By Amber Murray London’s super-prime market seems to following a similar track to the general market: optimism is cautiously increasing as mortgages start to come down following the Bank of England’s rate cut. The number of exchanges in London in June and July was 8.4 per cent above the five-year average, according to Knight Frank. It was a “release of pent-up demand following 12 months of frustratingly high inflation” and was “replicated in the wider UK market”, Tom Bill, head of UK residential research at Knight Frank, said. Unlike the general market, however, the prime London property marke…