The value of all the homes in Aylesbury has
risen by more than 252% in the past two decades, to £8.774bn, meaning its worth
more than the stock listed company Persimmon, which is worth £8.036bn.
Those Aylesbury homeowners and Buy-to-Let landlords
who bought their homes twenty or more years ago have come out on top, adding
thousands and thousands of pounds to the value of their own Aylesbury homes as
the younger generation in Aylesbury continue to be priced out of the market. This is even more remarkable because, in those
twenty years, we had the years of 2008 and 2009 following the global financial
crisis, where we saw a short term drop in Aylesbury house prices of between 15%
and 20% (depending on the type of property). And although there have been a
number of consecutive years of growth in property values recently in Aylesbury
it hasn’t been anywhere near the levels seen in the early 2000’s.
Twenty years ago, the total
value of Aylesbury property was worth £2.486bn. Over those twenty years, total
property values have increased by £6.288bn, meaning today, the total value of
all the properties in Aylesbury is worth £8.774bn. Even more remarkable, when you consider the FTSE100 has
only risen by 40.84% in the same time frame. Also, when I compared it with
inflation, i.e. the UK Retail Price Index, inflation had risen by 72.2% during
the same twenty years.
So, what does this all mean for Aylesbury? Well as we enter the unchartered waters of
2018 and beyond, even though property values are already declining in certain
parts of the previously over cooked central London property market, the outlook
in Aylesbury remains relatively good as over the last five years, the local
property market has been a lot more sensible than central London’s.
Aylesbury house values will remain resilient for several reasons.
Firstly, demand for rental property remains strong with persistent immigration and population
growth. Secondly, with 0.25% interest
rates, borrowing has never been so cheap and finally, the simple lack of new
house building in Aylesbury. Not even keeping up with current demand, let alone
eating into years and years of under investment mean only one thing – yes it might
be a bumpy ride over the next 12 to 24 months but, in the medium term, property
ownership and property investment in Aylesbury has and always will, out ride
out the storm.
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