What is really happening in the Wellingborough Property
Market?
Well its been a few months since Brexit and
as we settle into the Autumn with Great British Bake Off, Strictly and the
Football season ... the newspapers are returning to their mixed messages of good
news, bad news and indifferent news about the Brit’s favourite subject after
the weather ... the property market.
The thing is the UK does not have one
housing market. Instead, it is a patchwork of mini property markets all performing
in a different way. At one end of scale is Kensington and Chelsea, which has
seen average prices drop in the last twelve months by 6.2% whilst in our East
Midlands region, house prices are 7.9% higher. But what about Wellingborough?
Property prices in Wellingborough
are 7.6% higher than a year ago
and
1.3% higher than last month.
So
what does this mean for Wellingborough landlords and homeowners? Not that much
unless you are buying or selling in reality. Most sellers are buyers anyway, so
if the one you are buying has gone up, yours has gone up. Everything is
relative and what I would say is, if you look hard enough, there are even in
this market, there are still some bargains to be had in Wellingborough.
However, the most important question you
should be asking though is not only is what happening to property prices, but exactly
which price band is selling? I like to keep an eye on the property market in Wellingborough
on a daily basis because it enables me to give the best advice and opinion on
what (or not) to buy in Wellingborough.
If you look at Wellingborough and split the
property market into four equalled sized price bands. Each price band would
have around 25% of the property in Wellingborough, from the lowest in value band
(the bottom 25%) all the way through to the highest 25% band (in terms of
value).
Fascinating don’t you think that it is the
lower to middle Wellingborough market that is doing the best?
The
next nine months’ activity will be crucial in understanding which way the
market will go this year after Brexit ... but, Brexit or no Brexit,
people will always need a roof over their head and that is why the property
market has ridden the storms of oil crisis’ in the 1970’s, the 1980’s
depression, Black Monday in the 1990’s, and latterly the credit crunch together
with the various house price crashes of 1973, 1987 and 2008.
And why? Because of Britain’s chronic lack
of housing will prop up house prices and prevent a post spike crash. ... there
is always a silver lining when it comes to the property market!
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