London house prices decline most in 8 years

London house prices decline most in 8 years copy

 

Bloomberg

London house prices posted their largest annual drop in almost eight years in April as buyers shunned the capital’s central areas. The average asking price in the city fell 1.5 percent to 636,777 pounds ($813,000) this month from a year earlier, the largest annual decline since May 2009, property website Rightmove Plc said on Monday. On the month, London asking prices decreased 2 percent.
London’s housing market has underperformed the rest of the country since the start of 2016 after demand was hit by unaffordable valuations, the Brexit vote and tax increases on investors. More expensive homes are suffering the most as London’s inner areas posted a 4.2 percent annual decline, while prices in its cheaper outer suburbs were up 1.7 percent.
“While the rest of the country enjoys a spring surge with most regions seeing a price boom and new price records, some parts of the London market are still re-adjusting,” said Rightmove Director Miles Shipside. “The more discretionary upper end of the market is having to tempt buyers with cheaper asking prices, offsetting the higher purchase taxes.”
For the UK as a whole, prices rose 1.1 percent on the month in April, Rightmove said. That was still was slower than the average monthly gain of 1.6 percent seen at this time of year over the past seven years. The national annual increase of 2.2 percent was the weakest since April 2013.
The loss of momentum may signal that buyers are becoming more cautious as accelerating inflation erodes real earnings and the start of the
formal process of the UK to leave
the European Union clouds the economic outlook.
A separate report from Deloitte LLP on Monday showed consumer confidence fell in the first quarter. The survey of 3,000 Britons was carried out between March 17 and March 20.

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