london housing
George Hammond 8 HOURS AGO
For the first time in 30 years, London’s population is falling. Coronavirus has
stemmed the flow of migrants into the capital and created new reasons for residents
to depart. Since the outbreak of the pandemic, almost 700,000 foreign-born residents
may have left the city, according to one estimate by the government-funded Economic
Statistics Centre of Excellence (ESCoE).
The loss — which at that level would be equal to about 8 per cent of London’s
population — is already being felt in the city’s property market. Rental prices in inner
London have fallen sharply since the start of the pandemic, and the number of
property sales in the capital’s prime, central areas has dropped as international buyers
have been kept away.
But will this be a shortlived dip, or something more sustained? With the vaccine
rollout under way, some experts think that overseas renters and buyers will return in
droves once shops and businesses can reopen.
Others believe that underlying economic conditions, coupled with the impact of
Brexit, point to a longer-term reduction in demand for London property, creating a
drag on house prices that could last beyond the end of the pandemic.
UK prime property
What London’sfalling population meansfor the housing market
An estimated 700,000 foreign-born residents have left the city since the Covid-19 outbreak — how will this
affect rental and sale prices?
Muswell Hill, north London © Getty Images
So what is next for the London property market? We took a look at
the evidence.
Exodus leaves rentals reeling
Teresa Gottein Martínez left London for Spain in February, when the severity of
coronavirus started to become clear. “I and many people I know went back to our
home countries during Covid, be it to be in lockdown with family rather than alone, or
to save money on rent,” says the 24-year old freelance writer.
Some leavers — including Martínez herself — have since returned, drawn by work or
the pull of a city which, despite being diminished, remains home.
But with job loss one of the major factors behind the departure of foreign-born
Londoners, others have not, and are unsure they ever will. Martínez says that one
friend has begun looking for work outside of London after losing her job there. “We all
need to pay our bills somehow, even if it means moving countries,” says Martínez.
Hospitality workers in Parliament Square in December; many left London after losing their jobs © NurPhoto via Getty Images
Their absence is already being felt in the rental market. In the 12 months to October,
average rents in London fell 6.9 per cent, according to property portal Zoopla. In
Kensington & Chelsea, which is home to some of the capital’s most expensive
property, the average rent dropped 10.2 per cent. In the City of London, it fell 15 per
cent.
Met with a sharp drop in demand, some landlords are having to slash prices to appeal
to tenants. Across central London, reductions of more than 25 per cent have become
relatively common, according to homes listed for rent on Zoopla. A one-bedroom flat
near Piccadilly Circus has recently cut its asking price by 43.8 per cent to £1,950 a
month.
What next for house prices?
London house prices have grown since the first lockdown ended, especially in the
outer boroughs, as lockdown-weary buyers look for more space and their own garden.
Since July, property sales have been boosted by the government’s stamp duty holiday
— which waives the charge on the first £500,000 of any home purchase until March
31, saving buyers up to £15,000.
But how much have they grown? Official figures published on Wednesday by the ONS
and drawn from Land Registry data, suggest that London prices rose by 9.7 per cent in
the year to November, to an average of £514,000.
But Richard Donnell, research director at Zoopla, says Land Registry data has been
volatile recently, due the fact that more expensive houses have been selling, rather
than flats. In the year to October, for example, ONS figures show that prices rose 3.9
per cent to £491,000 — a £23,000 increase in the average value of a London home in
the space of a month seems unlikely, Donnell says.
Zoopla’s house price index for November suggests that the price in London had grown
by just 3 per cent in the previous 12 months, with boroughs such as Merton and
Sutton showing the largest gains.
The affluent streets of Kensington © Getty Images/iStockphoto
However much prices rose last year, tremors in the rental market could soon start to
be felt in the sales market, says Neal Hudson, a UK housing market analyst.
“If rents are falling that will put pressure on landlords: gross yields were already quite
low in parts of London and if [landlords] have got any sort of debt they are unlikely to
be covering costs.”
That could trigger a raft of non-profitable buy-to-let properties hitting the market at
the same time, which would put downward pressure on local house prices. “We could
definitely see that happen, particularly in new-build markets such as Nine Elms,” says
Hudson, referring to the huge redevelopment project near Battersea Power Station on
the south bank of the Thames.
Meanwhile, the loss of thousands of tenants will affect future sales too, says Donnell.
“The rental market is the top of the funnel: the number of first-time buyers in London
tomorrow could be hit by a lack of activity in the lettings market today,” he says.
A swift rebound in population — which would restore demand for housing — depends
on the return of the departed masses. But even if the pandemic is contained, tens of
thousands of jobs lost in the hospitality sector, where foreign labour is a considerable
part of the mix, will not return overnight.
“We’ve all but switched off the flow of people coming from abroad,” says Hudson.
“There’s fewer international people coming in, including students. So even if the
numbers leaving are consistent, that would mean the population is seeing some
pressure.”
