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PRIVACY
Economic Development

House prices could fall in no-deal Brexit, KPMG report finds

"The housing market has been stuck in the slow lane since 2016"

Houses in Bath(Image: Bath Chronicle)

House prices across the South West of England could drop if there is a no-deal Brexit , new research suggests.

Properties in the region could fall in price by as much as 5.9 per cent to an average of £240,000 if the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ crashes out of the European Union without an agreement, according to the KPMG report.

Nationally, house prices could fall by considerably more - as much as 20 per cent - under no deal.

However, if prime minister Boris Johnson manages to secure a deal with Brussels then little change is likely to be seen next year, the analysis found.

If the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ leaves with an agreement house price growth in the West of England is expected to be around 0.5 per cent in 2019, increasing to 0.9 per cent in 2020.

House prices could be affected by a no-deal Brexit(Image: PA)

 

Andrew Hodgson, senior partner for KPMG in Bristol, said: “While a no-deal could dent property values in the short-term, it doesn’t detract from the fundamental factor driving the market – the lack of housing supply in the South West.

“Sales volumes are predicted to fall much more than prices - making government housing delivery targets impossible to achieve and slowing new building across the sector.

“Also, the level of leverage in the housebuilding sector is much lower - meaning that volume housebuilders will be under less pressure to materially reduce prices, which helped to create the downward spiral of prices in the global financial crisis.”