Tax
Potential Tax Changes Are Top Deterrent To Wealthy Foreigners Buying In London
					
  Eighty-eight per cent of wealth advisors surveyed by Knight Frank
  cited the
  changing tax environment as the strongest deterrent to buying
  super-prime property in the
  UK.
  New York is perceived as its
  biggest competitor, the real estate firm found in its
  Super-Prime London Report 2012 report. The new report
  underlines the fact that the prime London real estate market's
  soaring recovery is more fragile than it looks. 
  Since 1976 gold prices have risen 802 per cent and central
  London
  house prices have climbed 2,685 per cent - geopolitical and
  security concerns in other countries are the biggest
  drivers for those considering buying or renting in super-prime
  London.
  "But over the past decade the
  price of a typical super-prime residential property in London
  had
  plunged in gold terms," the report said. "In 2002 it would have
  taken
  you 24,000 ounces of gold to buy a super-prime mansion in SW1. A
  decade
  on, you would get change from 9,800 ounces."
  In terms of prime rents, weaker employment prospects in the City
  have
  pushed down prices across the board in London over recent months.
  The
  report found that in the £6,000-plus/week market, the falls have
  been
  limited to -1.3 per cent, compared to -1.7 per cent in the wider
  prime
  market. "Anecdotally, the super-prime rental sector is slightly
  more
  protected from short-term employment market weakness, due to the
  greater
  preponderance of entrepreneurs and senior management," it said.
Overall, Knight Frank forecasts zero per cent growth in the super prime market in 2013, but with a return to positive growth in 2014.
  Nevertheless, London’s
  super-prime residential market has weathered the global
  financial
  storms of the past year, with 2011 turning out a record year for
  the £10
  million-plus (US$16 million) market and the first half of
  2012
  pointing to a continued solid performance, new research from
  
  Knight Frank shows.
  Overall, prices in the £10 million-plus market rose 9.4 per cent
  in
  the 12 months to August 2012, while the rate of growth has slowed
  from 3
  per cent in the three months to May 2012 to 1.8 per cent in
  the
  subsequent three months to August, the real estate firm found.
  The findings illustrate how London is still able to attract
  foreign
  wealth through lifestyle, security, stability and educational
  factors:
  "There is plenty of money around and much of it is targeted at
  the top
  of the London market," it said.
  But the performance of the prime and super-prime London
  property
  market has attracted the attention of politicians in the UK,
  as
  uncertainty around legislative - especially tax - changes is a
  key
  concern for potential investors at the top end of the market, the
  firm
  noted.
  "It appears that the new top rate of stamp duty for individuals
  at 7
  per cent has not undermined the market significantly. Sales are
  down in
  the £2 million to £5 million bracket but above that level the
  market has
  been relatively resilient. The problem pressing on the market is
  the
  uncertainty as to whether politicians have done their worst yet."
  The report found that over the past two years 67 per cent of
  buyers
  in the super-prime market have come from overseas. London, it
  said, has
  the most diverse range of nationalities buying in any key global
  city.