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PRIVACY
Economic Development

º£½ÇÊÓÆµ housing market is 'house of cards', says property expert

Average annual house prices in Britain have risen again, new ONS data shows

Average prices continue to head higher

House prices in Britain hit a new high over the year to April but as the country's economy comes under increasing strain, could the property bubble be about to burst?

Graham Cox, founder of the Bristol-based broker, SelfEmployedMortgageHub.com, thinks so.

Mr Cox believes house prices are "long overdue a correction" and has warned there is a risk of the market collapsing later in 2022.

"The housing market is a house of cards which could soon collapse," he said.

Average house prices increased by 12.4% in the 12 months to April - up from 9.7% in March 2022 - new data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) shows.

The average º£½ÇÊÓÆµ house price was £281,000 in April - £31,000 higher than this time last year. In England, average house prices increased over the year to £299,000 (11.9%); in Wales to £212,000 (16.2%); in Scotland to £188,000 (16.2%); and in Northern Ireland to £165,000 (10.4%).

Mr Cox said the Government, Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and Bank of England are all "desperate" to prevent a collapse in the market, however.

"Almost at any cost it seems," he said. "Hence why the FCA have just announced the removal of the affordability stress test, why Rishi Sunak introduced the stamp duty holiday, and why the Bank of England seem petrified about raising the base rate too far."