Pedestrians walk in view of Gasholders luxury apartment development in London, U.K., on Sunday, March 7, 2021. Sales of luxury properties tumbled 13 per cent as the pandemic spurred the richest buyers to look to the countryside. Bloomberg/Photo (Photographer: Hollie Adams)
Pedestrians walk in view of Gasholders luxury apartment development in London, U.K., on Sunday, March 7, 2021. Sales of luxury properties tumbled 13 per cent as the pandemic spurred the richest buyers to look to the countryside. Bloomberg/Photo (Photographer: Hollie Adams)

Sales of new London homes picked up in the second quarter after a dire start to 2021 as investor confidence grows in the purpose-built rental sector.

Transactions rose six per cent from the same period last year to 4,196, according to data compiled by Molior London and seen by Bloomberg. The increase comes after the U.K. capital suffered its worst quarter for home sales since 2012. The data are based on projects with at least 20 units, which tend to be apartment blocks.

"London's private residential development industry has delivered a significantly better set of figures," the researcher said in a draft of the report. "The turnaround in the numbers principally comes from one source: a welcome return of the build-to-rent sector to the forefront of industry activity."

London housing has lagged behind the nationwide boom as buyers seek more space and greenery in suburbs outside of the capital. The question for landlords and developers is whether that trend will continue as lockdown measures are lifted next week and the pandemic has less influence on lifestyle choices.

With the sluggish growth in homebuilding, investors are increasingly betting that London's housing shortage and sky-high home values will push more residents to the rental market. Purpose-built rental housing is one of the few areas where construction is picking up, accounting for almost a third of new homes starting work in the second quarter, according to the report. That compares with 12 per cent in the first three months of the year.

Central London rents spiked the most on record in June as more tenants returned to the capital. But the cost of leasing a home is still down 16.5 per cent from a year earlier, and broker Hamptons International predicts it will take 12 months for prices to return to pre-pandemic levels. - Bloomberg