Eight things deserve a draft.
Prime central London transactions hold above five-year average.
Weekly Wealth Report notes forty-seven transactions above five million in the week to 10 April, three more than the same week of last year.
International buyers return to Mayfair and Belgravia in measured numbers.
Coutts Luxury Index records a quiet uptick in enquiries from Gulf and North American clients, with offers concentrated in the eight to fifteen million bracket.
Country house values steady as spring listings rise.
Savills' prime regional index is flat quarter on quarter, with stock above three million up eleven per cent since February.
Off-market activity outpaces portal listings for the third consecutive month.
PrimeResi reports that roughly two in three super-prime deals in March were transacted privately, a pattern undocumented by the major portals.
Family offices broaden allocations into trophy residential.
Spear's quarterly survey finds a quiet shift towards direct residential holdings among UK single-family offices, away from build-to-rent funds.
Sold prices in W8 settle two per cent below asking on average.
Rightmove sold-price data for Kensington shows a narrowing gap between asking and achieved prices, the smallest spread since late 2023.
Lending appetite firms for non-domiciled buyers.
Private bank desks report a measured loosening on loan-to-value for established non-dom clients, particularly on Belgravia and Knightsbridge stock.
Super-prime rental yields compress as stock thins.
Knight Frank notes a quiet but persistent decline in available super-prime lets, with achieved rents above twenty-five thousand per week up modestly year on year.