Tag Archives: UK Property

Strong sales at Singapore launches of US, UK properties

SELL-OUT launches – that’s what local property agents representing UK and US developers are enjoying.

The buying interest is thanks to depressed prices in the two markets and favourable currency rates; a confluence of factors that is giving Asians a buying opportunity like no other in recent years, leading some overseas developers to even bypass their own markets to market projects here.

When Savills Singapore marketed a high-end San Francisco condominium development last September, for example, it expected to sell fewer than 10 units. In the end, 24 sales for units ranging from US$650,000 to over US$3 million – were closed, says Julian Sedgewick, senior associate director for Savills Singapore’s international residential sales section.

‘It caught us by surprise, as we didn’t expect this. It was the first American property we’d marketed in a couple of years,’ says Mr Sedgewick, who heads the department created just last September to tap the overseas property investment market. San Francisco’s Millennium Tower was built by New York-based Millennium Partners, which holds some Ritz Carlton franchises in the US. The developer had approached Savills to market the property in Asia, says Mr Sedgewick.

The weak US dollar and lower home prices are contributing to the foreign buying spate, especially as there’s now some stability in the market, he says. ‘For investors, this potentially can mean a 20 to 30 per cent capital growth in the next few years.’

The pound’s current low is definitely the reason for the boom in London property sales in Singapore this year, says Stephen Ho, associate director of Colliers’ International’s projects team. ‘The current 2.1 exchange rate is the biggest draw now, with high-end properties costing about 15-20 per cent less than they did in 2007,’ he says.

Prices are creeping up, according to him. But Colliers is still seeing a ’steady flow of good buyers’, rather than the kind of frenzied buying four or five years ago.

Developers are approaching international property agents, and Colliers expects to hold about three exhibitions a month in its bid to represent international developments at asking prices of £pounds;500-£pounds;800 psf in general, in mid-high to high-end projects.

Mr Ho’s advice for would-be buyers is that they should be familiar with the area they’re thinking of buying into. Colliers, for example, mainly markets projects in established locations, rather than regeneration areas in London.

Location, location and location is definitely the mantra when buying overseas, says Doris Tan, managing director of DST International Property Services which specialises in selling London property.

‘With the booming international property market now, buyers have to be very careful about what they’re buying,’ says Ms Tan. A check with the newspaper this week showed some four to five London projects advertised daily, for example. ‘Like all things, location is the most important as the properties in prime locations will come out alright when the economy picks up again,’ she says. ‘Cheap doesn’t mean good.’

International selling activity picked up at the end of last year, says Ms Tan, with some projects, like the Central St Giles development marketed here last week, launching here instead of in London.

DST will also launch some New York property here, but a key drawback is capital gains tax and various other taxes in the US real estate market which the UK does not impose. ‘That said, this is still a good time to consider investing in New York property, but one has to be prepared to hold it for five years or so,’ says Ms Tan.

Who are the buyers? Agents are seeing a wide range – from first-time investors to parents who have children studying in London or US cities. ‘About half are Singaporeans, followed by Malaysians and Indonesians and then about 5 per cent expatriates,’ says Colliers’ Mr Ho.

In London – by far the favoured and familiar market for Singaporeans – the majority buy as an investment, while the rest are mainly parents who buy properties for children studying or working there.

‘Buyers include those who have made money from Asian property so they’re now looking for another place to invest,’ says Mr Ho.

Source : Business Times – 13 Mar 2010

UK home sellers cut asking prices 1.6% in Nov

UK home sellers reduced asking prices in November for the first time in three months as demand for property dwindled before the Christmas holidays, Rightmove Plc said.

Average prices fell 1.6 per cent to £226,440 from October, when they rose 2.8 per cent, the owner of the UK’s biggest residential property website said in a statement yesterday. Prices have now dropped 6.6 per cent from the peak in May 2008.

‘In all but the most buoyant of markets, home moving comes second to Christmas festivities,’ Miles Shipside, Rightmove’s commercial director, said in the statement.

‘While the market has recovered from some dreadful lows, this month’s price fall proves that it does not yet have the strength to buck seasonal trends.’

Britain’s property-market pickup from the slump may reflect an ‘unusual’ imbalance between demand and supply which is unlikely to last, the Bank of England said last week.

Policymakers expanded their bond-purchase plan to £200 billion (S$462 billion) this month and Bank of England governor Mervyn King says he has an ‘open mind’ on whether to increase it further to aid the economy.

The pound was little changed against the US dollar yesterday, trading at US$1.6713 as of 9:10am here.

Asking prices fell the most in the Yorkshire and Humberside area, where they dropped 4.4 per cent from October, and in the North West, where they slid 3.8 per cent, Rightmove said.

London prices fell 3.1 per cent on the month, led by a 5.3 per cent decline in Barking and Dagenham.

Kensington and Chelsea, the city’s most expensive area, was the only one to show an increase. The 3.9 per cent gain there put the average price of a home at £1.97 million.

Kensington and Chelsea ‘is favoured by foreign buyers who have benefited from the weakness of the pound’, Mr Shipside said.

Last year, asking prices in England and Wales fell 2.9 per cent in November and declined further in December and January, according to Rightmove. Prices have risen in seven of the 10 months since then.

The Bank of England said last week that the outlook for the housing market ‘will depend, in part, on the supply of mortgage credit’.

UK mortgage approvals climbed to their highest level for 18 months in September. Loan approvals are still only half what they were when the credit crisis started in September 2007.

A separate report yesterday by the British Chambers of Commerce showed UK companies have found it harder to obtain credit since June as banks withhold loans.

The survey of 400 companies also found 64 per cent of them said their biggest obstacle to growth in the coming years was a lack of demand.

Source : Business Times – 17 Nov 2009