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New Year resolution sellers are gearing up for 2022, says Rightmove

As an exceptionally busy 2021 draws to a close, Rightmove expects a closer to normal, though still busy, market in 2022. One sign of a return to traditional norms is the continuation of the seasonal fall in the price of property coming to market, down by 0.7% (-£2,234) on the month, compared to a 0.6% fall this time a year ago. 

The company stated: ‘While we forecast prices to rise by another 5% in 2022, some of the edge will be taken off sellers’ pricing power by increasingly stretched buyer affordability, and more buyer choice boosted by previously hesitant sellers now gearing up for a New Year move. This would be particularly timely, as fully available stock for sale has hit a new record low again this month. Promisingly, requests from homeowners to estate agents to have their home valued are 19% up on this time a year ago, indicating that much-needed buyer choice will be coming to market in the new year.’ 

Tim Bannister, Rightmove’s director of property data, comments: “The kind of frenzied market we’ve seen in the last 18 months happens only a few times in most home-owners’ buying and selling lifetimes, exacerbated by the even rarer event of a global pandemic pushing homes higher up most people’s priorities.  

“While the pandemic is still having an ever-changing impact on society as we head into the new year, we expect a housing market moving closer to normal during the course of 2022. A return to a less frenetic market due to more choice, and slightly higher interest rates, will suit many movers who have held back during the last 18 hectic months. With a jump in the number of owners requesting valuations from agents with a view to marketing their homes, it looks like many of this group are now gearing up to make it a new year resolution to move, so more buyer choice could now be on the cards. 

“A rise in interest rates is likely next year, and whilst a rise is often regarded as unhelpful to the market, a slowing of the fast pace of sales, and associated pace of price rises, will help the return to more normality that will suit many movers. Buyer demand and market momentum remain strong going into 2022, with November showing buyer numbers 41% up on the election-subdued 2019, and still 3% up on booming 2020.” 

Available stock of property for sale has hit the lowest level per estate agency branch ever recorded by Rightmove. Having been an average of 28 at this time a year ago, it has now halved to just 14. Owners who come to market in the next few months and are judged by prospective buyers to be asking an affordable price, will therefore find their chances of a successful sale very high. 

That will put those sellers looking to buy again in a very powerful position to secure their next purchase, where they could well be in competition with several other potential buyers. Being a ‘power buyer’, who has sold subject to contract or can buy without selling, has increasingly become a requirement this year, says Rightmove and it expects that to continue in 2022. 

Proving your access to funds, including a mortgage agreement in principle, is also becoming a must-have, not only to get higher up the buyer pecking order, but also to speed up the process. 

A remarkable sign of the frenetic market as 2021 draws to a close is that seven out of ten properties advertised on Rightmove are currently marked as sold subject to contract, a number that has never been higher. In contrast, this compares to just two out of ten in the post-credit-crunch recovery period in 2012. With two months of data yet to be reported, 2021 has already seen the highest level of completed home sales since 2007, and the company forecasts that the total for the year will reach 1.5m. The firm added: ‘The average for the more ‘normal’ years from 2014 to 2019 was circa 1.2m. This highlights ongoing, as well as satisfied demand, and underpins our prediction of a further 5% price rise in 2022 despite the heady rises already seen in the last 18 months.’ 

Bannister concluded: “Those who have been working out their finances as part of getting ‘sale-ready’ will obviously hope to achieve the highest possible price. However, despite high demand, buyers will have limits to what they can afford or are prepared to pay. In addition, with the availability of stock so low, any property that sticks around stands out like a sore thumb and goes stale pretty quickly.”

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