Commentary by Ivor Dickinson, Managing Director of estate agents in London, Douglas & Gordon
Vendors are driving up prices in London by holding back the flood gates and not putting their properties on the market. Nobody wanted to sell when the market was falling, and now seven months of consistent price increases has given sellers the feel good factor, so they are still not moving, thereby fuelling pent up demand.
Although many sellers are being tempted back into the market, they are not taking the plunge just yet. In September, we carried out twice as many valuations, but instruction levels are down 50% compared to this time last year.





Up to the minute market comment
October 30th, 2009 by Ed MeadAnne Ashworth in the Times today says that never has the state of house prices told us so little about the state of the housing market. We’re lucky at D&G as we deal with well established buyers, not looking at the top end and with good jobs and sizeable deposits. This means they can access cheap mortgages, and if rates are going to stay low why wouldn’t you buy now. Add that to Sterling’s second collapse in a year giving our EU cousins another excuse to rampage here, and as if that’s not enough that nutter Berlusconi offers a tax amnesty to rich Italians (where have we heard that before) who can repatriate their overseas millions for 5% rather than the usual 40% Tax. The result is billions of Euros pouring out of various Tax havens and into central London. Put all that together with approx half the usual levels of stock and it’s no surprise there’s not so much of a bubble as an explosion going on at the moment. As far as D&G is concerned it’s a perfect storm, but it has to end. Our offices are reporting stock levels up 10% from last month and buyer levels down about 15%, so it does appear the balancing act is starting. Levels of actual business are steady but still about 50% down, in terms of volumes, from the 2007 peak, even if some prices being achieved are higher than they were even then.
Tags: Berlusconi tax amnesty, cheap mortgages, Italian buyers, london market comment, london property prices, weak sterling
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