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Bidders invest energy at auction

June 11, 2009 16:36
Property Dairy wood street E17

ByCharlie Jacoby, Charlie Jacoby

3 min read

Secondary retail properties producing high-income streams sparked competitive bidding at Andrews & Robertson’s residential and commercial property auction, as enthusiastic buyers chased keenly priced stock in London and the South East.

Prices at London’s New Connaught Room sale on June 4 averaged 20 per cent above guides, raising totals of £17 million, as 70 per cent of 107 lots found buyers, against £7 million and 65 per cent in April.
Star performer at the event was lot 39, an unbroken parade of four shops, eight flats and a D1 unit close to Clapham Common with a variety of commercial covenant strengths including Sainsbury’s. The mixed-use multi-let building, guided between £3.75 million and £4 million, produced £286,410 a year and sold under the hammer for £4.35 million and a yield of 6.2 per cent, making it the third largest lot to sell through auction this year.

Robin Cripp, chief executive and senior auctioneer, says this confirmed that investors still had an appetite for correctly-priced larger lots, though funding was still an issue for some.

Mr Cripp says: “We were delighted with the result. It demonstrates categorically to vendors that we are as capable as some of the larger auction houses of selling big-ticket items.