As the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee gathers later today, much of the property industry will be watching closely, not necessarily for what happens, but for what might not.
Only a few weeks ago, a modest cut to interest rates felt all but inevitable. Now, with inflationary pressures creeping back into the conversation, that expectation has quietly slipped off the table.
For agents who had begun the year with a sense of cautious optimism, the shift is difficult to ignore.
After a difficult couple of years dominated by inflation, affordability pressures and volatile mortgage pricing, the opening months of 2026 had begun to hint at something the housing market had been waiting for: momentum. Mortgage pricing had eased slightly, buyer registrations were edging upwards and, across much of the country, agents were reporting a noticeable uptick in enquiries after a long, economic winter.
But in recent days, global financial markets have shifted again as the escalating conflict in the Middle East has pushed energy prices higher and revived fears that inflation may prove more stubborn than expected.
Those concerns fed quickly into swap rates and mortgage pricing, and lenders have responded in the way lenders always do when markets become unsettled: repricing products, adjusting offers and, in some cases, quietly withdrawing deals from the shelves.
A new affordability landscape
For buyers, the result is familiar. When borrowing costs appear uncertain, hesitation quickly follows. Buyers pause to see whether mortgage rates might fall or rise again.
The market slows as confidence wavers and participants slip back into that well-worn position of waiting to see what happens next.
Agents, of course, have become used to navigating these moments. Over the past few years, the industry has weathered the pandemic surge, the shock of the mini-Budget, the sharp reset in mortgage rates and the slow adjustment to a new affordability landscape. Each time the market has adapted, found its rhythm again and carried on.
Of course, property markets respond not only to interest rates themselves but to expectations about where those rates are heading. When conditions worsen, confidence rarely takes long to deteriorate.
Which is how, almost overnight, both market and mood can begin to falter.
Yet history also suggests something else about housing markets: they rarely remain paused for long once uncertainty begins to lift. When stability returns, whether through calmer global conditions or clearer interest-rate signals, the demand waiting on the sidelines tends to move quickly.
The spring bounce may simply have paused, unsure for the moment which direction to take. When the mist clears, it will hit its stride again.
