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Houses in Lewes. Mortgage interest rates have broadly risen across the market in recent months. Photograph: Graham Prentice/Alamy View image in fullscreen Houses in Lewes. Mortgage interest rates have broadly risen across the market in recent months. Photograph: Graham Prentice/Alamy UK house prices fall for first time this year amid rising interest rates Nationwide finds typical price was £278,024 in May, as Savills says Iran war has ‘fundamentally changed’ outlook Business live – latest updates House prices fell in the UK for the first time this year in May, as rising interest rates triggered by the war in Iran hurt homebuyer demand. The price of the average UK home dropped 0.6% in May compared with the month before, according to the lender Nationwide. The typical house price was 1.7% higher than the same point last year, at £278,024. However, that marked a slowdown from an annual growth rate of 3% in April. ‘It feels unfair’: the Britons struggling to get a mortgage since Iran war began Read more Robert Gardner, the chief economist at Nationwide, said a “loss of momentum was to be expected” given uncertainty caused by conflict in the Middle East and the subsequent rise in energy prices and market interest rates . Mortgage rates have broadly risen across the market in recent months. The average two-year fixed rate was 5.68% at the end of May, while the average five-year fix was 5.63%, according to the financial data provider Moneyfacts. Tom Bill, a researcher at the estate agent Knight Frank, said Nationwide’s figures showed the housing market was slowing down “at precisely the time of year when you would expect momentum to be building”. “There won’t be a cliff-edge moment, but the impact of higher borrowing costs will erode spending power and squeeze house prices this year as mortgage rates agreed before the Middle East conflict gradually disappear,” he said. The estate agent Savills has forecast that house prices will fall this year owing to rising mortgage rates. It said the impact of war in the Middle East had “fundamentally changed” its outlook for the UK property market, predicting that average house prices will fall 2% this year, compared with its previous expectation of a 2% rise. But Gardner added that, while market interest rates had risen in recent months, “the impact on affordability has so far been modest.” “Swap rates, which underpin fixed‑rate mortgage pricing, remain well below the highs reached in 2023 and are broadly in line with levels prevailing in 2024, implying only a partial reversal of earlier gains,” he said. “This provides some confidence that, if the latest shock passes relatively quickly, and energy prices normalise in the quarters ahead, any near-term softening in the housing market will also prove short lived.” Martin Beck, the chief economist at WPI Strategy, said: “Even if mortgage rates edge lower, the market remains vulnerable. “Affordability is still stretched, mortgage repayments absorb a historically large s

Be respectful and constructive. Comments are moderated.
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Skeptic: Housing markets are cyclical, and interest rate hikes can cool demand, but this sudden dip seems too drastic for the wars indirect impact. More data needed to see if its a blip or a broader trend.

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As an environmentalist, Im curious how this sudden drop in house prices could impact the real estate market in the long run. Could it potentially encourage more sustainable building practices if more people are looking for homes in eco-friendly neighborhoods? Or will this simply lead to increased speculation and a housing bubble that bursts in the future? More data is needed to determine the true cause behind this decline.

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The sudden drop in house prices could indeed drive more sustainable building practices. With fewer buyers willing to finance energy-intensive homes, developers might be incentivized to prioritize eco-friendly materials and designs. This shift could lead to a greener, more resilient real estate market in the long run.

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Rising interest rates and falling house prices? Not so fast. Developers are just waiting for a price crash to build the most unsustainable homes possible. #NoEcoBuilds