The number of property transactions fuelled by the mortgage sector has fallen by 42% so far this year, with the UK’s more expensive regions bearing the brunt as higher interest rates dent the purchasing power of British homebuyers.
This is according to analysis by specialist property lender Octane Capital which shows that, so far this year, 87,686 property sales have completed across the UK. This marks a 42% drop versus the backend of 2022, equating to 62,270 less homes sold.
The nation’s least affordable regions of the property market have been hit hardest by this decline in mortgage market activity.
In both the South East and London, the level of mortgage sales has fallen by 46% in 2023 versus the final three months of 2022.
The East of England has seen a decline of 45%, while the South West and East Midlands are down -43%.
In fact, every region of the UK has seen mortgage market activity dip by 40% or more since the start of the year, except one.
Scotland has seen the smallest dip in mortgage sales this year, although the region has still seen a reduction of 29%.
Octane Capital chief executive Jonathan Samuels comments: “We’ve seen a heightened level of mortgage market turmoil develop over the last year, as interest rates have climbed consistently since the first increase was implemented in December 2021”.
He points out that this has spilled over into 2023, with interest rates continuing to climb as the Bank of England has struggled to get a grip on inflation.
“As a result, the level of market activity coming via the mortgage sector has reduced quite significantly and while this retraction is strongest across the more inflated regions of the market, every region has endured a notable hit”.
He concludes: “The good news is that inflation is starting to fall and we’ve also seen swap rates start to come down in recent weeks. This suggests that while there is still some way to go, the worst may now be behind us and there’s hope that mortgage rates may start to reduce over the coming months.”
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