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Auctions: what next?

May 26, 2015 11:30
A Southall house sold by Auction House London for £311,000, ‘well above’ its guide and reserve

ByCharlie Jacoby, Charlie Jacoby

2 min read

The next round of property auctions is happening now - and they will be popular, if the spring series is anything to go by. Andrew Scott Robertson raised more than £14.1 million from its second auction of 2015. A diverse residential and commercial portfolio brought a strong 82 per cent success rate. Largest lot sold under the hammer was a freehold building arranged as four flats, in Camberwell, SE5, sold at £1.21 million.

A ground-rent investment in Fulham achieved more than seven times the asking price, selling for £33,000, and a terraced house in Plumstead attracted 74 viewings and more than 100 legal-document downloads, selling for £316,000 (£76,000 over guide).

As ever, properties with development potential sold well. A roof space in Oval, SW9, with planning submitted for a mansard roof extension, went for £40,000 (guide, £25,000). And with the South Coast a favourite of those escaping London's house prices, a vacant house in the Kemptown area of Brighton, guided at £185,000, attracted strong bidding, selling for £275,000.

Robin Cripp, chairman and head of auctions at Andrew Scott Robertson, says: "Despite the latest industry figures indicating a cooling off in the auction market in the run-up to the election, our results continue to indicate a strong demand for auction property. The large turnout demonstrates a keen interest from investors, institutions and the public, and hammer prices are encouragingly positive."