House prices fell 1.5% in February
House prices dropped by 1.5% in February, the first decline since June 2009, shows the latest Halifax House Price Index.

The fall follows seven consecutive monthly increases and has lowered the average house price to £166,587
On an annual basis house prices in February were still 4.5% higher.
This was the largest increase in the annual rate of change - measured by the average for the latest three months against the same period a year earlier - since January 2008.
The annual rate increased from 3.6% in January despite February’s monthly fall, partly because February’s decline was lower than the decline in February 2009.
Prices are 8.0% above the low reached in April 2009; an increase in the average price of £12,367 over this period. This follows a decline of 23% between August 2007 and April 2009.
Martin Ellis, housing economist at Halifax, says: “There has been a decline in the underlying rate of house price inflation - measured by a comparison of the latest three months with the previous quarter - over the last few months. An increase in the number of properties available for sale has helped to reduce slightly the imbalance between supply and demand.
“At the same time, the bad weather in the first two months of 2010, together with the return of the lowest Stamp Duty threshold to £125,000, are likely to have had an adverse impact on housing demand. The combination of these factors appears to have helped to curb the upward pressure on house prices.”













Readers' comments (1)
Anonymous | 5 Mar 2010 3:20 am
With mortgage rates still at historic lows and business picking up in the financial sector again, London house prices will continue to increase in sought-after areas, especially for properties sought by professional twin-income couples working in London. The same may not be true of single income blue-collar families in the north of England or elsewhere. There is so much variation in the demographics of the market that a catch-all statement such as 'prices drop by 1.5%' is practically meaningless.
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