Number of first-time buyers falling
Mar 10th, 2010 | By Les Sheppard | Category: Property NewsWelcome back! Have you made sure you never miss a new property? Subscribe to updates with your best email address in the sidebar to the right.You see everything new at least 48 hours before the crowd!
The proportion of first-time buyers expecting to enter the property market in the next 12 months has fallen for the third consecutive quarter to just 25.8%, shows the first Rightmove Consumer Confidence Survey of 2010.
In a typical, healthy market, those buying for the first-time would constitute around 40% of all buyers and so this emerging trend is some cause for concern says Rightmove.
Miles Shipside, commercial director at Rightmove, says first-time buyers play a crucial role in keeping the market moving by helping to complete chains and their continued absence delays any prospect of a meaningful market recovery.
He says: “Even more concerning is this comes as part of an emerging trend showing the percentage of projected first-time buyers has been decreasing over the last three quarters.”
The Q1 Consumer Confidence Survey asked first-time buyers for their opinions on all areas of the housing market. The proportion of those who believed that now was a good time to buy fell for the fourth consecutive quarter to 58%, though the fact that those expressing this view remains in the majority provides some encouragement.
This can perhaps be explained by the fact that a majority of potential first-time buyers are also expecting prices to increase over the next year, with 1 in 10 believing prices will go up by over 10%.
Shipside adds: “Deposits are the greatest hurdle for first-time buyers to get over. In the aftermath of the banking crisis, lenders have increased the deposits required but by doing so have severely restricted the number of first-time buyers. This in turn affects total sales volumes as first-time buyers are typically responsible for around two in five of all property transactions.”
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