Posts with tag: London prime property

London is World Leader for Luxury Property

London has overtaken New York City and every other major city in the world on prices and sales in the prime property market in the last five years, according to a recent report by Knight Frank.

In London, there were 2,147 luxury home sales in the $2m-$5m price range in 2009, which put the capital behind Hong Kong but roughly on par with NYC. However, by 2014, sales in this category in London had soared to 6,250 – double the number witnessed in Manhattan and tripe the amount in Hong Kong, Singapore and Sydney.

In the ultra-prime market – the homes selling for more than $5m (around £3m) – London has also surpassed Manhattan.

London is World Leader for Luxury Property

London is World Leader for Luxury Property

Knight Frank found that 1,638 properties were sold in London for over $5m in 2014, compared to 796 in Manhattan, 258 in Sydney and just 21 in Los Angeles.

The upmarket estate agent reports that London and NYC are constantly fighting for position as the world’s leader in the prime property market, but London has taken the top spot.

Head of Research at Knight Frank, Liam Bailey, comments: “These two cities continue to lead development trends in terms of design, pricing and iconic architecture.”1

He expects London’s dominance to remain for the next ten years, although NYC could take over in 2024.

Prime London house prices have increased faster than any major city in the past decade, including those in East Asia. The average Mayfair or Holland Park apartment price rose by a huge 138% since 2004. Hong Kong followed with 93% price growth, New York at 78% and Singapore at 69%.

The increase in London prices arrives despite a fairly high supply of new build luxury apartments compared with overseas cities.

In Hong Kong and NYC, residential completions were lower than in London in 2014, as the English capital experiences a boom in tower building.

London’s traditional, low-rise skyline is being replaced by soaring residential skyscrapers, with 264 buildings of more than 20 storeys either proposed, approved or under construction in Greater London.

However, NYC is fighting back. It’s new 1,396 foot tower, 432 Park Avenue, is nearing completion, making it the tallest residential building in the world and the third highest in the city. The building’s penthouse was allegedly sold to a Saudi Arabian buyer for $95m in 2013.

In total, there are 100 new residential skyscrapers in Manhattan, with 6,500 condos for sale. Knight Frank reports that this represents a “staggering inventory”1 of $30 billion worth of property.

Similarly to the situation being observed in London, New Yorkers are complaining that foreign buyers are purchasing luxury apartments that are then left empty, pushing up prices and making housing unaffordable for ordinary locals, as rent prices are also inflated.

Knight Frank believes that one reason London has surpassed NYC is not just its attractiveness to overseas buyers, but a rising population and workforce, particularly in the finance and IT industries.

The number of Londoners working in finance, insurance, IT and telecoms increased from 1.28m to 1.56m between 2009-14, surpassing the 1.1m employed in the same sectors in NYC and 0.8m in Hong Kong.

However, Knight Frank says the global city to watch is Miami.

Despite becoming the repossession capital of the USA during the financial crisis, the city’s housing market has started to boom again recently. Prices for prime property have surged by 91% in the last five years.

1 http://www.theguardian.com/money/2015/oct/06/london-outstrips-new-york-to-top-global-prime-property-league

 

Emerging Prime Hotspots in London Lead Growth

Published On: July 8, 2015 at 4:53 pm

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Categories: Landlord News

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Property prices in the emerging prime hotspots of London recorded a slight increase of 1.3% in the second quarter (Q2) of 2015, down by 0.84% compared to Q2 2014, revealed new data.

Emerging Prime Hotspots in London Lead Growth

Emerging Prime Hotspots in London Lead Growth

Demand in South West London has continued to be fuelled by sales, particularly of flats under £937,500, following Stamp Duty changes at the end of 2014, according to the latest quarterly report by real estate company Douglas and Gordon.

Contrastingly, larger houses priced over £1.3m in emerging prime markets were less promising, due to Stamp Duty issues and concerns over the mortgage market. In some areas, such as Battersea and Battersea Park, prices were down 10% annually.

In the sector, Clapham and Southfields experienced the strongest price growth, of 3.5% and 3.9% respectively. A weak second-half of 2014 has led prices in these areas to catch up to where they were a year ago.

Rental growth is also strong, up 1.7% in Q2, continuing this market’s strong performance during a difficult year in the sales sector. However, this is expected to slow once sales pick up.

Total returns, capital and rental growth remain attractive to professional investors in emerging prime areas. Capital values are also forecast to increase by 10% in the next 12 months.

Douglas and Gordon’s Executive Director, Ed Mead, says: “Whereas there is some evidence of a post-election bounce, unsurprisingly, many are taking their time to make decisions and a continuation of the anticipated bounce needs to be tempered with a dose of realism.”1

His predictions for the next 12 months regarding family homes is that the market will remain firm, due to there no longer being a threat of mansion tax.

However, he also notes that there is a lack of supply and the firm’s emerging prime index is only back to levels seen a year ago.

He expects fringe areas to perform best, as buyers look for new areas to purchase a property in.

1 http://www.propertywire.com/news/europe/london-prime-emerging-markets-2015070710717.html