UBS: Here's why 2018 will be a bad year to invest in London's housing market

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UBS: Here's why 2018 will be a bad year to invest in London's housing market

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  • Investors in London's turbulent housing market can expect a shaky year
  • In a note sent to clients, strategist Caroline Simmons said surveyors expect prices in the capital to fall by 0.4% this year, compared to a 2% rise in 2017.
  • Prices in Prime Central London have fallen the furthest, but that decline seems to have bottomed out.


LONDON - Investors in London's housing market can expect a shaky year, according to UBS Wealth Management.

In a note sent to clients, strategist Caroline Simmons said surveyors expect prices in the capital to fall by 0.4% this year, compared to a 2% rise in 2017.

House prices across the country are expected to rise by 4% in 2018, which means a historical trend has been reversed: London is now lagging behind the rest of the country in terms of price growth.

London outperformed the UK consistently - until 2017

Screen Shot 2018 01 26 at 12.05.59

Land Registry, UBS, as of 31 October 2017

(Annual London vs UK house price growth, y/y)

Average London prices have underperformed the UK only once in the last 10 years, but growth in London was below the UK average in every month of 2017.

"London has likely underperformed due to higher prices in London, and thus lower affordability; with less benefit from government initiatives [like Help-to-Buy], and greater impact from tax changes in the past few years," Simmons wrote.

Prices in Prime Central London - where a £1 million house counts as a bargain - have fallen the furthest, down 7.4% on average from their 2007 peak, according to data from Knight Frank, but the rate of decline appears to be slowing. The year-on-year rate of decline bottomed in January 2017 at -6.7%, and moderated at -2.2% by the end of November.

Greater London's negative price outlook could be starting to stabilise, too. November 2017's reading from the monthly RICS poll of surveyors marked 22 months of almost consistently negative price expectations, and more surveyors still expect a fall in London house prices than expect a rise.

But the month on month proportion seems to be shrinking: November's reading was the lowest since the EU referendum in June 2016, while December's reading was the lowest since at any point since April last year.