Annual rental growth in prime London property sector falls back

Annual prime London property rental growth has slipped back into negative territory for the first time in two years, down 0.4% year on year, according to the latest Savills prime rentals index.

It reflects weak short term prospects in the financial and business services sector and is despite a rise of 2.35 in the first six months of 2012.
 
‘The financial sector has long been the lifeblood of the prime London rentals market and rents have struggled to limp past their pre Lehman peak,’ said Lucian Cook, director of Savills research.

‘The profile of tenants has changed as a direct consequence of weakened sentiment, with a notable decrease in big ticket tenants employed in the financial sector in the prime central and east of City markets of Canary Wharf and Wapping. As such, there are a number of new and increasingly localised market forces being seen in the capital,’ he added.

Prime central London values remained flat over the past three months, while values are down 0.5% year on year. Stock levels have increased as overseas safe haven buyers brought their investments to market, easing supply constraints and suppressing rental growth.

The safe haven effect has also impacted the upper end of the market which remains 5% down on peak. Traditional high net worth occupiers looking to shelter wealth have been inclined to buy rather than rent, while those continuing to rent have focused on iconic, fully serviced buildings, meaning the ultra prime market has become increasingly selective.
 
Average rents across prime central London now range from £91 per square foot for the top quartile of rental properties, to just £41 per square foot for the bottom quartile.

Demand from young, City professionals at the lower, £250 to 400 per week, end of the east of City markets is described as red hot' This has underpinned average values in these locations, where values rose 0.8% in the past quarter, and are now 3.7% over peak. Demand for one bedroom flats in Islington is similarly high with values rising 1.6% in the quarter.

The big news, according to Jane Ingram, head of Savills lettings, is that family demand is finally coming back to some key sectors of the prime market, where houses have underperformed flats over the past year, but its focus is shifting away from core central locations. This has particularly benefited the traditionally domestic locations of south west London. Here, international tenants have accounted for 52% of demand this year to date, compared to 47% in the second half of 2011.

Similarly, families have returned to the markets of Kensington, Chelsea and Knightsbridge in the past few weeks and the £2,000 to £5,000 per week has shown signs of picking up after a few months of very slow trade. ‘Here, however, landlords are accepting lower rents to avoid missing the family house season, which traditionally runs through July, but is expected to be curtailed this year by the Olympics,’ said Ingram.

There are also signs of a ripple effect out of London, with the prime markets of South East England seeing demand up 16% and values up 3.6% in the past six months, though still down 1.5% year on year. Demand is focused on key commuter towns, mirroring early patterns of recovery in the underlying housing markets.

The biggest issue facing the private rented sector is the need to increase supply. Within the prime markets, changes to the stamp duty regime have increased the barriers to potential investors in central London, where the supply of quality properties to rent is crucial to ensuring demand from overseas tenants employed in the financial sector of the economy is accommodated within central London.

‘It is essential that amendments are made to the proposals to ensure that measures are, as intended, more precisely targeted at tackling tax avoidance, and in particular to identify where assets in a corporate envelope are genuinely held as a business, as distinct from being for personal use,’ said Cook.

‘As currently proposed, the new stamp duty regime would put investment funds and some of London's landed estates at a disadvantage to the rest of the private landlord market, while the proposed annual levy would impinge on net income yields that are critical to the investment credentials of this sector,’ he explained.

‘The recently published Treasury consultation paper, Ensuring the fair taxation of residential property transactions, opens the door for additions to the exemptions to these charges,’ he added.