The blog often reports on the landgrabbing in Africa but there is another sort of land-grab going on. The rich African elite buying expensive property in Europe, particularly in London.
Harrods Estates’ prime central London office in Mayfair has
reported a 400 per cent rise in sales to African buyers in the year to March
2015, compared with the previous 12 months.
“The majority are looking to spend between £2.5m and £6.5m
on a two- or three-bedroom apartment, where they can stay when visiting London
on business or for pleasure,” says Shirley Humphrey, director at the agency. “Absolute numbers are still relatively small but the growth
has been quite spectacular and is continuing, exceeding the growth from any
other region of the world. “African buyers are mostly working in the oil sector [the
blog wonders if they are ‘working’…actual workers,
we doubt it]. We recently sold two apartments to two men visiting oil firms in
Aberdeen. They enjoyed their stopover in London and decided to buy an apartment
each,” she says.
The growth in interest from African buyers is also being
seen in the higher reaches of London’s residential market. Giles Hannah, senior
vice-president in London for Christie’s International Real Estate, says he has
seen a 12 per cent rise in Africans buying in the £10m-plus category over the
past year, mostly in Mayfair, Lancaster Gate, Knightsbridge and the City.
“The buyers are mainly from Ghana, Nigeria and South Africa
and are high net worth business owners in oil, finance, minerals and textiles,”
he says.
Beauchamp Estates says that, in the three years to late
2014, African buyers spent more than £600m on property it sold in central
London. The majority of these buyers spend £15m to £25m each on a home and are
from Nigeria, Ghana, Congo, Gabon, Cameroon and Senegal.
“Nigerians, in particular, have been longstanding
purchasers, in the 1980s and 1990s, typically in north London — Hampstead, St
John’s Wood and Primrose Hill. Now enhanced wealth has enabled them to move
into Mayfair, Belgravia and Knightsbridge, joined by purchasers from other west
African states,” says Beauchamp Estates director Gary Hersham. He adds that
Africans are also beginning to have an impact on the prime lettings sector. “They
tend to rent a luxury apartment in Mayfair, Belgravia or Knightsbridge for
£2,500 to £5,000 per week or on a short let for £10,000 to £15,000 per week and
stay in London for anything from six weeks up to three months”.
“Many wealthy
Nigerians were UK-educated and send children to school here, for example,” says
Camilla Dell, of Black Brick, a London-based buying agency, which — since 2007
— has seen 44 per cent of its clients come from Africa. Of those from Nigeria —
by far the largest group — 58 per cent have bought homes to live in and 42 per
cent bought property as investments. Dell’s clients have shown a preference for
recently modernised properties or new builds similar in design to those in
Africa’s more exclusive compound developments. They also demand privacy, with
facilities such as a 24-hour concierge and extensive security.
Private estates, with large, modern houses and easy access
to both central London and Heathrow and Gatwick airports have proven especially
popular.
“St George’s Hill in Surrey is a hotspot for this type of
purchase,” says Alex Newall, of Hanover Private Office, an estate agent
catering for buyers at the high-end of the market.
Roarie Scarisbrick, of Property Vision, a buying agency that
makes regular trips to Africa to meet clients interested in London real estate,
admits “it’s gone pretty quiet” recently because of these oil and currency
issues. “But the Africans will be back,” he says.
Harrods’ Shirley Humphrey is similarly optimistic. “There’s
a lull in the market now because, like every other nationality, African buyers
are waiting to see what happens,” she says. “They are a growing force and when
the market returns, so will they.”
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