike the resident Edinburgh 'property experts'.

There have been other clowns on here though, Namely our friends the Landlord and Easy Money.

That one bed flat in Gorgie at 200k is not looking too good..............
25

Marcoloco,

13/05/2009 12:11:46
Morning folks.

Spring bounch... fair enough. Those still with money down sought are buying up their properties for their little ones before they return to university.

The market will flatten very quickly in Q3 & Q4 and is likely to stagnate for a further 2 years before we witness some positve growth again. Its a cycle. Give it time...

 

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