prime london

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    Latest property news

    Transactions slump by a fifth in Central London as Brexit bites

    Market report by LonRes covering the final months of last year reveal continuing problems for the capital's central postcodes.

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  • Latest property news
    Latest property news

    Slow-moving prime London property market drives £1 billion January ‘sale’

    The pain in the prime London property market continues as research reveals that nearly £1 billion has been knocked off the original asking prices of properties for sale within its upmarket streets. Analysis of portal data by Garrington Property Finders shows that the average reductions is 9% or, by the crazy metrics of the capital’s property market, £223,000. Such dramatic reductions (shown in a heat-map form, above) have been created by a slow market, Garrington says, and in six of the seven areas featuring the greatest reductions more than half of properties currently for sale have been on the market for over six months. The most dramatic reductions in prime London property are in the more expensive enclaves including St James and Victoria, where the average reduction is 14.1% or £765,919 and Knightsbridge, where asking prices have been slashed by 12.1% or £927,188 on average. Well-to-do homes in the City, South Kensington, Soho, Covent Garden and Marylebone areas of London have all seen an average reduction of approximately 10%, the research shows. “2017 was not a year for the faint-hearted in London’s prime property market,” Garrington’s Managing Director Jonothan Hopper (pictured, left). “Acute price sensitivity among buyers continues to force…

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  • Latest property newsLonres prime london
    Latest property news

    Weak pound makes prime London 29% cheaper

    The Brexit vote may have contributed to the current prime London woes but the ensuing pound bloodbath since June is set to save it, says London housing data firm Lonres. The company has crunched the numbers to work out how much cheaper London’s fashionable central postcodes are now that sterling has crashed against the dollar and euro, with surprising results. For those buying with dollars, Lonres says, average values paid including both currency changes and recent average price reductions of up to 10% make prime London up to 29% cheaper than 2014 when sterling and the overall market was at its strongest. “This makes prime central London, for those buying with dollars, the most affordable it has been since 2012,” says Marcus Dixon, Head of Research and Data Analysis at Lonres (pictured, below). And for euro buyers, it’s a similar picture. “Price falls and a weaker sterling have meant the amount paid per square foot in euros in prime central London has dropped by 26% from €2,684 per square foot at the peak in July 2015 to €1,997 in August this year,” says Marcus. “A combination of price falls and a weaker sterling could mean the next few months represent…

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