U.K. house prices fell in May by the most since at least 1991 as the shortage of credit starved the property market of buyers, Nationwide Building Society said.
The price of an average home dropped 2.5 percent from April to 173,583 pounds ($344,000), Britain's fourth-biggest mortgage lender said today in a statement. That's the biggest drop since the index started in January 1991. From a year earlier, prices declined 4.4 percent.
Bank of England Governor Mervyn King predicted this month that property values are ``likely to fall further'' and said there is a risk that the U.K. economy may contract. Mortgage approvals dropped in April by 39 percent from a year earlier, the British Bankers' Association said this week.
``Tighter credit conditions in the market at present are making it more difficult for borrowers to obtain loans,'' said Nationwide Chief Economist Fionnuala Earley. ``More weak economic news added to the gathering momentum of negative sentiment about the housing market.''
Property values have now declined for seven months, the longest streak of drops since 1992, Nationwide said today.
Homebuyers are paying more for mortgages after the global credit squeeze prompted financial institutions to curb lending. U.K. banks increased the cost of home loans with a 5 percent down payment to the highest in more than eight years in April, failing to pass on the Bank of England's three interest-rate cuts since December.




