Company Tag: London Central Portfolio
Nine Elms’ new-builds flood the lettings market
Prices slide across SE11, SW11 and SW8 as available listings soar by 28%
Just how bad was 2016 for London’s new-build market?
Full-year new-build sales figures make for some pretty grim reading...
INTERVIEW: Naomi Heaton on 25 years of finding returns in PCL
The CEO of London Central Portfolio shares her top five investment property picks, the three steps to finding value in PCL, and discusses the importance - or not - of timing
‘The centre of gravity has shifted in Prime Central London’
Land Registry stats show huge gulf in performance between neighbourhoods as buyers seek out value and new transport links
Just 64 deals a week in Prime Central London last year
Full-year data from Land Registry reveals all-time low for transactions as prices hit all-time high
The number of company-owned properties has plummeted as ATED hits home
Government strategy to cull wrapped property ownership structures has succeeded, says London Central Portfolio
Welcome but underwhelming: Prime resi industry reactions to the Housing White Paper
Proposals to get more homes built faster and to boost the private rented sector are good, but are they enough to "fix the broken housing market"?
Chelsea and new-builds bear the brunt of Prime Central London’s falling market
Deal numbers tumbled by 28.5% in Chelsea last year, while prices fell by 12.2%
‘A challenging year’: Prime Central London’s property transaction collapse
PCL deal numbers are "similar to levels during the Global Financial Crisis" according to LCP's analysis of Land Registry data
Super-prime new-build sales plummet
Analysis of Land Registry data suggests just nine £5m+ new-build properties were sold between May and October
London’s prime property market dip to drive a £1.6bn cut in this year’s SDLT receipts
Stamp duty receipts "so far this year have been much weaker than expected" says the OBR
#AutumnStatement: The prime resi industry reacts
What the luxury property sector thinks about the abolition of letting agency fees, more money for housebuilding and infrastructure, and no changes to stamp duty