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UK House Prices Inched Higher in June, Lloyds Data Shows

LONDON, July 7 (Reuters) - British house prices ticked higher in June, the first ​monthly increase since February, mortgage lender ‌Lloyds said on Tuesday, though it cautioned the outlook remained clouded by economic uncertainty.

Lloyds said its measure ​of British house prices rose by 0.2% in June, leaving ​them 0.6% higher than a year earlier.

The ⁠median forecast in a Reuters poll of ​economists had predicted a monthly house price rise ​of 0.1% and an annual rise of 0.8%.

The indicator was known as the Halifax House Price Index until ​this month.

House prices have been broadly flat ​since the start of this year, which Lloyds said ‌reflected ⁠wider economic uncertainty. Last week Bank of England data showed lenders approved the fewest mortgages since December 2023 in May.

"Looking ahead, we expect the ​housing market ​to continue ⁠moving at a measured pace," said Amanda Bryden, head of mortgages ​at Lloyds.

"The outlook for house prices will ​depend ⁠largely on inflation continuing to ease and household confidence gradually improving."

Financial markets point to a ⁠roughly ​3-in-4 chance of a quarter-point ​rise in Bank of England interest rates taking place this ​year.

Reporting by Andy Bruce, editing by Kate Holton

Source: Reuters


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