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Home House Prices Prime London prices fall again but pace slowing

Prime London prices fall again but pace slowing

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Prime London residential prices continue to decline, but at a slower rate according to Knight Frank.
 
Prices of luxury property in central London fell by 0.1% in August, a decline which followed the 0.5% fall in July whilst the recent price falls mean that the annual rate of price growth - which hit 21% in April this year, has softened to 16% in August. 

Price declines are marginal across all price ranges, however the biggest drops are being seen in the £1m to £2.5m sector.
 
Liam Bailey, Knight Frank’s head of residential research said, “There has been widespread speculation for a number of months that the prime London market would begin to turn a corner – after a very strong period since last March.
 
“Our index results confirm that the market has weakened in terms of prices – with a further decline of 0.1% in August, added to the 0.5% fall in July.
 
“To me one of the main reasons for the softening in prices relates to the fact that demand and supply have become more closely aligned in recent months, with supply of stock for sale rising 22% over the past four months and new applicant volumes falling back marginally by 8% over the same period.
 
“Another critical issue to the health of the London market is the strength of the overseas marketplace, which has been weakened slightly by Sterling's rise against the Euro and the US Dollar (by 8% and 6% respectively over the last three months).
 
“The key question from this point is where the market is heading in the remainder of 2010. The next four weeks will be all important, as the autumn market really begins to gear up. Early signs are promising with a number of vendors beginning to look at asking prices – which have become in many instances overinflated.
 
“The London economy is outperforming the UK average by some margin, with strong employment data from Morgan McKinley showing vacancies in the City and Canary Wharf markets up by 71% year-on-year in July, suggesting that fears of a significant correction in central London values are overdone. “

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