Biggest Rise In UK House Prices Since 2006

The Bank of England kept the benchmark interest rate at 0.5 percent this month and extended its asset-purchase program to help pull Britain out of its worst recession in a generation.

U.K. house prices rose at their fastest pace in more than 2 1/2 years in August as low interest rates spurred demand and a lack of properties for sale underpinned values.

The increase in house prices this month was the fourth in succession, leaving them over 3 percent higher than at the end of 2008, according to a UK Building Society. In the three months through August, they rose by an average of 3.3 percent from the previous period, the most since February 2007.

Britain’s six biggest banks approved more home loans in July, a sample from the Bank of England’s lending panel showed on Aug. 20. U.K. mortgage approvals rose in July to the highest level since February 2008.

The average cost of a home climbed 1.6 percent, the most since December 2006, to 160,224 pounds. Economists predicted an increase of 0.5 percent, according to the median of 17 forecasts in a survey. From a year earlier, prices fell 2.7 percent.

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