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UK real estate sees surges in buyers after Bank of England cut interest rate from 16-year high: Report

Financial markets on Friday priced in at least one, and probably two, further quarter-point rate cuts this year

UK Real Estate Market Sees Pickup in Demand After BoE's Rate Cut
UK real estate market sees increased buyer demand following Bank of England's interest rate cuts. Image: Shutterstock

UK real estate agents have reportedly seen a pick-up in demand from buyers since the Bank of England’s (BoE) decision on August 1 to begin cutting interest rates from a 16-year high.

Rightmove, a property website which says it advertises the property for more than nine of every 10 estate agents in the UK, said on Monday that buyer enquiries in August were 19 percent higher than a year earlier, compared with an 11 percent annual increase in July.

“While mortgage rates aren’t yet substantially lower since the rate cut, the fact that the long-hoped-for first cut has finally arrived, and mortgage rates are heading downwards, is positive for home-mover sentiment,” a Reuters report, quoting Rightmove director Tim Bannister, said.

BoE Governor Andrew Bailey said after the rate cut that mortgage rates had fallen in anticipation of the move, and that the central bank would be careful not to cut rates too quickly.

Financial markets on Friday priced in at least one, and probably two, further quarter-point rate cuts this year.

The average interest rate on a five-year fixed-rate mortgage was now 4.80 percent, Rightmove said, down from 5.82 percent a year ago when the BoE had just raised rates to their peak of 5.25 percent.

The average asking price for newly advertised property on Rightmove between July 7 and August 10 was 1.5 percent lower than a month earlier at 367,785 pounds ($474,663), which Rightmove said was typical for August when there is usually a lull in activity.

Asking prices were 0.8 percent higher than a year earlier, compared with an annual rise of 0.4 percent the month before.

Official data based on sales completed in June has shown prices were 2.7 percent higher than a year earlier, the joint-biggest increase since March 2023.

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