Jump to content

Have house prices actually fallen in ED?


Recommended Posts

Despite everything I keep reading about the flagging state of the housing market, can anyone confirm whether prices in ED have actually dropped at all? Just looking in Estate Agent windows it would appear not, but I know that there is a big difference between asking prices and selling prices.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Dropped, considerably. Don't be fooled by the what's for sale price they are achieving no where near this. 60+ grand below asking price offers and estate agents raising them to counter this. Buyers are not having any of it and are pulling asking prices down before they even offer.


Its only serious cash money buyers who are going for the larger properties. Everyone in mid size houses, effected by pay freezes are stuck , they can't make the jump so the market has really shrunk. If Gordon had not ringfenced the Bank of England interest rates at 0% it would be a bloody massacre out there right now.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

House prices are near 2007 levels if not above.


Stories of falling house prices normally refer to UK, London had a small fall but seems to have recovered. East Dulwich in 2009 seemed cheap compared to clapham/balham/wandsworth, so it may even go up further, but def on the rise over the last 12 months imo.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The rate of house price increase certainly slowed wouldn't say they actually have fallen compared to fourth quarter 2007 overall.


Houses are being sold at around 94% of asking price on average...


Check the link out too see that apparently Southwark is the biggest gainer in London for first quarter 2011.


http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/mortgages-and-homes/house-prices/article.html?in_article_id=533622&in_page_id=57&ct=5


trebles all round for ED homeowners?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Southwark may be the biggest gainer , but its not because of ED dears! And no way are Houseprices anywhere near some of 2007 prices! if anything its 4years of static growth. I think the best specfic indicator is what houses / flats actually achieved. Obviously if a house was on for ?670000 in Crystal Palace Road and acheived ?620000 or ?695000 in Melbourne grve and achieved ?628000 cant see how thats 94% of asking price? These wider figures can be well massaged, the Land Registry can not.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

i don't think things are actually going for much more than in the past (check out land registry records to see) but asking prices seem to have shot up to often ridiculous levels. small 3 bed - 91 sq m - for sale on Marsden Road for ?575k - or severely run-down 4-bed on Grove Hill for ?595k - get real! and that's the Peckham Rye side.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think it depends on the type of property. The 2-3 bed terraced houses that have been renovated well seem to be selling very quickly at or close to asking price.


A 2 bed near us sold within 2 weeks at a price close to 2007 levels.


Of course there will always be one agent on LL who puts houses on the market at ridiculous asking prices that will eventually have to drop to more realistic levels. Your examples of price drops aren't all marketed by Foxtons are they Thomas?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Estate agents do encourage sellers to ask more than the true value so they will become the sole agent however, once an offer comes in for way less than the asking price, they will suggest accepting it because they are desperate for their commission.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

A house that we looked at in ED in autumn 2009 (which sold for asking price of ?670k) came back onto the market the other week at ?820k and is now under offer... We weren't looking in 2007 so don't know what it would have fetched at the peak, but I was pretty amazed to see such a massive jump in price in just over 18 months...
Link to comment
Share on other sites

amberwood Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> A house that we looked at in ED in autumn 2009

> (which sold for asking price of ?670k) came back

> onto the market the other week at ?820k and is now

> under offer... We weren't looking in 2007 so

> don't know what it would have fetched at the peak,

> but I was pretty amazed to see such a massive jump

> in price in just over 18 months...


Im guessing but this may be a Friern Road house? If so it has a side return, which looks pretty goo, but I don't know if the side return has been done since 2009.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Yesterday my bank card was stolen from the ATM at Sainsbury’s, Dog Kennel Hill. It may be helpful to others to describe what happened and suggest how to avoid it. I put my bank card into the ATM, entered my PIN and pressed the button to withdraw cash. Then a young man approached me from behind and warned me that the machine swallowed one's card - which it appeared to have done. What had actually happened was that the man had viewed me entering my PIN and then, as soon as I turned towards him, pressed the "return card" button and removed the card without my seeing. So I would advise: (1) Always shield the keypad when entering your PIN at an ATM. (2) If someone speaks to you, keep looking straight ahead and put your hand over the slot where the card has been inserted. (3) If all that fails and you lose your card, cancel it at once! (I can do so using my banking app.) The rogue who stole my card promptly made several cash withdrawals, which the bank has very decently refunded to me in full.
    • Are there any Celia Hammond volunteers local to SE22 Underhill Rd?
    • Zeret is amazing, run by wonderful people make sure you have the coffee ceremony at the end as well 
    • I'd recommend just using the Hub's website to get caught up on this. I'm not sure why it wasn't posted at the very beginning because it is always best to go to the source especially since the original poster just copy/pasted directly from their news: https://carnegielibraryhub.org.uk/the-carnegie-library-hub-is-at-a-difficult-juncture/ The older EDF posts look irrelevant to the issues the Hub is having with the council since the main issue stems from a decision from the council in 2023. It doesn't look like the council is shutting down the library, but revising the library's operators terms, which then has prompted the operator to determine it'd be better to shut down than continue on? Their 3 main points of contention don't mention the council kicking them out, but rather reducing their scope within the building. "Consequently, the trustees and team have decided that, with Lambeth as a principal stakeholder and with the new restricted terms of tenancy which Lambeth appears unwilling to materially negotiate on, we are not able to fulfil our charitable objectives and have no choice than to set a timetable for an orderly close. We have informed all of our partners that we no longer have secure tenancy and will be closing by the end of December 2024 unless we can urgently agree terms that foster success for community use aligning with our charitable objectives."   "new restricted terms of tenancy" doesn't equate to "we no longer have secure tenancy". To me this reads as they're fed up and would rather close down due to their frustrations. That seems fair enough to me, but I think they should just say that, since it's how the entire thing reads to me. I've been to the library loads of times with my child for parties and school events. It's a lovely place and it would be better if the Hub could continue as it is, but this also gives me the vibe that if they can't have it their way then they'll shut down entirely.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...