Taylor Scott International News
The next 12 months is set to be another year of strong returns for investors in the UK’s commercial property sector with investment volumes expected to be as strong as 2015 which was a record year. The latest forecast from global real estate advisor CBRE suggests that total investment in UK commercial property will be around £70 billion in 2016 and the firm predicts attractive total returns of around 10.1%, declining thereafter but remaining positive through to 2020. The report explains that as capital value growth slows, income will become the most important driver of returns. A strong economy and an increasing role in e-commerce suggests that the industrial property market will outperform with total returns of 9.5% pa on average for each of the next five years. Retail property is expected to experience happier times as consumer disposable incomes recover, with returns of 7.0%, while recovering supply in the office market will constrain total returns to 7.4% on average each year to 2020. It also points out that foreign investment has long been one of the main drivers of the central London market and while this rose further in 2012/2013 it levelled out at around 70% of all central London investment in 2014/2015. In contrast, foreign investment has not historically been a significant part of the UK market outside central London, making up only around 20% of acquisitions. However, in recent years foreign investment outside London has increased. Indeed, in 2015 so far some 32% of transactions by value outside London have attracted foreign buyers from 31 different countries, a noticeable increase in the diversity of investors. Looking ahead the firm says that the origins of foreign capital will also change. Asian investment inflows have been higher than the 10 year average, with countries like Singapore and Taiwan becoming more important. Meanwhile, European and US investors have withdrawn a little over the last year, potentially due to a recovery in Europe promising relatively better value than the UK. Increasingly, Middle East investment is coming from private wealth rather than sovereign wealth, given the latter is suffering from the low oil price. ‘After several years of strong investment and capital growth, 2016 will offer steadier and more sustainable returns for the commercial property market. The UK economy remains strong, underpinning the rental value growth which will form a much more important part of investor returns than in the last few years,’ said Miles Gibson, head of UK research at CBRE UK. ‘Overseas investment will remain strong and increasingly diversified as London maintains its status as the global centre for property investment. But we predict increasing interest in, and outperformance by, office and industrial property markets in the wider South East and other big UK cities, and a long-awaited recovery in retail,’ he added. According to Ciaran Bird, UK managing director of CBRE UK, property will continue to be a bellwether for the UK economy… Taylor Scott International
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