Prime Property Price Growth Slows
Tuesday, August 30, 2011
Prime property prices in the cities monitored by the Knight Frank Prime Global
Cities Index rose by 6.8% in the year to June 2011, down from 13.5% growth in
the comparable period a year earlier.
According to Knight Frank's analysis, prime property in Hong Kong recorded the
strongest annual growth, with prices in June 2011 16.1% higher than twelve months
earlier. Indeed, Hong Kong, Singapore and Shanghai are the only locations, based
on the latest available data, where the cities' prime markets have not outperformed
the mainstream housing market in the wider country or territory.
London, Paris and St Petersburg are the only cities where prime property prices
have reached their pre-recession peak, says the report.
Meanwhile, a number of the Asian cities tracked have yet to experience a decline
during this cycle and continue to follow an upward trend. Anti-inflationary
measures being introduced by some governments are, nonetheless, thought to be having an impact
on property prices in Asia. Singapore's prime market
has responded with slower price growth, but other cities are further behind
in the deflationary cycle.
Liam Bailey, Head of Residential Research at Knight Frank, comments:
“One of the most noticeable outcomes from the recent global recession
was the divergence between property performance in the mainstream markets (generally
weak) and the prime or luxury markets (generally much better).
“The Knight Frank Prime Global Cities Index has tracked this process,
which until recently seemed to be strengthening – with improving conditions
in the luxury global city markets set against renewed price falls in the mass
markets, especially in the US, the UK and most of Europe."
“Our latest results confirm that annual price growth in prime city markets
has slowed rapidly (from nearly 14% in Q2 2010 to barely 7% in Q2 2011). With
growing concerns over sovereign debt and even for the outlook of the global
economy, it seems likely that this process will continue – with still
lower growth in the world’s prime city markets a likelihood."
“I think it would be wrong to become too fixated on the downside risks
to the market we track in this index. The fact is that prime residential markets
have acted as ‘safe-havens’ for investors over the past two years
– with growing demand for property in London, New York and other key global
cities as economic and geo-political concerns have pushed investors to look
for stable locations for their wealth."
“In these important global markets the biggest risks seem to be concentrated
for the time being in Asia – with the ongoing process of managed market
cooling being buffeted by rapid supply growth – the outcome of this process
is likely to determine how healthy the Prime Global Cities Index is looking
a year from now.”
According the Knight Frank Prime Global Cities Index city by city analysis:
Hong Kong has retaken its position at the top of our performance rankings partly
due to strong annual growth of 16.1% and partly as a result of slower price
growth in Paris, which topped the table last quarter. Despite the global financial
crisis prime property prices in Hong Kong have followed an upward trend since
Q4 2008, rising 75.9% over this period.
Asian cities appear to be responding to their governments’ regulatory
measures to dampen price inflation, albeit at varying speeds. Singapore saw
prime prices fall by 2% in the three months to June 2011 but Hong Kong, Beijing
and Shanghai continued to record positive quarterly growth
Administrative measures such as new property taxes, restrictions on the number
of property purchases and the promotion of subsidised housing have started to
influence sales volumes in the key Asian cities but this has yet to feed through
in a meaningful way on prices in several markets. We expect this will change
in the second half of 2011.
Singapore’s slowing market, despite a rise in Chinese and Indonesian buyers
in the last quarter, offers the first evidence that the Asian property market
is moving into a new more negative phase. Concerns over the stability of the
global economy, and in particular over EU and US debt, are causing uncertainty
amongst Asian investors who have been pushing prices higher across the main
cities over the past two years.
After a very strong year market conditions began to slow in Paris in the second
quarter. Supply has increased in some of the most high-profile prime locations
as vendors, particularly in the EUR4m to EUR5m price bracket, have taken
advantage of the recent surge in prices. Interestingly foreign demand for Parisian
property has remained healthy over recent months – with a number of new
enquires from the Middle East and from Syrian buyers in particular.
Conditions in London’s prime market remain strong. Despite a recent rise
in supply we expect prices to continue to grow in the second half of 2011, albeit
at a slower pace. Offsetting rising supply has been the fact that buyer registrations
have held steady and viewings have increased over the past two months.
Buyers in Monaco while facing lower prices than at their peak in Q3 2008, are
still seeing asking prices of EUR40,000 to in excess of EUR50,000 per
sq m for prime apartments, a reflection of the ongoing imbalance in the Principality
between tight supply and cautious demand, that is nonetheless beginning to show
the early signs of a more positive trend.
Both St Petersburg and Moscow have recorded positive annual growth since Q1
2010, with prime property prices in St Petersburg rising by 12.2% in the year
to June 2011. Such strong price inflation is partly attributable to an improvement
in economic and business sentiment in Russia since the start of 2011.
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