Harga rumah di Inggris naik +3,2% dibulan February sesudah BOE rate 
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U.K. Rightmove House Prices Rise for First Time in Four Months 

By Jennifer Ryan and Brian Swint

Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) -- U.K. house prices rose in February for the 
first time in four months after two interest-rate cuts by the Bank of 
England encouraged sellers to demand more for their homes, Rightmove 
Plc said. 

The average asking price climbed 3.2 percent to 237,856 pounds 
($466,000) from January, compared with a 0.8 percent decline the 
previous month, Britain's most-used property Web site said today. In 
London, values increased by 0.9 percent. 

``With a couple of interest rate drops,'' homeowners seeking to sell 
``are probably thinking the outlook is more positive,'' Miles 
Shipside, commercial director at Rightmove, said in an interview with 
Bloomberg Television. ``They've got the whole year to pitch their 
asking price. It's not the return of a boom.'' 

Other reports have shown the property market slumped after the 
benchmark interest rate reached a six-year high in 2007 and credit 
costs rose. Bank of England Governor Mervyn King said last week that 
further price drops are ``possible'' as economic growth slows and 
banks curb loans to consumers. 

The average time a property spent on the market rose to 93 days from 
78 days a year earlier, Rightmove said. Average stocks per real-
estate agent increased to 64 from 54 in February 2007. 

Nine of the 10 regions in England and Wales tracked by Rightmove 
increased, led by the East Midlands, which climbed 5.8 percent in the 
month. Prices stagnated in the North of England. 

In London, gains were led by Hammersmith and Fulham, and by 
Wandsworth, led gains, with prices rising 3.5 percent in both 
districts. The capital's average asking price is 402,233 pounds. 

London's Laggard 

Kensington and Chelsea, London's most expensive area, was the worst 
performing district with a 4.2 percent drop. Prices fell by 67,539 
pounds to an average of 1.6 million pounds. The overall increase for 
the capital was the smallest for the month of February in five years, 
Rightmove said. 

The U.K. housing-market slump deepened in January to the worst since 
the British economy emerged from its last recession in 1992, the 
Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors said Feb. 13. Apart from 
Scotland, every region showed declines. HBOS Plc, the country's 
biggest mortgage lender, said Feb. 5 that home values stagnated in 
January. 

``There's certainly a slowing down of the market,'' Rightmove's 
Shipside said. ``We see a flat trend and we forecast that to continue 
in 2008.'' 

Bank of England policy makers cut the benchmark interest rate to 5.25 
percent this month after a quarter-point reduction in December, to 
cushion the economy from slower growth and contagion from the 
collapse of the U.S. subprime mortgage market. Fallout from that 
turmoil has already prompted U.K. banks to raise mortgage rates and 
offer fewer home loans. 

The central bank's economic forecasts, published Feb. 13, suggested 
the case for further interest-rate reductions is limited by the risk 
of faster inflation, which may match a decade-high later this year. 

To contact the reporters on this story: Jennifer Ryan in London at 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ; Brian Swint in London at 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] . 

Last Updated: February 17, 2008 19:01 EST 

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