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Property DOOM: Prices of luxury London homes 'could fall as much as 50pc'

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    Property DOOM: Prices of luxury London homes 'could fall as much as 50pc'

    House prices in the most expensive postcodes of central London could fall by as much as 50pc, according to analysis by Société Générale.

    The French bank said that Brexit could result in jobs in the City being cut and businesses potentially moving abroad, if access to the single market is denied. City workers would then have to sell their homes, which are mostly in very expensive areas of London, in order to relocate.

    Marc Mozzi, an analyst at SocGen, said: "A simplistic ‘back of the envelope’ computation shows there were 3,140 real estate transactions registered above £2m in London in 2015 (and 920 in 2016 leading up to Brexit).

    "If we assume 500 managers from 20 firms relocate outside the UK (so as to retain access to the single market), of which one-third of those households are ‘forced-sellers’, we end up with a potential volume of these transactions for one to two years in that prime segment.

    "Given the current ratio of prices to incomes in London, a price correction of even 40-50pc in the most expensive London boroughs does not seem impossible."

    This analysis only reflects potential falls in prime London real estate, which even before the referendum had suffered sliding prices as demand withered. House prices in the rest of London and further afield are not expected to fall so steeply, with firms such as KPMG putting price falls outside London at 5pc.

    SocGen added that house prices in London fell by 20pc during the subprime crisis of 2008, when 55,000 jobs were cut in the financial sector. Average London house prices have risen by 74.5pc since 2009. Mr Mozzi added: "We see a classic housing bubble in London and Brexit as the trigger for the correction."

    PwC has said that there could be 70,000-100,000 fewer jobs in the financial services sector, and 950,000 job losses overall, as a result of the vote to leave the EU.

    The upside is that properties in prime London areas are now much more attractive to foreign buyers as sterling has fallen since the result of the vote was announced on June 24. Furthermore demand for homes in more reasonably priced areas of London and outside the capital continues to outstrip supply, suggesting house price falls will be limited.

    Source: Prices of luxury London homes 'could fall as much as 50pc'

    DOOMED!!!

    P.S. Luxury flats over 1500 sq ft in Bham will not be affected...
    Last edited by AtW; 18 July 2016, 16:12.

    #2
    So all that means is some people bought at the top of the biggest housing bubble in history, and so will sell at a loss.

    Am I bovvered?
    First Law of Contracting: Only the strong survive

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by _V_ View Post
      Am I bovvered?
      You should be because it won't be just property values of those who bought at the top dropping rapidly.

      Only those who got luxury flats in Bham can sleep safe at night...

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by AtW View Post
        You should be because it won't be just property values of those who bought at the top dropping rapidly.

        Only those who got luxury flats in Bham can sleep safe at night...
        Overpriced "luxury" flats in crap cities are most at risk.
        First Law of Contracting: Only the strong survive

        Comment


          #5
          All these articles contain the words may and could which means who ever is writing them is confirming nothing.

          Bored now.

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by _V_ View Post
            Overpriced "luxury" flats in crap cities are most at risk.
            Not bovvered - I'll buy 10 more and average value nicely.

            HTH

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by AtW View Post
              Not bovvered - I'll buy 10 more and average value nicely.

              HTH
              Averaging down on margin. Just when you thought things couldn't go any lower........

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by GB9 View Post
                Averaging down on margin. Just when you thought things couldn't go any lower........
                Bank savings rate is near zero so having BTL is good return ob money plus capital appreciation

                Comment


                  #9
                  Scare mongering. As if we will be denied access to the single market.
                  .....as if we will exit anyway .

                  Would be nice for some professional youngsters if they can afford more than a flat share.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by AtW View Post
                    Bank savings rate is near zero so having BTL is good return ob money plus capital appreciation
                    Such insight! I wondered why people have been doing this for the last 10 years!
                    I get up...

                    Comment

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