What goes up, must come down? Maybe. Maybe not.
London property prices have gone up for a long, long time now. Few property markets in the world have generated the sustained levels of investment returns that London real estate has over the past two decades or more.
If you invested in London property back at the turn of the millennium when the average house price was £200,000 you’d be sitting on a return of investment of over 250% – the FTSE 100 barely broke double-figure returns over the same period.
Following such performance, London property prices hit an all-time high just a few months ago in November 2021, coinciding with the end of lockdowns in the UK. According to official Land Registry figures, an average annual increase of 5.1% was enough to make history with average asking prices hitting £519,934.
The figures were part inflated by pent-up demand bottle-necked during a covid-hit, partially operating housing market, plus a stamp duty holiday, but all indications suggest the market was truly buoyant. The number of offers accepted hit a decade-long high with central London properties leading the way – a 116% rise in demand. It was a similar story throughout London with buyer demand increasing 25% month on month and new buyer registrations doubling over the course of the previous 12 months.
And, yes, since that all-time high, the market has indeed softened. London property prices have fallen.
Recent headlines in the UK tell tale of a 1.8% dip from £519,000 to £510,000. It means that over the past 12 months, average London property prices have only increased by 2.2%, which is substantially less than the leading markets of Birmingham and Manchester.
However, it is important to remember these are top-line, average figures. London represents a massive market with one of the largest tenant populations in the whole of Europe. Indeed, investors with properties in some London boroughs actually recorded growth of up to 12.5% over the period.
Furthermore, demand remains strong. The majority of London agents are experiencing plenty of buyer activity and a shortage of stock. New-build properties continue to be sold off-plan, while existing properties continue to go beyond the asking price.
The recent dip is thought to be a small correction from the post-pandemic surge rather than anything more sustained. That’s what investments do. London property has produced sustained investor returns for such a long time and over the course of the last 20 years, there have been many short, isolated periods that have record slowing or even negative growth.
But what about the infamous bubble? Will the cost of living crisis finally burst London property prices to the extent that years of investment gains and capital value rises get wiped out?