Prime central London homes at bargain-basement prices post-Brexit



Price cuts of nearly 20 per cent and a drop in the value of the pound have created “Brexit discount” bargains on some of the most expensive homes in central London – if you have millions to spare.

The UK property market was one of the first sectors hit by uncertainty after Britons voted to leave the European Union on June 23, at one point forcing more than £18 billion (Dh86.04bn) worth of commercial property funds to be frozen.

Some wealthy foreign buyers saw an opportunity, however.

One Canadian buyer snapped up a seven-bedroom, five-bathroom home with a pool two weeks after the vote for £11.5 million, a discount of around a third from its £14m list price when combined with a drop in the pound of more than 10 per cent.

The property, in sought-after Holland Park in west London, had been on the market for eight months, says Charles McDowell, a property consultant working for the buyer.

“They think they’re getting a good house, which is the most important thing, and they also feel they are paying a discounted price, certainly discounted on what they’d be paying two years ago,” he says.

Prices in prime central London had already started to fall in the run-up to the referendum, thanks partly to hikes in stamp duty tax on high-end property in December 2014 and on second home and buy-to-let properties in April, according to research from consultancy Knight Frank.

After the vote, in July, prices in prime central London – from Holland Park and Knightsbridge in the west to the City of London in the east – fell by 1.5 per cent, the biggest fall in nearly seven years, it says.

“Since the vote, a number of buyers have requested discounts due to the climate of political and economic uncertainty,” says Tom Bill, Knight Frank’s head of London Residential Research.

With little official data yet published covering the period since the vote, there are divergent views on how Brexit will impact the economy, ranging from recession to a boost for exporters, retailers and hotels due to the fall in the pound.

London house prices rose nearly 14 per cent in the year to May, according to the latest official data from the office for national statistics published in July.

However, asking prices fell by a monthly 1.2 per cent nationwide between July 10 and August 6, according to a survey by property website Rightmove published on Monday, with London recording the biggest drop with prices down 2.6 per cent.

There was a 2 per cent fall for the month of July versus the same month a year earlier in the number of “instructions”, when estate agents are hired by sellers to list their properties, according to data from Countrywide research.

“Uncertainty is generally poison to markets so you’re going to see people beginning to wait and see what comes out of it,” says the Hamptons International residential research director Fionnuala Earleys.

Summer is generally a quiet period as many househunters are on holiday, but Susan Emmett, the director of residential research at Savills says she expects there to be less demand heading into the autumn.

“We expect uncertainty to lead to lower sales volumes in the short-term. Transaction numbers are therefore likely to fall from recent UK highs of 1.3 million a year.”

April’s increases in the stamp duty paid by buyers of second homes and buy-to-let properties – adding a surcharge of 3 per cent – led many to purchases earlier in the year, producing a slump in the months coinciding with the run-up to the referendum.

Buyers were already paying more tax on properties worth more than £937,000 after the changes made in December 2014.

Around 80,000 homes were listed on major property websites in London in the second half of 2015, with half under offer, according to data collated by the Swiss bank UBS.

The number of homes on the market has since risen to almost 100,000 in mid-July, the latest available data shows, but only a third of those are under offer.

“We believe that this is indicative of a slowing market, which pre-dated the referendum,” says the UBS analyst Mark Fielding. “This trend is particularly pronounced in higher price brands.”

The London-focused estate agents Foxtons blamed a 10 per cent drop in both the number of homes it sold and let in the first half of the year firmly on Brexit.

The firm, which went public in 2013, saw first-half profits plunge 42 per cent and says it does not expect a recovery until 2017.

Mr McDowell says post-Brexit property jitters in prime areas in London have already started to wane but adds some foreign owners are reluctant to sell to British buyers because of the unfavourable exchange rate.

“We’ve also had sellers who have said, ‘You know what, I’m not going to sell now because ... the pound is weak and we’re foreign and we don’t want pounds,’” he says.

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