Overnight, UK property consultancy Knight Frank reported that London property prices rose 7.5% annually, modestly slowing from 8.1% in March 2013, and 11.3% March 2012. Slowing you say? Not really, and certainly not at the high end: "London sales over £1 million accounted for 22% of the £4.7 billion total in the 2012/13 tax year, while sales over £2 million made a 15% contribution. Transaction volumes in both price brackets represent less than 2% and 1% of the total, respectively" Knight Frank reported. But really putting it into perspective is the observation that on the 5 year anniversary of the centrally planned, HFT-rigged market ramp,London real estate prices have risen by a stunning 68% in the 5 years since March 2009.
Why? Perhaps the breakdown presented below, showing that London is nothing more than a hot money parking lot, with Singapore, Hong Kong, China, Malaysia and Russia (ahem Ukraine) and others accounting for nearly three quarters of all London new-builds, should explain it, and also explain why if the Chinese property and credit bubble indeed are popping, then London should be very scared.





Comments
Log in or sign up to join the conversation.