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Lots going for us

Crisis creates opportunity for enlightened investors with funds and foresight.

January 27, 2010 17:42
Former pumping station on more than five acres of land in Enfield, sold by King Sturge for £1.52 million

ByCharlie Jacoby, Charlie Jacoby

12 min read

Property auctioneers had it tough in 2009. While admitting that 2010 may offer an end to recession variously described as “corrugated” or “W-shaped”, they face the year with renewed vigour and cheer. The bumpy ride in 2009 included a continuing slowdown in property transactions, the collapse of the residential housing market, price falls of 40 per cent in the commercial sector and banks unwilling to lend to each other as the LIBOR remained high, putting the cost of borrowing at home beyond many private investors. Volumes continued to fall at auctions nationwide, as many vendors preferred to hold, rather than sell while pricing was volatile. Margins on prices achieved above reserve continued to narrow, hitting revenues. In the first half of 2009 alone, £440 million was wiped off the total revenue of the UK’s top 12 residential sale rooms, a 29 per cent fall on the same period in 2008.

So what’s to be cheerful about? John Weatherall of Andrews & Robertson points out that crisis creates opportunity for enlightened investors with funds and the foresight to take advantage of marked declines in values, recognising that the best time to get into a market is when others are not.

“With talk of a corrugated recession with smaller fluctuations in values and sentiment gathering pace, many would-be buyers only now feel able to recognise and reflect upon the missed opportunities of last year and contemplating where to put their money in 2010,” he says. “While some may say ‘if only’ and ‘I wasn’t sure’, our experience as auctioneers since the crash of 1974 has proved how fortune can favour the brave. For many of those who are now key players in the industry, times of early recovery proved pivotal.”

Andrews & Robertson’s opening sales of 2009 witnessed strong demand for all types of property in London and the South of England, which intensified as the year unfolded. In June, it raised the third-highest price nationally on a single lot, a mixed commercial/residential investment in Balham Hill, London SW12. Guided at £4 million, it sold for £4.3 million.