QUOTE(Giraffe Cat @ Dec 30 2004, 10:03 AM)
I can't find a way to get it to display
all data. But I have found that only 1 letter is needed in the postcode field. So all data can be obtained by just 26 searches (well, less, I dont think that "x" is a postcode)
Heres some data, a bit comical in parts, a good read though
LONDON (AFX) - UK house prices fell in December, confirming that higher interest
rates are causing the housing market to cool, according to Nationwide, the UK's
largest building society.
December house prices fell 0.2 pct from November and were up just 12.7 pct from
a year earlier, the lowest annual inflation rate for almost three years.
The average price stood at 152,623 stg, it said.
In November, prices were up a revised 0.9 pct from October and rose 15.0 pct
year-on-year, while the average house cost 153,439 stg.
In London, prices rose just 1.0 pct over the second half of 2004.
"The evidence is consistent with house prices 'treading water' in most regions",
Nationwide said.
A sharp downturn in prices "cannot be completely ruled out", but whilst the
economic outlook remains positive it "looks unlikely", it said.
Nationwide expects house prices to end 2005 up between 0 and 5 pct, probably
towards the bottom end of this range at around 2 pct.
"Developments over the course of 2004 were much as we had been expecting with
some regions, including the North and Wales, experiencing a rapid deceleration
in price growth over the latter part of the year," said Alex Bannister,
Nationwide's Group Economist.
Although monthly house price inflation is now much weaker than earlier in the
year, the trend in prices remains moderately upwards, he said.(yeah right)
Over the 12 months to October 2004, activity slowed most sharply in Yorkshire &
Humberside, the East Midlands and the North, while London and Scotland saw the
smallest year-on-year drop in activity, the building society said.
jkm/jc