The First Day Of Allsop’s London Auction Bodes Well For The Property Market In General
September 18th, 2008 by Karelia | No Comments | Filed in House Prices, London House Prices, Property Market NewsMusings of a London Property Finder
The Allsops auction today sold well with bargains galore but at reasonable prices for an auction, which proves there is an appetite for property priced correctly in London and the South East. The plethora of residential investments were selling at approximately 8% yield. Most of the vacant residential stock was at the lower end of the market but there were a few more desirable gems sold for a song.
Lot 87, a five storey house on busy Kennington Park Road was sold for £600,000, approximately half that of neighbouring 237 and 335 which sold for £970,000 and £1.15m respectively, last August. Presumably even a canny investor would want to spend upwards of £100,000 on the property but doing so could make it a spacious 3 or 4 bedroom family house with further bedrooms /playroom/ independent flat or gym and media room in the basement.
Lot 92, a four bedroom house in Wooten on the Isle of Wight, looked over-priced for an auction at £320,000 and didn’t sell.
A freehold 2 storey Victorian 3 bedroom house was sold in Walworth for £215,500, less than a new-build 2 bed flat on the market round the corner and only a little over the price of a 3 bed flat in a period housing association block.
Lot 135 also looked good value for a 2/3 bed Victorian cottage in Newhaven. Not since 2002 have homes on this road been sold so low – this made £105,000 and would have sold for circa £160K last year, done up. The problem is that renovations cost the same at this end of the market, but there is little room for profit unless the buyer plans to do the work themselves. For this reason, auction prices in London and the South East still aren’t low enough to attract investors in droves, which bodes well for the ability of property prices to continue to stand up in these areas.
Good quality new build also made an appearance with 2 four bedroom houses sold in Oxley Park, Milton Keynes. But despite the gloom mongering in the press, at least one of the owners still made money: Number 2 sold for £189,995 in June 2006 – presumably the ‘brand new’ price and made £267,000 today at auction, so hopefully after paying off the mortgage and other debts, the owners will still be able to pocket a tidy sum. But the trick is in the buying. Another new-build repossession in Knight Road in Rendlesham, Suffolk was bought in 2005 for £340,000 and was sold today at auction for £185,000.
A speculative bidder picked up a backland site with vehicular access in Northolt, London for £30,000 which should net a minimum 300% profit in a few years or double that if they decide to build.
All in all, this was a solid auction, with c. 50% investment property. Vacant residential stock was mostly priced under £400,000 and sold for around the guide price or 20-25% below the price if sold through an estate agency. Given that at the bottom end there is little room for making profit since inevitably renovations are required, this shows the appetite for property in London and the South East and bodes well for the housing market in these areas. The London Property Finder says auctions are good places to buy!
Tags: Auctions, Bargains in Souh East, House price bargains, london auction property, London Property Finder
