North London Property Prices Jump as Buyers Return to Capital

Property prices are surging across north London as young professionals return to jobs in the capital after the pandemic, a survey showed.

(Bloomberg) — Property prices are surging across north London as young professionals return to jobs in the capital after the pandemic, a survey showed.

Asking prices for homes in Camden surged 17.2% from a year ago and by 6% in the past month alone, the property search website Rightmove said Monday. Barnet and Islington notched up annual gains of about 8%.

Known for its chaotic market and steampunk aesthetic, Camden is a draw for those seeking trendy entertainment spots and long established pubs — as well as green spaces such as Primrose Hill and Regent’s Park. Property there trails only the richest boroughs of Westminster, Kensington and Chelsea.

“It’s amazing how much some of these young professionals have to spend,” said Simon Ward, senior sales consultant at the Camden branch of estate agent Dexters.

 

Asking prices in Camden, at an average of £1.16 million, are comparable with £1.4 million in Westminster and £1.64 million in Kensington & Chelsea. 

Barnet and Islington are nearby for those unable to afford the prices in the leafier parts of Camden, which includes the well-heeled area around Hampstead Heath. The richer boroughs meanwhile are toward the bottom of the table for rises in London asking prices, with an annual gain of just 0.7% in Westminster and a drop of 2.2% in Kensington and Chelsea.

The activity in Camden hints at burgeoning strength in the broader national housing market, where soaring mortgage rates have strained affordability. Mortgage lenders last month said prices across the country notched up their longest losing streak since 2008, and Rightmove said asking prices across the nation were unchanged in February.

This had led to gloomy predictions of a plunge in prices, with some penciling in a peak-to-trough fall of more than 10%.

But rather than seeing a steep slide in house prices, Rightmove’s Director of Property Science Tim Bannister now expects a “transitioning towards a more normal level of activity after the market turbulence at the end of last year.”

February is usually a time when new sellers come to the market seeking higher prices, and Bannister said the latest data showed vendors “breaking with tradition and showing unseasonal initial pricing restraint” as conditions demanded “greater realism on price.”

Yet while rising interest rates have made mortgages more expensive, pressures in the rental market mean it’s increasingly cost-effective for tenants to buy a house if they can afford the deposit.

Average rates for a 15% deposit five-year fixed mortgage are now 4.82%, down from 5.9% in October, Rightmove said.

“The lettings market is so expensive, and it’s so competitive, that it makes more sense to buy,” Ward said. “Mortgage rates were at a staggeringly unattainable level last September/October” in the aftermath of the budget set out during Liz Truss’s short tenure as prime minister. 

Across London, it’s increasingly common for prospective renters to bid on a property at the same time. 

Rising mortgage rates are pushing more people into the rental market at the same moment landlords seek to maintain their margins by driving up what they charge tenants. That, along with the surge in people returning to London, is adding fuel to the rental market.

Ward said he had tried personally to rent a property recently, going to a viewing in the evening. At 3 a.m. the next morning, he received an alert on his phone notifying him the owner had accepted another offer after 50 viewings.

His observations fit with Rightmove’s data, which show activity recovering faster among first-time buyers than among those on the upper rungs of the housing ladder.

“It’s a positive sign for the market to see many in the first-time buyer sector getting on with their moves,” said Bannister from Rightmove. “Some first-time buyers will still be priced out of their original plans and may need to look for a cheaper property.”

Rightmove’s survey showed further signs the market will hold up, avoiding the worst-case scenarios of a sharp crash predicted by some forecasters.

The number of people contacting estate agents rose 11% over the past two weeks compared to the same period before the pandemic in 2019.

Agreed sales fell by the same proportion, a more gradual dip than the 15% drop recorded in January and in the aftermath of the ill-fated September budget.

Read more: 

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