10th May 2008  
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The Knight Frank Global House Price Index for Q2 2006 shows results for property in 30 countries on a standardised basis every quarter.

Headlines:

  • Risk of global house price crash falls away.
  • Average global house prices stood 8.5% higher at the end of June 2006 compared to the same period 12 months earlier.
  • Global house price growth has continued to slow from the recent peak reached in 2004, average annual prices were growing by 12.3% in June 2005, overall 18 out of the 30 countries covered saw price growth slow over the last 12 months.
  • The annualised growth table is led by phenomenal growth in Latvia (45.3%), Bulgaria (20.5%) and Denmark (15.4%).
  • The slowest annualised price growth is experienced in Serbia (-5.1%), Japan (-2.7%) and Hong Kong (-2.4%).
  • The sharpest reversal of fortune was experienced in Hong Kong moving from 22.5% growth in mid 2005 to -2.4% falls in mid 2006.

 

Annualised House Price Growth and Country Rankings

Postion Country Annual % change at 2005 Q2 Annual % change at 2006 Q2 Rank as at 2005 Q2 Rank as at 2006 Q2 Position change 2005 Q2 to 2006 Q2 Position change from 2006 Q1 to Q2
1 Latvia (Riga) 73.50% 45.30% 1 1 0 10
2 Bulgaria 43.80% 20.50% 2 2 0 2
3 Denmark 15.30% 15.40% 9 3 6 -1
4 Belgium 18.90% 14.90% 7 4 3 13
5 South Africa 25.20% 14.30% 3 5 -2 0
6 Estonia (Tallinn) 19.90% 12.90% 6 6 0 -5
7 Sweden 7.70% 12.80% 19 7 12 3
8 Canada 9.50% 11.80% 16 8 8 8
9 Greece 10.40% 11.80% 14 9 5 4
10 New Zealand 13.40% 10.60% 12 10 2 -7
11 US 14.10% 9.40% 10 11 -1 -3
12 France 15.30% 9.40% 8 12 -4 -3
13 Ireland 10.10% 9.40% 15 13 2 -6
14 Spain 14.00% 8.50% 11 14 -3 -8
15 Lithuania (Vilnius) 21.70% 7.00% 5 15 -10 -3
16 Finland 4.80% 6.70% 21 16 5 2
17 Norway 9.10% 6.40% 17 17 0 N/A
18 China 8.00% 5.80% 18 18 0 1
19 Singapore 2.40% 5.70% 24 19 5 2
20 Italy 11.20% 5.20% 13 20 -7 -6
21 Hungary 1.30% 4.90% 26 21 5 N/A
22 UK 6.10% 4.80% 20 22 -2 -7
23 Australia 1.90% 3.70% 25 23 2 -1
24 Switzerland 0.80% 3.40% 27 24 3 -1
25 Austria 3.90% 3.20% 23 25 -2 0
26 Netherlands 4.40% 2.00% 22 26 -4 -6
27 Germany 0.20% 0.50% 28 27 1 -1
28 Hong Kong 22.50% -2.40% 4 28 -24 0
29 Japan -4.80% -2.70% 29 29 0 -2
30 Serbia (Belgrade) -14.80% -5.10% 30 30 0 -1

 

Liam Bailey, Head of Knight Frank Residential Research, comments: "The most notable trend is that house price growth is continuing to slow across the globe. Many commentators have been concerned that the boom in prices which has been seen in many countries would end in tears.


When price growth began to slow in Australia and the UK, in 2003 and 2004 the belief was that this was the beginning of a house price slowdown which would influence consumer confidence, spending and economic growth.


Close attention has been paid to the US market and to other European markets such as France and Ireland where price growth continued to expand last year. However in all of these markets price growth has begun to slow with annualised inflation lower in each compared to the same period last year. A stable slowdown appears to have taken place in the UK and Australia with both countries sitting well down the price growth league table.


New data for Latvia reveals huge growth in prices over the past two years, with prices for apartments in Riga and the surrounding area over 45% higher in a year. Why has this market performed so well? A levelling up situation is affecting all markets in the former Eastern Bloc – especially those which have joined the EU in recent years. Wage inflation, growing prosperity and access to less constrained mortgage finance have all contributed to rapidly rising prices.


The same process has been seen in Bulgaria – with a classic combination of catch-up, speculation, second home interest and slow but sustained economic growth underpinning prices.


Higher prices in most parts of the globe are a result of lower finance costs and increased wealth following strong economic growth in recent years. Slower house price growth globally suggests that affordability constraints have been hit in more locations.


Our forecast is that we will see continued slowing of average global house price growth over the rest of 2006 and into 2007. However this wider trend will mask regional hot-spots and investment opportunities. Our favoured locations are:

  • Germany – Europe’s largest economy, and the world’s largest exporter is still underperforming and we believe will see sustained growth from 2007.
  • Slovenia and Slovakia – the two countries with the best potential for further growth in Eastern Europe (not yet in our index but joining from next quarter with new data sets available).
  • Cyprus – has potential for growth over the medium term – once the VAT changes are implemented and settle down.
  • Russia – effectively Moscow, has the potential for more growth and will rival eventually rival London as the most expensive world city within five years."


Notes on Data:

Results for 30 countries based on an assessment of price changes in the mainstream housing markets of the countries covered.


Moving outside of the UK, US and northern Europe in most parts of the world there is a serious lack of data to enable the assessment of market movements in many countries; even tracking basic data on house prices on a like for basis within the European Union can be very problematic.


Where possible the Knight Frank index relies on an official national statistical source or a well respected national financial institution, usually a large mortgage provider (as in the case of the UK where we adopt figures provided by the Nationwide Building Society). In some cases these sources of data are not available and we have had to rely on valuation assessments of market movements – effectively assessing the value of a basket of properties from quarter to quarter. In certain cases we have had to relate our findings to capital cities as a proxy for the wider national market – this is the case for example for the three Baltic states; Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia.

Source: Knight Frank Residential Research