Q4 transactions

Q4 sees transactions soar to over 300,000

The conveyancing market across England and Wales registered a record 306,237 completed transactions between October and December last year, data from Search Acumen shows.

The final quarter of 2021 was the busiest on record for completed transactions logged with HM Land Registry, with over 100,000 transactions wrapped up in both November and December – another industry first.

Race to the end of the year sees transactions spike

The top 1,000 firms saw a 9% increase compared to the previous quarter, with 226,948 transactions registered in Q4 2021. This represents an increase of 56% when compared with the previous year. These firms performed particularly well in November and December, recording over 80,000 transactions in consecutive months for the first time since tracking began in April 2011.

Those firms outside the top 1,000 equally performed well and recorded new heights of activity. In Q4 2021, a combined 79,289 transactions were logged, compared to 70,670 in Q3 and up by 69% from 46,957 in Q4 2020.

The monthly breakdown of transaction volumes shows the race for completing on properties before the year came to an end. Transactions were slightly higher in November than December – 111,637 compared to 109,505 – which can be expected as people’s minds turned to the year-end break and Covid-19 reared its head again.

However, transaction levels in Q4 2021 remained elevated in context of the pandemic period and were still 35% higher than in Q4 2019 before the pandemic first emerged.

Graph 1: Number of monthly transactions since Q1 2020 (Search Acumen)

Activity reaches highest quarterly figure since records began

The average firm continued to operate at a frenetic rate to match buyer demand, undertaking 76 transactions on average for the quarter. This represents a 50% annual increase from the average of 50 transactions that were processed in Q4 2020 and is also the highest quarterly figure since records began. Furthermore, this figure has remained above 70 for the last three quarters, having never once exceeded 67 in the decade from Q2 2011 to Q1 2021 – indicating the sustained pressure that the conveyancing sector has experienced.

Graph 2: Average quarterly transactions since Q2 2011 (Search Acumen)

Conveyancing firms rise to the challenge

In terms of market participation, the tracker shows the number of active conveyancing firms in the market followed a similar trend in Q4 to earlier in the year – surpassing the 4,000 threshold for three consecutive quarters. This is the first time this trend has been sustained since 2018.

A total of 4,041 firms registered completed transactions between October and December, slightly up from 4,021 between July and September. Year-on-year comparisons show that 6% fewer conveyancing firms were active in Q4 2020 compared with the same period this year.

Prior to Q2 2021, the number of active firms per quarter had persistently lagged below 4,000 since Q3 2019, and fell as low as 2,411 during Q2 2020 at the height of the first Covid-19 lockdown when property market activity was heavily restricted.

Graph 3: Number of active conveyancing firms since Q1 2015 (Search Acumen)

Andy Sommerville, Director of Search Acumen, comments:

Our latest analysis highlights how the property market finished on a high in 2021, with a series of record-breaking milestones landing in the final quarter of the year. Conveyancers and real estate lawyers have had to work extremely hard right until the end of 2021 to manage a sprint finish after a marathon year. We expect 2022 to benefit from the learnings and efficiencies that were forged at the height of the pandemic, to enable savvy firms to enhance their service and keep up with extremely high levels of demand.

Consumers are increasingly demanding greater transparency and speed when it comes to property transactions, and there will need to be a concerted push to implement the necessary data and digital ways of working that can make this a reality. This will have the longer-term result of lightening the burden on already exhausted lawyers – enabling them to process administrative tasks more efficiently and get back to the more rewarding task of advising clients.

The early months of 2022 demonstrate signs of being slightly less frenetic than 2021. The key market dynamics include global political and economic uncertainty, rising interest rates, higher mortgage rates and a hit to real household incomes caused by inflation and rising living costs.”

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