Surveys
Luxury London Period Properties Outperform New-Build Apartments – Survey
Luxury period properties in London’s long-established and most expensive neighbourhoods have appreciated by as much as 30 percentage points more than new-build flats in high-end developments in Central London since 2009, according to new research by specialist prime residential property investment advisor Huntly Hooper.
Luxury period properties in London’s long-established and most
expensive neighbourhoods have appreciated by as much as 30
percentage points more than new-build flats in high-end
developments in Central London since 2009, according to new
research by specialist prime residential property investment
advisor Huntly
Hooper.
The research found that flats in prime Central London have
appreciated by 57.4 per cent since 2009 to the end of the first
quarter 2014, with properties in some top-tier established period
districts rising by as much as 78 per cent. In contrast, re-sale
prices for new-build apartments built in Central London’s prime
residential neighbourhoods in the past decade have climbed by
46.2 per cent over the same period.
The study revealed that period flats in Belgravia, Chelsea,
Kensington, Knightsbridge, Marylebone, Mayfair, Notting Hill and
South Kensington all outperformed the price appreciation per
square foot of luxury new-build apartments in prime Central
London. More than two-thirds of the housing stock in these eight
“period neighbourhoods” was built before 1900.
The report noted that successful sales campaigns by developers
targeting wealthy Asian buyers had helped to fuel a surge in
demand for luxury flats in new developments in prime Central
London. This has lifted the price of these properties to £1,501
($2,519) a square foot, or 9 per cent more than the average price
fetched by flats across the rest of prime Central London.
Oliver Hooper, founder and managing director of Huntly Hooper,
said that buyers should consider their investment options “more
widely” before signing on the dotted line for the latest
new-build apartment in prime Central London as a result of period
properties outperforming the average of their new-build
peers.
“There is limited scope to negotiate down prices for new-build
luxury flats and the current market dynamics mean developers with
strong balance sheets can achieve a premium in pricing relative
to existing prime housing stock,” Hooper said.
The report showed that while the appreciation in values is more
muted for new apartments, they generate a better average gross
rental income return of 2.6 per cent compared to a 2.1 per cent
return for flats in established period neighbourhoods, as well as
being quicker to lease.
However, Huntly Hooper warned investors should be aware that the
superior rental return might be eroded by the higher service
charges that come with new developments.
“Opportunities to lock in far superior investment returns from
London’s prime residential market currently lie generally in the
period neighbourhoods and the inefficiencies this asset market
provides. Things change quickly and each neighbourhood market is
different, which is something that investors need to consider
when they invest in London property," said Hooper.
Huntly Hooper drew on data on 55,000 sale or leasing transactions
from the Land Registry and Lonres to track the investment
performance of properties in prime Central London and the smaller
group of period neighbourhoods.