But the numbers are not consistent. A new points-based immigration system,
introduced post-Brexit, has added to the barriers facing migrants from the EU, and is
expected to lower the numbers moving to London in the longer-term.
Meanwhile, the number of Londoners departing the city and buying homes elsewhere
has increased. Estate agency Hamptons International estimates that departing
Londoners bought 73,950 homes outside the capital last year, the highest number
since 2016 — and the highest proportion of sales outside of London since before the
financial crisis.
The Nine Elms development in Battersea, south London © Bloomberg
“Proportionally, the share of homes outside the capital that were bought by a London
leaver reached 7.5 per cent, the highest level since 2007” [when it was 8.2 per cent],”
says Aneisha Beveridge, head of research at Hamptons.
One of those leavers is Elysia Byrd, who is painting the walls of her new home when
she answers the phone. The 31-year-old and her boyfriend bought the house in
Hastings, on the UK’s south coast, in December, leaving behind a rented flat in
London.
“We’re both artists and we were living in a flat in Crystal Palace with no garden and
one bedroom. We just thought, ‘What are we doing?’ Now we’ve got a studio and I can
see the sea,” says Byrd, who grew up in London. The couple never thought they could
afford to buy in London; the pandemic, she says, “gave us the impetus to leave”.
As 2020 has underscored, putting a firm figure on what the exodus means for house
prices a year out is impossible. The grim expectations at the start of the pandemic last
year were confounded by government intervention and shifting buyer preferences.
Ministers may act to support the housing market again in 2021, and historically low
interest rates look likely to burnish the appeal of property for some time yet. Even so,
estate agencies are anticipating very limited price growth this year.
Betting long on central London
Many buyers have been happy to look beyond what they believe will be temporary
effects of the pandemic and have bought homes in central London. Anita, a solicitor,
has just completed on a one-bedroom flat in The Denizen, a new development near
the Barbican in the City of London, after renting nearby for seven years.
“I work crazy hours and wanted to be able to walk to work in 15 minutes,” says 31-
year-old Anita, who did not want to give her real name. “I am sceptical that the
working from home trend will continue and think the City will get its buzz back.”
A near-deserted Carnaby Street, central London © AFP via Getty Images
Others, having sampled a different lifestyle in the countryside, found it only renewed
their urge to be in the capital. “We had a chocolate-box thatched property with plenty
of land and nobody around but I felt isolated and uninspired,” says fashion designer
Stephanie, 41.
“It was complete cultural shock. I missed cosmopolitan London. There was nowhere
to go aside from the village pub.” Stephanie and family only moved to south
Oxfordshire two years ago, but are now living close to Hyde Park in a three-bedroom
flat.
Those who are wealthy enough can choose to have a foot in each camp. This group
“don’t want to cut themselves off from London life completely, as moving to the
country is a big adjustment. One buyer moved out to a big pile in Surrey but is so
bored she started renting a room at Claridge’s three nights a week [until Tier 4
restrictions ended this in December],” says Martin Bikhit of Berkshire Hathaway
HomeServices.
Eroding the London premium?
While ONS figures show London prices zooming ahead, according to Zoopla, house
price growth in London last year was slower than nearly every other UK region.
Spurred on by the stamp duty cut, prices in the North West grew 5 per cent; in the
South West, they rose 3.6 per cent.
After the stamp duty holiday ends on March 31, most estate agents predict a sharp
drop in activity. In London, the impact will be greater if the city’s population
continues to contract. According to a paper by independent research house
Carraighill, which analyses the effects of the new points-based migration system on
the housing market, that is a real possibility.
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Estate agents predict a sharp drop in sales when the stamp duty holiday ends on March 31 © Alamy Stock Photo
“The points-based system creates legal and bureaucratic hoops which migrants now
have to jump through . . . that’s pushing a lot of lower-skilled EU migrants out of
contention,” says David Higgins, the report’s author. “A slowdown in migration will
slow house-price growth in London and that will spill out to the south-east and southwest: if you want to sell but there’s no migrants to buy there will be an impact.”
The ONS forecasts that the UK’s population
growth will slow over the course of the next
decade. “But 2020 and 2021 are likely to
bring sharper drops,” says Higgins. “That’s
dramatic for a country that’s enjoyed strong
population growth since Thatcher’s time.”
That could mean that a period of relatively
slow growth for London’s property prices —
during which prices in other regions of
England have been catching up — is
extended.
“In pound sterling terms, prices in London have gone sideways, and in real terms have
gone down for the past six years. What you’ve really seen is a soft correction in
London,” says Donnell.
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2021. All rights reserved.
A slowdown or a dip in prices would be bad news for homeowners, who could struggle
to trade up the property ladder, or even find themselves in negative equity. But, says
Hudson, “it could actually be what London needs over a longer-term perspective, if it
leads to London becoming more affordable and more attractive to young people
again.”
Additional reporting by Liz Rowlinson
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This article is has been updated from the version that appears in print to include
reference to new ONS house price data
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