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UK house price growth hits five-year high in April: Halifax

Published 10/05/2021, 08:43
Updated 10/05/2021, 09:10
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Houses are seen painted in various colours in a residential street in London, Britain, May 15, 2019. REUTERS/Toby Melville

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Houses are seen painted in various colours in a residential street in London, Britain, May 15, 2019. REUTERS/Toby Melville

LONDON (Reuters) -British house prices increased last month at the fastest annual rate for five years, helped by finance minister Rishi Sunak's extension of tax cut for buyers, mortgage lender Halifax said on Monday.

House prices rose by 8.2% in annual terms in April, Halifax said, the biggest gain since April 2016 and following a 6.5% increase in March.

In April alone, house prices rose by 1.4% - the biggest monthly jump in seven months.

Britain's housing market has boomed since the lifting of a first coronavirus lockdown in the spring of 2020 and was given further impetus by Sunak's announcement on March 3 that he was extending the cut in stamp duty land tax for buyers.

The first 500,000 pounds ($703,200) of any property purchase in England or Northern Ireland will remain exempt from stamp duty until the end of June, and there will be a 250,000 pound tax-free allowance until the end of September.

Sunak also announced a new government mortgage guarantee scheme to ease deposit constraints for prospective home-buyers.

Last week the Bank of England reported a record increase in the value of mortgage lending during March, while mortgage lender Nationwide said house prices jumped by 2.1% in April, their biggest monthly rise in more than 17 years.

"We do expect recent levels of activity to be sustained over the short-term as buyers continue to search for homes with more space and potentially better suited for their new working patterns," Halifax managing director Russell Galley said.

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Houses are seen painted in various colours in a residential street in London, Britain, May 15, 2019. REUTERS/Toby Melville

However, he stuck to his view that house price growth was likely to fade later this year because of the potential for higher unemployment once Britain's job-protecting furlough programme ends.

($1 = 0.7110 pounds)

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