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High end houses pushing £5m tag



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Published Date: 08 June 2008
SCOTLAND is expected this year to break through the £5m barrier for the most expensive house sold, as the property market north of the border continues to hold up despite the global economic slowdown.
Estate agent Strutt & Parker has predicted the milestone will be reached in Edinburgh this year, based on the record number of million-pound-plus homes it has sold in recent months and the properties about to come on the market.

The highest reside
ntial house sale in Scotland to date was the £5m obtained for Seton Castle in East Lothian last year, but the highest price yet for an Edinburgh property is £4.95m.

Strutt & Parker said it sold 15 homes for more than £1m across Scotland in the first quarter of this year, up from nine over the same period in 2007.

Its country house department is averaging a sale price of 19.1% above the asking price, compared with 18% last year. It is not just Strutt & Parker that says the top end of the market remains buoyant. Total sales of properties over a million pounds increased throughout Scotland by 138% last year.

Blair Stewart, head of Strutt & Parker's Edinburgh residential department, said: "We have four properties coming on the market at offers over £3m in the next few months. That's double the number we had last year.

"A £5m sale is within reach in the city of Edinburgh this year. There are opportunities for people to buy a grand house in Edinburgh and refurbish it to increase the value."

This month the estate agent is to start marketing Langham House, a 10,000 square foot mansion and the former headquarters of housebuilding company Applecross, on Grange Loan at offers over £3.35m.

Stewart added there is strong demand for such prime properties from southern buyers and wealthy Edinburgh residents who are looking to trade up. The most expensive areas of the city where a £5m-plus sale is likely to occur include The Grange, Barnton and Murrayfield.

Despite the increase in house prices, Scotland is still much more affordable than London. The premium price per square foot for a top-end residential property in London is £4,600, compared with £640 in Edinburgh. Strutt & Parker currently has a property on the market at Cheval Place in Knightsbridge for £45m.

Reports from private banks and solicitors provide further evidence that the top-end Scottish housing market remains buoyant.

Graham Keith, senior solicitor in the property team at HBJ Gateley Wareing, said: "The global credit crunch has not really affected the type of client who is buying property over the million-pound mark.

"In almost all cases such clients will be financing a large proportion of the price from personal funds rather than a mortgage. These clients are likely to have funds available from other sources such as the sale of a business or investment properties, or indeed cash in the bank."

HSBC Private Bank in Scotland said it has not seen any slowdown in the demand for mortgages or loans for more than £1m.





The full article contains 515 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

Kingston,

Singapore 08/06/2008 03:19:12
The Scotsman obviously has an agenda to hype the property market.

It is also clear that it lobbies for developers and house builders.

Despite this type of reporting, the property market is sinking.
2

JRA,

08/06/2008 08:10:50
#1. Yes, and you among others have an agenda to talk the market down, driven by paranoia and a simplistic view.

There are 3 articles in todays Scotsman that discuss the negative trajectory of the property market. Interesting that you choose to comment on this one.

This article is discussing a property micro market, The purchasers at this end of the market barely require credit and are therefore beyond the direct impact of the current credit shock.

Where facts are few experts are many, eh Kingston.
3

ccc,

08/06/2008 11:26:28
#2.

Yes the Scotsman has had more reasonable property stories in recent weeks. That is only because they have got to the point where they cannot deny the obvious.

Let's have a look at the first paragraph of this article.

"as the property market north of the border continues to hold up despite the global economic slowdown"

That is nonsense. This article relates, as you say, to specifically high end houses that are in reality no barometer of the market as a whole. Yet the opening statement gives the impression this story is about the entire market. That is misleading to say the least.

As usual the headline paragraph puts a slightly overly optimistic view on the details within.

It is getting better though !!!
4

techpunk,

10/06/2008 19:33:58
no surprise there then.

current negative press comments on how the residential property market is (UK-wide)going to fall heavily are now seen as a major directive towards (slight) downturn (markets need confidence, people follow press): check the most recent resi property reports at RICS.com (after all, they are the profs).

0.1 percent drop in UK in last quarter. WooHOO!

hardly cause for concern.

BTL still a good investment for most (as.
it allways has been).

no mass downstream of panic-sells on the market (not just in scotland, again UK wide)....havent seen any yet.

so hang on to your horses.
5

techpunk,

10/06/2008 19:40:10
actually, in summation, no effetc in the last 2 or 3 months, despite soothsay reports over that period.

really not surprising.
6

techpunk,

10/06/2008 19:52:40
sorry, 0.1 pc drop in last month.....

 

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