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More homes sliding below £1m mark

posted : FRIDAY, 6TH NOVEMBER 2009 06:40:48 GMT comments : 4

filed under : PROPERTY NEWS
- Search: Home prices slides

The number of homes worth more than £1 million has fallen
The number of homes worth more than £1 million has fallen

The number of homes worth more than £1 million has fallen by a third during the past two years, research has shown.

Around one in every 97 properties in Great Britain was worth at least seven figures before the housing market correction started, but now the figure has fallen to around one in every 150, according to property market website Zoopla.co.uk.

Overall, the group estimates that there are now 35% fewer properties worth at least £1 million than there were in November 2007, when house prices first started to fall.

The North East has been the worst hit by the downturn, suffering an 83% slide in the number of million pound-plus homes in the region, followed by Wales at 56% and the Midlands at 50%.

Unsurprisingly, London has seen the smallest reduction in the number of properties valued at £1 million or more, with 29% fewer now than two years ago, while the South East has seen a 39% fall.

Eight out of 10 homes that are still worth more than £1 million are in London and the South East.

Kensington in London has the highest proportion of properties worth at least seven figures, with 48% of the housing stock in the area valued at this level, followed by South Kensington and Chelsea at 39% and 37% respectively.

Virginia Water in Surrey has the most homeowners with properties worth at least £1 million outside of London at 28%, well up on the national average of 0.88%.

Alex Chesterman, chief executive of Zoopla.co.uk, said: "The housing market downturn has taken its toll on the exclusive property millionaires club, reducing the number of those who can claim membership from 283,168 in November 2007 to only 183,630 today.

"London remains the property millionaire capital of Britain, whilst other parts of the country have seen their property millionaire ranks decimated over the past two years, with many of the former million-pound pads sitting close to the threshold."

diparis
Thursday, 5 November 2009 08:41:33 GMT

oh no how can this be is it because the bankers are not getting their bounses this year or is it because the rich bankers know something (A REAL HOUSING CRASH IS COMING)

adopted_bairn
Wednesday, 4 November 2009 23:20:43 GMT

Yawn!

adopted_bairn
Wednesday, 4 November 2009 23:19:54 GMT

Yawn!

BLP
Wednesday, 4 November 2009 22:56:45 GMT

It is about time to get the market back to where it should be. The whole housing scam was orchestrated by a group of wealthy property developers, the bank CEO's and of course the current corrupt Labour government which stop building council home to create more housing shortages. While they are enjoying the profits of their scam the rest of us have to suffer with high living costs, poverty, later retirement, and psychological illnesses.

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