London home sales include perks

Furniture, parking lots among offerings to woo buyers

A construction worker looks out from a residential apartment building this month in the Stratford district of London.
A construction worker looks out from a residential apartment building this month in the Stratford district of London.

London homebuilders are offering to pay sales taxes, kick in furniture valued at $26,000 and give buyers a chance to win a free parking space as Britain's vote to leave the European Union dampens demand.

The British vote to exit the EU will damage the U.K. economy and residential property values in London could fall by more than 30 percent, Societe Generale SA analysts including Marc Mozzi wrote in a note to clients on Monday. U.K. homebuilder sales will drop by 5 percent, according to Barclays PLC analyst Jon Bell.

The U.K. capital's housing market faces an oversupply of apartments that Londoners can't afford and fewer landlords want after tax changes made owning real estate less attractive. Even before the vote, values were facing a "major shock" as landlords offload properties after increases in levies and new lending rules reduced their returns to near zero, analysts at Deutsche Bank AG said a week before the referendum. Home prices fell 1.4 percent in May, the biggest monthly fall in about five years.

Natalia Kopczynska, a 26-year-old compliance officer, and her fiance were planning to buy a $660,000 property in the Beckenham district before the vote to leave. They have put the decision on hold.

"We now have no idea what is going to happen to interest rates, if the country is heading for recession and if and how far property prices are going to fall," she said in a telephone interview. "You can't make a decision as big as this with so much uncertainty in the mix."

Galliard Homes Ltd. is offering a 3 percent discount for owner occupiers. It's also offering the chance to win two parking lots worth $33,000 each for buyers of a three-bedroom home at its Marine Wharf East development in London.

Galliard sold the project to an investor and the homes have since been effectively resold, sales director David Galman said. Just two "buyers spooked by Brexit" dropped out and purchasers have since been found for those properties, he said by email. "It's the 3 million-pound plus market in London that's been most slowed by Brexit and Galliard has very little exposure to this marketplace."

Barratt Developments PLC is offering furniture packages worth $26,000 to clients who commit to purchasing a one-bedroom apartments in Aldgate Place near the City of London financial district before the end of the month. An apartment at the project costs more than $1 million, according to the company's website.

The homebuilder is also offering reduced stamp duty on its most expensive homes. "At the price point above [$1.3 million or $2 million] you will find that there is more supply and therefore from a sales perspective it is more challenging," Chief Executive Officer David Thomas said.

New home sales in London, where prices are about 62 percent above the 2007 peak, have been falling after the introduction of a capital-gains levy for overseas buyers and higher sales taxes damped demand. Purchases fell 33 percent in the first quarter to 5,947, according to data compiled by Molior London that was seen by Bloomberg News.

Plans are in the pipeline for 35,000 high-end properties worth almost $102 billion in the coming decade, 40 percent more than in 2014. As many as 100,000 financial-services jobs could be lost in the U.K. by 2020 because of the results of the EU referendum, according to an estimate by PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, which would reduce demand from buyers and renters.

The number of prime properties sold in London in the 12 working days after the referendum fell 43 percent from the same period a year earlier, according to data compiled by researcher Lonres. The number of homes under offer dropped 25 percent.

The number of rental properties available in London surged 33 percent in June from a year earlier after landlords rushed to buy before the stamp duty tax on second-homes increased in April, according to data compiled by Countrywide PLC. Increased supply in the market is slowing rental growth, the broker said.

That means now's not the time for investors to buy, said Charlie Ellingworth, a co-founder at broker Property Vision Ltd., which advises purchasers. "New builds have been flooding the market and the number of renters is finite, so if people leave your main worry will be finding a tenant."

Business on 07/19/2016

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