The Daily Telegraph

Booming housing market creates 36,000 millionair­es in a year

- By Tim Wallace

BRITAIN’S booming pandemic housing market created 36,000 new millionair­es last year, as sellers cashed in on rocketing sale prices.

The country now has 609,000 highnet-worth individual­s, an increase of 6.3pc in 2021, according to consulting company Capgemini’s annual study of the world’s rich.

Making the grade requires at least $1m (£820,000) of investable assets, meaning individual­s must hold that much wealth beyond property such as their main home.

The combined riches of the UK’S millionair­es, meanwhile, grew by 7.4pc, reversing the modest declines suffered in 2020 on the back of the pandemic. It came as house prices boomed in 2021.

Prices were up more than 13pc at the peak of the growth spike in June, compared with the same month a year earlier. The pace had cooled by December, when the stamp duty holiday was over, but price rises remained high by historical standards with the average property up 9.5pc on the year.

The value of the average home has risen even further since, hitting another new record of £278,000 in March, up £24,000 on the year, according to the Office for National Statistics.

The UK has the sixth most millionair­e investors, according to Capgemini. The US tops the list, with almost 7.5m displaying wealth on this scale, followed by Japan with 3.7m. Germany is third with 1.6m, maintainin­g its lead over the UK with a 6.4pc increase in its number of rich inhabitant­s. Rounding out the top five is China, with 1.5m and France, which rose 8.5pc to pull ahead of Britain with a total of 775,000 millionair­es.

This is largely due to the spectacula­r 29pc rise in French stock markets last year, its best performanc­e in two decades.

‘Britain now has 609,000 high-net-worth individual­s, with $1m of investable assets, an increase of 6.3pc’

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