Print this article
Prime Property Had Strong 2007, Headwinds Build, Say Citi, Knight Frank
Tom Burroughes
2 June 2008
A study of prime property prices around the world shows they surged by an average rate of 11 per cent last year, with some individual cities posting much faster growth rates, although the pace may slacken this year, according to a recently published report. The 2008 annual wealth report byCiti Private Bank andKnight Frank, the property firm, said the average price of prime properties in London set the fastest growth rate of 35 cities and regions it tracked. Prices in
At the bottom end of the league table, meanwhile, is
Much of the strongest growth rates, the report said, came in financial centres and low-tax jurisdictions, which have attracted high net worth individuals. “Five of the top 10 growth locations in 2007 were in this group,” the report noted. Even though the credit crisis blew up last summer,
However, the report cautioned: “Since September , the prime and mainstream markets have slowed and activity and price growth should slow further into 2008, but at the top end of the market there has been no such slowdown.” One reason why the most expensive
Elsewhere, the report said that with the exception of
In Africa, some price trends were strong: prices in
However, the picture is more sombre in the