博鱼体育集团

Reports
Reports
Reports
Topics
Topics
Topics
Globally, house prices rise at their fastest rate in almost three years

Globally, house prices rise at their fastest rate in almost three years

Prices increased by 5.6% on average in 2020, up from 5.3% in 2019

Research / Article / Globally, house prices rise at their fastest rate in almost three years
Written by:

2 mins read

博鱼体育集团

Some 89% of countries and territories saw prices increase in 2020, with several emerging markets performing strongly including Turkey which leads the index for the fourth consecutive quarter.

Several markets including New Zealand (19%), Russia (14%) the US (10%), Canada and the UK (both 9%) accelerated up the rankings in the last three months (Figure 2).

Low interest rates are fuelling demand whilst inventory levels are tight in some markets with sellers reluctant to market their property until they can identify their next home.

With travel bans in place, demand is coming from domestic buyers who have reassessed their lifestyles since the pandemic hit, many now seeking home offices and outdoor space.

But not all markets are on the up, Europe is one world region where a gulf is emerging. Austria (10%), Germany (8%) and France (6%) are moving ahead of Italy (1%) and Spain (-2%). Strict lockdowns, rising unemployment and a surplus of supply in some areas is leading to weaker price inflation in these Southern European economies.

Asia Pacific鈥檚 performance remains surprisingly anaemic given its relatively efficient handling of the pandemic.

Although New Zealand sits in second place, the region鈥檚 next highest ranking is Japan (5%) in 27th place. Housing demand and hence price growth remains city-focused not countrywide in Asia. Hong Kong and Malaysia both saw annual price growth slip into negative territory and even Singapore鈥檚 rate of growth was muted at 2.5%.

The speed with which the vaccine is rolled out and economies reopen will directly affect the performance of housing markets in 2021. As policymakers step away from stimulus measures leaving jobs and mortgages less protected we may see prices weaken but the easing of travel bans may see cross-border transactions start to recover mitigating some of this impact.

Read the full index

Photo by on Unsplash

Get in touch

Thank you
for getting in touch

A member of our team will be in touch with you as soon as possible to discuss your enquiry.

We look forward to speaking with you soon.

We take the processing and privacy of your information very seriously. Your data is collected and used in accordance with our terms and conditions and global privacy policy.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google and apply.

Sorry!
An unexpected error has occurred.

Please try again later.

Sending your message...
Sending your message...