Buyer enquiry upturn boosts surveyor confidence

Published on

Surveyors’ optimism has increased following signs that activity in the housing market is picking up.

RICS’ latest UK housing market survey shows that price expectations rose for the first time since May 2007, supported by low levels of stocks on surveyors’ books and increasing buyer enquiries.

The net balance of surveyors expecting price increases rose for the first time since May 2007. 6% more chartered surveyors expect house prices to rise over the next three months compared to a negative reading of 11% in May. The rise in optimism has been driven by the continuing up-turn in buyer enquiries and falling levels of fresh supply.

The number of chartered surveyors reporting an increase in new enquiries rose again in June, with a net balance of 67% reporting a rise rather than a fall, the eighth consecutive monthly gain and the highest figure since the series began in April 1999. The level of stocks on surveyors’ books continued to provide some support for property prices while new instructions remain marginally in negative territory. In fact the amount of properties on surveyors’ books has declined by around one third over the past year. Consequently, the net balance of surveyors reporting a fall in house prices rose from a negative balance of 43.8 to 18.1%, the highest reading since September 2007.

The survey also contains more definitive signs that the rebound in enquiries is now feeding thorough into increased transactions. Sales rose again but from very depressed levels. The average numbers of properties sold over the past three months rose to 12.7, up from 11.7. Newly agreed sales, measured on a net balance basis, increased sharply, reaching the highest level since August 1999.

RICS spokesperson Jeremy Leaf said: &quotAlthough the market is showing signs of improvement, it is unlikely that there will be a sustained upturn while mortgage lenders remain risk adverse. A lack of stock on the market is providing a platform for modest price increases. While supply remains tight, the market may continue to show tentative signs of firming but instructions are starting to increase in some regions and this could dampen any meaningful recovery as long as economic conditions remain quite so uncertain.&quot

COMMENT ON MORTGAGE SOUP

We want to hear from you!
Leave a comment and get the conversation started.
You need to register to post, so please login or sign up below.

Latest articles

Equity Release Council hires Tracy Gorbutt-Powell for risk and policy role

The Equity Release Council has appointed Tracy Gorbutt-Powell as head of risk, policy and...

Together appoints Legal and General Surveying Services as valuation partner

Specialist lender Together has appointed Legal and General Surveying Services as a key valuation...

1.3 million households facing mortgage cost shock

Around 1.3 million additional UK households are now exposed to higher mortgage costs following...

The Vernon hires internal BDM to expand intermediary reach

Vernon Building Society has appointed Damien Sabbaghe as intermediary business development manager as it...

Coventry trims first-time buyer and limited company buy-to-let rates

Coventry for intermediaries has cut selected mortgage rates for first-time buyers and limited company...

Latest publication

Other news

Rental barometer shows strength, but March changes the tone

Looking at our recently published Q1 2026 Rental Barometer data in isolation, there is...

Equity Release Council hires Tracy Gorbutt-Powell for risk and policy role

The Equity Release Council has appointed Tracy Gorbutt-Powell as head of risk, policy and...

Together appoints Legal and General Surveying Services as valuation partner

Specialist lender Together has appointed Legal and General Surveying Services as a key valuation...