HMRC has reported figures that show residential property transactions were up 16 per cent in May from April. The figures showed 48,450 residential property transactions took place during the April/May period.
Even though the figure is still half that of May 2019 it is still a positive sign that the housing market is in recovery. The data from HMRC includes the impact of the coronavirus pandemic on the housing market and did show that transactions completed in May were 50 per cent lower than they were a year ago. The figures for non-residential transactions showed a similar pattern. HMRC reported that had also also picked up 14 per cent month-on-month with 5,880 completed in May. However, this was still a 42 per cent decline on the same month last year.
However, property experts are looking at this data in a positive light and are confident that it signals a return of appetite to the market.
Anna Clare Harper, co-founder of property fund Anglo Residential, said: “What we can see from the HMRC data and from what we are hearing from investors, appetite is responding quickly. “We are seeing the signs of strong appetite to move forward with investments in the UK residential market in particular.”
Jeremy Leaf, former Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors residential chairman, said as the figures represented activity initiated months ago, it was “historically disappointing” but still reflected the resumption of deals in the market.
He added: “As always, it is property transactions rather than the more volatile prices which prove to be a better barometer of market strength and these are no exception. “Looking forward, listings are increasing which is encouraging and likely to bring more balance.”
Andrew Southern, chairman of property developer Southern Grove, said: “The vast majority of these transactions will represent sales put on hold by the coronavirus shut down so, at this point, HMRC’s figures are not an indicator of how buyers and sellers are flooding back to the market. “The HMRC figures to watch will come much later in the autumn when they will reflect the post-lockdown activity of May and June.”