Meanwhile Frank Webster - director of Finders Keepers, a well-respected letting agency in Oxford recently acquired by Countrywide - tweeted: “UK voters opt to jump off a big cliff with long fall ahead. All of us asked to vote for something none of us understand.”
Other agents have issued statements to express their views.
“The decision to leave the EU will be most keenly felt in the London housing market which is fully valued and already facing headwinds. History shows that external shocks can reduce sales volumes by as much as 20 per cent” says Hometrack’s research director Richard Donnell.
Adam Challis of JLL says: “We expect an immediate slowdown in housing market transactions, in the order of 10 per cent to 15 per cent, resulting in downward pressure on prices for at least a couple of years. We anticipate current activity levels will return but this is unlikely before late in 2018.”
Andy Martin, senior partner at Strutt & Parker says: “It is going to cause a huge amount of disruption to the markets while everybody takes stock of what it actually means and the government starts giving us clear policy direction. Before then we are going to have volatility, which is a risky thing to have in these markets because economic performance is still not something that is a given.
“As a firm, we are market driven. The market has shown signs of volatility in the lead up to this vote. We have seen a real cutback in trading due to the uncertainty of this vote. What we are now waiting to see is how our clients and markets will react to this. I suspect that they will continue to tread with caution until they can see the outcome.”
Mark Granger, chief executive of Carter Jonas, says: “With a vote to leave, the UK property market is unlikely to escape the wider economic instability which is anticipated over the coming months. However, recent volatility in the bond and equities markets reinforce the case for real estate investment, as property continues to provide long term income stability and the ability to add value through active asset management.
“Looking forward, we firmly believe that fundamentals will continue to drive the UK property market. The UK has one of the largest and most sophisticated property markets in the world and because of this it should remain a magnet for global occupiers and investors” says Granger.
“A vote for Brexit will immediately see the value of Sterling fall” warns Martin Bikhit of Kay & Co., a London agency.
“This will, in turn, create a spike in demand as London property will be more attractive to opportunistic investors who will take advantage of the bigger spending power, but it is the wrong sort of demand that will ebb away as prices fall. Normally, the falling prices should spur the market into action, however, I can see that both domestic and foreign buyers will continue to wait and see how far prices can or do fall, to make the most of their money.”
Charles Curran, principal of Maskells estate agency in London, says: “We expect the domestic buyers to remain subdued, perhaps opting for rental accommodation (rents being low for the time being due to oversupply and high cost of acquisition), but we do we expect more interest and volumes from overseas buyers. An unwanted consequence of leaving the EU is that our currency will depreciate, making property cheaper in net terms compensating for the high stamp duty in prime and prime central London.”
Alex Newall, managing director of another prime market agency, Hanover Private Office, says: “We can no longer use past data accurately to help predict the future. Over the next two years, until Brexit actually happens, gradually the rule book will be re-written on asset prices in the UK. Yield hunters, e.g. pension funds, will have to be careful to protect their underlying asset value over the next two years and pre-planned exit strategies will need to be considered.”
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The pessimism is way overdone.
Those already decided to move will do so. The pattern for the next 6 months at least is already set.
Yes, lenders may wind back criteria for lending from where it is now, and that applies for both secured and unsecured. However, the BOE are primed for a rate cut to soften impact from this type of reaction.
Moreover, the current 'bubble-esque' conditions driven by QE in the first instance are likely to be maintained by either the prospect of further injections of liquidity or indeed on the actuality of further QE.
Right now, 09:30 the markets and sterling are coming back.
FFS, don't allow the over-reaction to become a self fulfilling prophesy.
The BOE have made it clear Sterling and Markets will not be allowed to come to harm.
Mortgages are still cheap. There are still more buyers overall than homes.
This will not change.
Do NOT allow sentiment to drive things, be driven on the facts. And the facts are that this economy has a huge amount of backing.
Well commented Matt my sentiments exactly
Indeed. One Agent just emailed:
"Keep calm and carry ! It will be fine FTSE and £ already coming back"
We are exchanging on deals this morning just fine.
Sorry chaps, its going to be a hard one, 5 to 10 years grind min. It feels like black Friday in 1987 all over again. It got so bad then that a third of Chartered surveyors lost their jobs and agents like Knight Frank were charging for viewings. Should be a good time to set up in 3 to 5 years time to catch the wave. Good luck everyone
I do not know where you have been hiding for the last 30 years but the economy and institutions have changed a lot in that time.
Still nothing like an old dinosaur giving out a scare.
We are still listing properties, we still have customers viewing those properties and we are still selling those properties. Although I am absolutely gutted with the result we carry on doing our job to the best of our ability, and leave the rest to the people best qualified to sort that out. Simples.
Exactly that, tied up two today and listed two :)
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