Overseas buyers lap up London’s luxury homes as pound falls
London’s luxury homes this month sold at the fastest pace since the market started to slide more than two years ago as overseas buyers took advantage of a weakening pound.
Thousands of bankers and finance industry workers, the main buyers of luxury homes in the UK capital, have lost their jobs since the start of the credit crunch in 2007. Foreign buyers now account for more than 40% of purchases as they take advantage of the pound���s 11% drop against the dollar and 8.5% fall against the euro in the last 12 months.
Luxury home prices fell 15% in the five months following the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings in September, said Knight Frank. They have gained 4.7% in the past six months including a 1% month-on-month increase in August. Prices were down 12% from a year earlier, the smallest drop since October when they were 11% lower.
���We are at the beginning of a V-shaped recovery,��� said Stephen Yorke, chairman of D&G Investment Management. The company manages the 10 million-pound Prime London Capital Fund, owner of eight rental properties in Chelsea, Knightsbridge and Belgravia. A few properties are now fetching record prices as they attract multiple bidders, James Pace, head of Knight Frank���s Chelsea office, said in the statement. ���This price growth has been focused on quality.���
Knight Frank recently sold a four-story family house in the area for 15% more than it got for a similar property on the same street in November, said Pace.
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