Miller Homes is hitting back at the wave of recent negative
property market reports - arguing that recently published stats
fail to give consumers a full and fair view of the current
climate.
The warnings from Miller, the largest privately owned
housebuilder in the UK today, follow a recent report by the Royal
Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) predicting that house
prices are heading for another fall - because 44 per cent of its
members have registered a drop in selling prices over the last
three months.
National sales and marketing director, Sue Warwick, said: "This
was the last in a long list of so called expert comment that
suggested property prices were on the way down - again.
"It is vital that everyone stops and takes time to read beneath
the headlines. Scary topline statistics rarely give the full
picture and we shouldn't all write the market off on the back of a
few sick looking numbers.
"For a start, only 265 estate agents were surveyed for this
report - and of that number - more than half actually think that
the housing market is doing ok."
According to the report, 6 per cent of those surveyed also said
prices had risen and 50 per cent said they had been stable.
Sue added; "Talk about half empty reporting. I'm not sure what
else the housing market could be doing. Amidst talk of
Government austerity measures and the October spending review, the
housing market will hardly see any sort of boom, will it?
"One month it's a bit up, the next it's a bit down. It's
called stabilising - and it's what the housing market needs to do.
Yes, the market is tough - but there is still a market."
Other statistics reinforce the company's claims. For
example, the typical deposit that first time buyers need to put
down has shrunk quite significantly - from 24 per cent in July to
21 per cent in August and figures from the Council of Mortgage
Lenders (CML) show that the number of loans approved for house
purchases is up 3 per cent on the same time last year
Sue said; "So, there is good news out there. In short, if
you buy a house now - it won't be worth 10 per cent more than you
paid for it by Christmas, but who wants a return to those days?
"They key thing we all need to understand is this: medium term,
our homes will hold their value and longer term, will rise nicely
and at a very sensible level (supply and demand pretty much
guarantees that)."
According to Miller Homes, anyone in the market for a new home
has to do their homework as the property market varies from county
to county, town to town - even street to street.