Table of contents
This Australian city will be world’s strongest prime property market in 2021. - featured image
By
A A A

This Australian city will be world’s strongest prime property market in 2021.

Sydney's luxury home market will be world’s strongest prime property market in 2021 according to international property consultancy Knight Frank with prices forecast to rise faster than envisaged just six months ago.

However  in 2022, Australia’s biggest city, crowned the most improved prime residential market, will share the top spot with London, with both cities forecast to see prime prices accelerate 7% year-on-year.

This rise would represent prime central London’s strongest annual price performance in almost seven years.

Global Prime Price Forecast by city

Annual % change (as of June 2021)

2021 2022
Sydney 10% 7%
Miami 6% 4%
Los Angeles 5% 5%
Hong Kong 5% 5%
New York 4% 3%
Paris 4% 4%
Geneva 4% 6%
Singapore 3% 5%
Auckland 3% 4%
Madrid 3% 6%
London 2% 7%

Since the start of the pandemic, Knight Frank’s global research team has undertaken three prime price forecasts, with the average overall forecast tracking higher each time.

Back in May 2020, Knight Frank envisaged prime prices climbing 1% on average in 2021, this changed to 3% in December 2020, and in July 2021 now sits at 4%.

Revealing what has driven the forecast, Kate Everett-Allen, head of international residential research at Knight Frank said:

“Government fiscal stimulus measures have been revised upwards, protecting jobs and incomes via furlough schemes meaning there have been few forced property sales. Banks in key developed markets offered mortgage holidays to customers reducing repossessions and foreclosures.

Households accrued a total of over US$5 trillion globally in savings during lockdown, enabling some homeowners to undertake home improvements but others have opted to relocate, upsize, downsize or buy a second home/investment property.”

Michelle Ciesielski, Knight Frank Australia’s head of residential research said:

“Lockdowns and the COVID pandemic haven’t yet had a negative impact on Sydney’s luxury property market – in fact, they are carrying it from strength to strength, with wealthy Aussies purchasing luxury properties domestically instead of overseas.

“Although lockdowns are currently in place, exclusive viewings are custom when buying prestige residential property and in many instances off-market purchases were already taking place with ultra-wealthy Australians who have been grounded on home soil for the past 16 months.”

Tax and lending incentives also motivated buyers.

From stamp duty holidays to relaxed loan-to-value ratios many householders took advantage of lower purchase costs and/or accessed mortgage finance with smaller deposits.

Construction rates slowed due to lockdowns and social distancing exacerbated the lack of new supply in several key cities putting upward pressure on prices.

Changes to working patterns prompted some homeowners to rethink their lifestyles rendering the five-day commute obsolete for some industries and enabling a move to the suburbs or countryside.

The award for the most improved market goes to Sydney with our 2021 forecast rising from 3% in December 2020 to 10% in July 2021, a rise of 7%.

Closed borders have seen wealthy Australians purchase at home instead of abroad.

The first quarter of 2021 saw 1,429 prime sales recorded, the highest quarterly figure on record for Sydney, and despite recent lockdowns, momentum is being maintained.

Hong Kong and New York aren’t far behind Sydney with their 2021 forecasts shifting up by 5% and 4% respectively between December 2020 and June 2021.

According to Martin Wong, head of research and consultancy at Knight Frank Greater China:

“Despite four waves of the virus, Hong Kong’s luxury residential market has proved resilient with several transactions of note taking place in The Peak and Mid-Levels in the first half of 2021.

Economic forecasts have been revised upwards, 35% of the population has now had their first vaccination and sentiment is improving with capital flows from the Chinese mainland a key driver.”

The outlook is even more upbeat in New York.

As Liam Bailey, Knight Frank’s Global Head of Research noted,

“New York is back, restaurants are crowded, flights are packed, the Yankee Stadium is at full capacity and corporate America is calling its workers back.”

Much like London, the 4% price growth we envisage in 2021 will mark New York’s return to positive price growth for the first time since 2018 and its strongest performance since 2015. Hickson Rd Dusk Living

Prime markets have arguably operated against a more challenging backdrop during the pandemic than mainstream housing markets due to their strong international bias and the stringent travel bans put in place.

For some cities, this means it’s likely to be 2022 before the effects of looser travel arrangements start to be felt and prime sales gain traction, but for other cities such as Miami, Auckland, Hong Kong, and Geneva their domestic prime buyers are compensating for the absence of non-residents.

The outlook for prime residential markets will be closely tied to the ease with which cross-border transactions can start to normalise, and whilst virtual viewings and improved technology have assisted in this area, the reality is the resumption of commercial air travel will be key.

Key factors which could boost or stymie prime markets over the next 12 months:

Headwinds Tailwinds
Path of the Delta variant (& others) Easing of travel restrictions
Slow vaccine rollouts (+ vaccine protectionism)  

Low stock levels will support prices

Higher taxes & cooling measures Accrued savings
Rising interest rates City reinvention - wellness & sustainability

About Brett Warren is National Director of Metropole Properties and uses his two decades of property investment experience to advise clients how to grow, protect and pass on their wealth through strategic property advice.
No comments

Guides

Copyright © 2024 Michael Yardney’s Property Investment Update Important Information
Content Marketing by GridConcepts