House Prices
Land Registry
This survey, which comes out once every three months, is the most comprehensive
of the lot, and is widely considered to be the most authoritative. All property sales in England and Wales have to be logged with the Land
Registry. The proceeds of all the transactions are totted up, and then divided by the total number of sales to reach an average sale price.
However, repossessions and property transfers following a divorce are excluded to avoid skewing the sample. But because it takes virtually
all residential property sales into account, the Land Registry's figures can provide a unique insight into not only national but local
prices. In fact, the Registry can provide an accurate picture of prices down to postcode level. However, since the survey comes out only
once every three months, the figures are out of date by the time they are published. A similar survey is produced in Scotland, known as the
Register of Scotland.
Government price survey
The government has its own monthly house price index, issued by the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister (ODPM).. It uses lending
information from about fifty lenders, which is collected through the Survey of Mortgage Lenders. Unlike the Land Registry survey the new
government index does not contain information on cash purchases, which account for about a quarter of the market. And another drawback is
that it is not very timely. It will only appear two months in arrears. But the survey offers indexes for the whole UK, the major regions
and one for first-time buyers. Unlike the Nationwide and Halifax surveys which are weighted according to transactions, the new survey
depends much more on the total amount of money spent. Relying on expenditure in this way will mean that London and the South East, where
house prices are highest, will have a greater influence on the government's index.
Nationwide and Halifax
Perhaps the best known snapshots of the property market are provided by Britain's two biggest mortgage lenders, Nationwide and
Halifax. Both surveys cover the entire UK, rather than just England and Wales.Their figures are often very similar, as they are both based
on the price agreed after a survey by their mortgage customers. However, like the new government survey, they are based only on property
sales financed by mortgage lending, ignoring sales which are transacted on a cash basis.
Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS)
Put simply, this survey reflects confidence in the property market rather than what is actually happening to house prices. Three
hundred surveyors and estate agents in England & Wales are asked if they feel prices are falling or rising. Respondents are also
quizzed on a host of other related issues, such as whether the number of buyers and sellers are rising or falling. Generally speaking, the
RICS survey is the first to show any sea change in the market.
Hometrack and Rightmove
Both of these property websites also produce their own house price surveys. Hometrack was first in on the act in 1999, and has
established its survey as a very useful guide to current prices. Data is collected from 3,500 estate agent offices from all 2,200 postcode
districts in England and Wales. The estate agents report whether asking prices are rising or falling.
Rightmove's survey operates in a completely different way to the Hometrack survey, collating asking prices for houses placed on
its own website over the previous month. The sample size is quite extensive, as Rightmove claims to display around 35% of all homes for
sale. Over half the UK's largest estate agency chains choose to list their properties on its site. However, it obviously does not reflect
the prices at which properties actually sell.
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