Stella Dimoko Korkus.com: Wealthy Africans Spending Almost £4million On London Property Every Week

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Monday, October 27, 2014

Wealthy Africans Spending Almost £4million On London Property Every Week

Wealthy African buyers are spending almost £4million on London property every week as they look to snap up exclusive investments in the UK, it has emerged.
Super-rich oligarchs are taking their vast resources and investing them in the safe haven of London property - with more than £600million spent in the capital in the past three years.A mixture of traditional reasons combined with increased terrorism and the outbreak of Ebola is said to be behind the dramatic influx of African money to the capital.

Super-rich African oligarchs are taking their vast resources and investing them in the safe haven of London property - with more than £600million spent in the capital in the past three years and £4million spent in the city every week. They favour the likes of One Hyde Park




Folorunsho Alakija, a billionaire oil tycoon, fashion designer and philanthropist from Lagos, is a big investor in the London market

Folorunsho Alakija, a billionaire oil tycoon, fashion designer and philanthropist from Lagos, is a big investor in the London market


The wealthy buyers are typically spending between £15million and £25million on each home and are purchasing luxury properties


Beauchamp Estates, which sells some of London's most expensive homes, said properties such as the one above are those favoured

While African buyers only account for 1.5 per of transactions in the 'ultra prime' London market, they make up five per cent of sales by value - up from two per cent. This is by typically spending between £15million and £25million on each home.
The recent Ebola epidemic and continued terrorism from groups such as Boko Haram has resulted in an increase in buyers in recent months.
Beauchamp Estates, which sells some of London's most expensive homes, today released a report on African buyers in the capital.
The upmarket estate agency said the buyers are coming from six countries - Nigeria, Ghana, Congo, Gabon, Cameroon and Senegal.


Nigerians are the biggest spenders, with wealthy nationals forking out £250million on London homes in the last three years. 

The new wave of super-rich includes Aliko Dangote, a Nigerian business magnate who, with a £16billion fortune, is Africa's wealthiest man. 

Folorunsho Alakija, a billionaire oil tycoon, fashion designer and philanthropist from Lagos, is also a big investor in the London property market. She recently bought four apartments in One Hyde Park, the super-exclusive development in Knightsbridge.
Her British-born nephew Rotimi Alakija, who also goes by the stage name of DJ Xclusive, has also invested property in the capital.
It is thought other tycoons have also been eyeing up homes on Kensington Palace Gardens - known as Billionaires' Row.


Nigerians are the biggest spenders in London, with wealthy nationals forking out £250million on homes in the city in the last three years
Nigerians are the biggest spenders in London, with wealthy nationals forking out £250million on homes in the city in the last three years


African buyers make up five per cent of sales by value in the 'ultra prime' London market - up from two per cent in recent years
African buyers make up five per cent of sales by value in the 'ultra prime' London market - up from two per cent in recent years


Beauchamp Estates said the African buyers are coming from six countries - Nigeria, Ghana, Congo, Gabon, Cameroon and Senegal
Beauchamp Estates said the African buyers are coming from six countries - Nigeria, Ghana, Congo, Gabon, Cameroon and Senegal


The super-rich look to buy luxury property in the 'platinum triangle' which is made up of Mayfair, Belgravia and Knightsbridge
The super-rich look to buy luxury property in the 'platinum triangle' which is made up of Mayfair, Belgravia and Knightsbridge


Gary Hersham, managing director of Beauchamp Estates, revealed he has had three super-rich Nigerians enquiring about homes in the past week alone. This is despite the average person in Nigeria earning just £850 per year.


He said: 'I've had an upturn in African buyers over the last few months.
'The situation in West Africa at present is pushing rich African buyers back into Central London at a significantly higher level than is normally experienced.
'While war, disease and terrorism in West Africa grab media headlines, actually for super-rich Africans its domestic wealth, cultural ties to London, general safety and education for their children that are the key attractions for buying a home in central London.'

Mr Hersham said these super-rich look to buy property in the 'platinum triangle' which is made up of Mayfair, Belgravia and Knightsbridge.
Around 80 per cent spend between £15million to £25million on a residential property, with ten per cent spending more than £30million.
If they are not buying, they are renting luxury homes for up to £15,000-per-week and staying for between six weeks and three months per year.
London's reputation for having a residential property market, which is secure and a stable investment, is one of the main reasons wealthy Africans are buying, according to Beauchamp Estates.

Another reason is historic cultural and community ties. 
Nigeria is a Commonwealth country and there is a community of 70,000 in London. There are a similar number of Ghanaians in the capital.

