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Real estate

Luxury house prices worldwide show further signs of stabilization in Q3

November 2, 2023

The wealthy and UHNWI are fairly resilient to market trends as long as their stock portfolios and key asset values hold up. Image: Shutterstock The wealthy and UHNWI are fairly resilient to market trends as long as their stock portfolios and key asset values hold up. Image: Shutterstock

 

Tight inventory in luxury housing, high interest and mortgage rates, a generously spending U.S. consumer and retail as commercial real estate’s star performer have caught the eye of the head of global research at British property consultant Knight Frank.

Liam Bailey, in a comprehensive take on the prime housing and commercial real estate market and the trends that drive prices and demand, sees strong growth based on Knight Frank’s indicators.

Here, in his words, is Mr. Bailey’s take on the latest trends in property and economics worldwide:


Luxury house prices across the world showed further signs of stabilization during the third quarter.

Average annual prices rose 2.1 percent during the year to September across the 46 markets covered by the Knight Frank Prime Global Cities Index, which is the strongest rate of growth since third-quarter 2022.

Though central bankers are eager to make the point that interest rates will remain higher for longer, the decision by many to pause their tightening cycles has boosted sentiment.

Meanwhile, a lack of stock in many markets is putting a floor under values that would otherwise soften further.

That said, this revival in demand is fragile and could be pushed off course if inflation surprises on the upside.

A more sustained upswing in demand and pricing will only be achieved once rates begin to move lower – which is unlikely to take place before mid-2024.

For a full breakdown of which cities are outperforming and why, see the report.

U.K. perspective
The United Kingdom offers a good illustration of how constrained supply impacts values.

House prices rose 0.9 percent during October after taking account of seasonal effects, Nationwide said. The annual rate of change improved to -3.3 percent, from -5.3 percent in September.

Mortgage rates at more than 5 percent are prompting people to delay moving home, and the supply of properties for sale has now declined for three consecutive months, according to the RICS September survey.

Average stock levels on estate agents books has held broadly steady at 38 properties since July, which is very low by historic standards.

"There is little sign of forced selling, which would exert downward pressure on prices, as labor market conditions are solid and mortgage arrears are at historically low levels," said Nationwide chief economist Robert Gardner.

The data reinforces our view that the prevailing downturn will be characterized by sluggish activity and relatively resilient prices.

We expect U.K. values to fall 7 percent this year and 4 percent next year as inflation comes under control and mortgage rates stabilize.

European inflation
The prospect of a nasty surprise when it comes to inflation looks more remote with each month that ticks by.

The annual rate of inflation in the Euro area plunged to 2.9 percent in October, down from 4.3 percent in September, according to official figures just published. That is the slowest rate of growth since the summer of 2021.

The figures are flattered by a steep drop in energy prices, which analysts think will level off as a result of the conflict in the middle east at the very least, but core inflation continues to ease in-line with expectations.

It is too early to entertain the prospect of rate cuts, according to several members of the European Central Bank Governing Council interviewed by Bloomberg in recent days.

Officials still do not think the annual rate of inflation will return to the 2 percent target until the second half of 2025. That could mean almost two years to bring the annual rate down by another 0.9 percent.

Different jobs
The ECB's job, on the face of it, looks considerably easier than the Federal Reserve's.

Separate figures published yesterday showed that economic output in the Euro area shrank 0.1 percent in the third quarter.

Higher interest rates are translating rapidly into falling demand for goods and services.

Output in Germany's manufacturing sector, the so-called engine of the European economy, is falling at the fastest rate since the onset of the pandemic.

The U.S. economy by contrast is humming along nicely.

Economic output almost doubled to 4.9 percent in the third quarter, the fastest rate of growth in almost two years.

Worryingly, consumers drove the acceleration by spending on everything from cars to restaurant meals, according to an AP analysis of the figures.

Nevertheless, economists expect the Federal Reserve to keep rates unchanged in a range of 5.25 percent to 5.5 percent.

“It will be kind of a hawkish pause,” said Thomas Simons, senior economist at Jefferies tells Bloomberg. “The economy is doing well and inflation hasn’t gotten to target yet. They more or less have to continue to say we may need to raise rates one more time.”

The retail renaissance
In 2018, the retail market was on its knees.

A wave of CVAs led to spiralling vacancy rates. Rents and capital values were in freefall. Then along came the pandemic to surely put the retail market out of its misery once and for all – except it did not.

Few back in 2018 would have wagered that retail would reclaim its crown as the top-performing commercial real estate class by 2023, but that is the case.

The sector has met many challenges head on, and forecast total returns for the sector sit at 5.7 percent for the calendar year.

Yet not many investors within the retail sector would acknowledge this with any sense of triumphalism, given the outlook, Stephen Springham and Emma Barnstable write in the introduction of a new in-depth report.

The previous report, published five years ago, pin-pointed 10 structural failings that the sector would need to overcome to thrive. The pair return to those themes to offer detailed insights as to how investors can navigate the sector amid the massive changes that still lie ahead.