The stock squeeze

Published under Our blog — Dec 2021
The stock squeeze

Finding enough homes to view has been one of the biggest challenges facing buyers in 2021. This is no surprise since there are fewer properties for sale than at any time over the past decade. The lack of choice is causing some people to deter a move. But do low stock levels reduce the transactions and when will the stock squeeze start to reverse? Right now, everyone is eager to find out the direction of the market in 2022. Prices are at record highs almost everywhere. As a result, there is almost no negative equity and the number of people who sold a home for less than they paid for the property accounted for less than 5% of sales in 2021.

The surge in property values of 2020 and 2021 was caused by a Covid-induced reassessment of the home and the space and other facilities that it should offer.

Over the past decade, there have been peaks and troughs in the number of homes for sale.

Since interest rates are set to rise over the short to medium term, the cost of extra space for anyone buying or owning a home with a mortgage will increase. This means that households are less likely to hang onto properties too large for their needs, encouraging early downsizing among those close to paying off their mortgages. These homes will start to come onto the market this year and next.

Stock levels depend on people moving - from their first home or their fifth. Younger homeowners relocate much more often than older counterparts. The average one-bedroom flat is bought and sold three times during the period when the average detached five-bedroom house remains in the hands of one owner.

The reverberations from collapsing homeownership levels among the young since 2008 continue to be felt in the current market. The majority of younger people who are currently selling a home bought that property in 2015. Since that year, first-time buyer numbers have slowly improved as the English Housing Survey underlines.

In light of this, we are expecting stock and transactions to gradually move upwards, as younger homeowners who have outgrown their homes seek to upsize. Hybrid working, part in the office and part at home, will increase the demand for space among this group of buyers.

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In this century, there were typically about 1.2 million home sales a year. This total was exceeded only in the boom years of 2006, 2007 and 2021.

But we forecast a shift to a new normal of 1.3million, as a new generation of first-time sellers, about 75,000 larger than the previous cohort, take the next step up the housing ladder. Household rightsizing in response to higher interest rates will further boost transactions.

We forecast that the increase in stock levels will begin this year, with more homes on the market by December than there were 12 months ago. This change will come as a relief to househunters.

More about Hamptons

At Hamptons, we’re experts at putting the housing market into a real-life context; our Research team have access the richest property data in the UK, helping our agents stay one step ahead of the market to offer you advice you can trust. If you’re moving this year, register today to get started.

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