It is thought the property tycoons have been eyeing up homes on Kensington Palace Gardens - known as Billionaires' Row (pictured)
It is thought the property tycoons have been eyeing up homes on Kensington Palace Gardens - known as Billionaires' Row (pictured)


London's reputation for having a residential property market, which is secure and a stable investment, is one of the main reasons wealthy Africans are buying, according to Beauchamp Estates
London's reputation for having a residential property market, which is secure and a stable investment, is one of the main reasons wealthy Africans are buying, according to Beauchamp Estates


Around 80 per cent spend between £15million to £25million on a residential property, with ten per cent spending more than £30million
Around 80 per cent spend between £15million to £25million on a residential property, with ten per cent spending more than £30million


If they are not buying, they are renting luxury homes for up to £15,000-per-week and staying for between six weeks and three months


If they are not buying, they are renting luxury homes for up to £15,000-per-week and staying for between six weeks and three months
The third reason is education, with King's School Canterbury, Wycombe Abbey, Cheltenham Ladies College, Eton, Harrow and Bradfield are among the favourite private schools for wealthy families from Africa.
According to the Nigerian embassy, Nigerian nationals spend more than £300million-a-year on tutoring, accommodation, fees and equipment at British schools and universities.
Mr Hersham added: 'It is going to be the African century.
'Continental African buyers or luxury tenants in London are currently where the Russians and Ukrainians were five years ago.
'At present virtually all the transactions are for end use, not rental investment, which indicates that the African buyer market in London has significant room for growth and maturity.

'Nigerians have been long standing property purchasers in the central London market, going back to the early 1980s.
'However, in the 1980s and 1990s they typically purchased houses in North London, in Hampstead, St Johns Wood and Primrose Hill.

'Now, enhanced wealth has enabled them to move into the ultra prime market in Mayfair, Belgravia and Knightsbridge, and have been joined by affluent purchasers from other West African and French equatorial states.'





 


22 comments:

  1. Replies
    1. Choii i must chop better before i die oo. God do am for me n my fellow sdkers who need this type of blessing in their lives. Amen!!

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    2. Am happy for them and at same time not bordered cos I know d angels are busy preparing my own masion in heaven.

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    3. Gbam @Queen Amy
      Yes o! Mansion in heaven is the most important incomparable to anything on earth

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  2. nigerians are really wealthy people..i only wish they can come back home nd spend that money

    visit my bog

    www.glowysofiscated.blogspot.com

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  3. Stelastic! My gist goes like this. Last year met this man on my way back from naija. We got talking and he said he was looking to buy properties in London na so I convince am and became his emergency estate agent/driver/pa/adviser. To be honest I came across houses I've only seen in movies with my korokoro eyes!!! Stella e be like say na another world I dey not this same London. Peeps from Naija dropping almost a million pounds in cash without battling an eyelid. If you see this man hey you wouldn't believe he commands so much. He is so simple and even humble to a fault. God remember me too and give me the power to make wealth. If you taste that kain life u go know say truly poverty na bastard!

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  4. Little wonder why London just retain it status as the world most expensive city for the year. These people don't help matters as investments like these keeps taking rentage, mortgage and general cost of living on the high side; the oily Gulf states millionaires, Russians and most third world countries loots always ends up in Britain. Rather than develop and invest in their respective countries they keep heading to over crowded London. Please Nigerian political looters invest home biko.

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  5. Instead of developing their countries, homes they hardly stay. RUBBISH!

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  6. God punish poverty

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  7. Hmmm
    Vanity upon vanity
    Good for them though.

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  8. God please bless me n DH ooo....*drooling*

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  9. God please bless me too immensely so i can play with millions and billions of pounds Sterling. Ase.

    Click my name for all your celebration cakes and cupcakes, cheers

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  10. Lol! Those of you in the UK or the EU should stop saying God should bless you but do something about it, manners don't fall from heaven. My advice to you lots is to start playing Euromillions, true the chances of winning big is slim but its possible to win. In today's world that is the only way to become super rich, yes there's no other way. I never trusted it until a brother of mine won half a million pounds. Been playing since early this year but still no win but hope dey.

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    Replies
    1. That na nothing. My colleague's cousin and her husband won about £120 million a few years ago! National lottery advised them to go public because it will be extremely difficult to explain that sudden immense wealth. Them say e better make dem just announce d thing and get it over with once and for all. They promised them personal security etc for 3 months. The mumu people come enter paper pose with champagne. No be small thing o. Every day na sacks of begging letters dem dey receive. Marriage no even last reach one year, dem divide money waka.

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    2. .......and to add to all that, most of my colleague's cousin's (phwoar, that's a mouthful) friends and relatives have fallen out with her due bad belle or unreasonable expectations etc. People saying she's changed. Come on, na who £129million no go change? Its different when you accumulate wealth over the years, starting from your 20s. You get enough time to grow into it, and nobody really knows your Worth.

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  11. U r ryt "Manners" dont fall from heaven, but "Manna" does....hpe u get d sarcasm *tongue out*

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  12. Oluwa ooo!!! There is God oooo

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  13. this is why i respect the Jagaban of Nigerian politics, Ashiwaju Bola Ahmed Omo Tinubu. He at least is investing massively in Nigeria through his various companies like The Nation Newspaper, First Nation Airline, Alpha Beta, (& i hear say na him get Oando).

    To have a house is London is not the biggie, the question is "are your people back home gainfully employed courtesy your wealth?"

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    Replies
    1. He makes Billions of naira monthly just from Alpha Beta. He should employ me abeg.

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    2. It doesn't matter if u invest d money at hone or abroad. Third na thief!

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  14. No interested in stories like this at appeals to Nigerians who need to see wealth on public display when there is a boy with his scalp disfigured by dogs and requires a faction of the money mentioned here for life saving surgery and am sure most people would spend alot if time reading the fine print in this article but no time for the poor boy whose article isn't too far off. Nigeria have a human face

    ReplyDelete

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