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Property Investors Warm Up To UK Regional Opportunities

http://www.ft.com/cm…l#ixzz2iRueiSOU October 16, 2013 11:47 Property investors warm up to UK regional opportunities By Kate Allen England’s regional commercial property markets are once again starting to gain interest from investors. Regional commercial property has been deeply unpopular as an asset class in the past few years, in sharp contrast to the boom in London. But, according to analysts, this is beginning to change. “Now might be a good time to look at the unfashionable regions,” says Mat Oakley, director of commercial research at Savills, the estate agency. “Office take-up rose in the first half of 2013 across the majority of [English] cities and availability is falling. The proportion of investment that is outside London also rose in the first half of 2013.” Take-up in the first half of 2013 is nearly a quarter higher than the long-term average, according to CBRE, the commercial property group, with more than 3.8m square feet acquired by occupiers. Adrian McStay, CBRE national team managing director, says that Leeds, Manchester and Bristol have fared particularly well. “Since March we’ve seen a good uptick in both occupation and investment. Big corporate [tenants] have strong balance sheets and are now looking at their real estate strategies,” he says. We have seen a real move out into the regions, not just by UK money but also overseas investment. Two years ago you couldn’t even find a buyer for some regional offices. – John Slade, BNP Paribas Real Estate chief executive There are three main reasons for investors’ change of heart towards the regions. First, the UK’s economy has begun to claw its way back to growth this year, rising 0.7 per cent in the first half, which is feeding through to demand for office space. Intense competition among investors in the London market is also pushing demand outwards in a search for other opportunities. Third, supply is falling as new development remains frozen. As a result, yields are beginning to fall. According to BNP Paribas Real Estate, prime regional office yields have dropped to 5.75 per cent from 6.75 per cent at the start of this year. “At the start of the year we forecast investment starting to flow into the regions and that is now happening,” said John Slade, BNP Paribas Real Estate chief executive. “We have seen a real move out into the regions, not just by UK money but also overseas investment. Two years ago you couldn’t even find a buyer for some regional offices. The market picked up last year and now yields are falling and are under pressure to fall further.” Darren Yates, partner at Knight Frank, the estate agency, agrees “locations outside central London are now on the radar of international investors”. He cites Manchester and Leeds as being particularly well-placed “due to their very diverse commercial base”. By contrast, Liverpool and Sheffield are seeing less demand, he says, noting that the economies of these two cities are more reliant on a public sector that is facing spending cuts. “We will see yield compression in the next six to 12 months, and the prospect of rental growth in the medium term, perhaps as early as next year,” Mr Yates says. Perhaps most crucially for future prospects, supply remains subdued, with little new space under construction other than in parts of southeast England, which is strongly influenced by the London market. Figures from IPD, the property value benchmarking group, show that the likes of Cambridge, Guildford and Brighton are doing particularly well – partly thanks to their proximity to the capital. Just six speculative office developments are planned for completion in the next two years, according to Knight Frank, all of which are in Manchester, Glasgow or Bristol. The developments will deliver less than 1m square feet of space between them. Manchester is the only regional city to have more than 200,000 sq ft of new space under construction. Rising demand in recent months has eroded an overhang of supply left empty since the start of the financial downturn. So much so that Mr McStay is now forecasting a supply crunch within two years. “In most places there has been no new development at all since 2007. Most cities now have less than 500,000 square feet remaining. That is a problem – you just need one or two big occupiers to come along and that takes up all the available space.” Developers have started to respond. Mr McStay cites schemes in Bristol and Glasgow as the first new supply of the most prized and sought-after “Grade A” space in six years. But the time lag between starting a new development and tenants moving in means that more needs to be done. “Construction takes a minimum of two years, and it can take three to four years depending on . . . planning permission,” he says. There are also still reason for investors to be cautious. While high-quality property is in demand, most regional cities still have some unwanted poorer-quality stock that is unpopular with both occupiers and investors. Birmingham has perhaps the greatest oversupply of office space, according to data from Jones Lang LaSalle, the property group. Its vacancy rate of about 16 per cent is the highest of the UK’s major regional cities, with 3m sq ft remaining empty. “There is a lot of second-hand stock that is almost obsolete,” says Mr McStay. This situation could be eased in the coming months by forthcoming changes to planning laws, which would permit empty office buildings to be converted into housing. Some experts predict that this could help to erode the remaining volumes of secondary- and tertiary-quality stock sitting empty in many English cities. Continue reading

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Investors Continue To Boost Land Prices

Robyn Vinter Monday 07 October 2013 Investor demand is continuing to help drive up the price of farmland, according to Knight Frank. The average value of English farmland rose by 4% in the third quarter of the year to £6,678/acre – a new record high – according to the latest results of the firm’s farmland index. “We are seeing a steady increase in the number of enquiries from individuals and funds, both in the UK and overseas, looking to diversify their investment portfolios,” said Tom Raynham, head of Knight Frank’s agricultural investments team. “Large blocks of good arable farmland, preferably over 1,000 acres, are most in demand,” he said. Capital growth is a key driver, according to Mr Raynham, with prices having risen by 222% in the past decade and predicted to rise by at least 5% annually over the next three years. Investors, however, were also looking more closely at annual yields, he added. “People start to get very interested if there is also the potential for additional income from the likes of renewable energy or a diversified farm business.” A resurgence in agricultural research is also adding to the sector’s investment potential, he said. Continue reading

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US Shutdown Prompts Investors ‘To Cut Ag Exposure’

UK, 8 th Oct 2013, by Agrimoney.com The US government shutdown, and the resulting dearth of official statistics, are prompting investors to quit agricultural commodities over concerns about diminished market transparency, and of a “data dump” when Washington reopens. Agricultural investors and businesses are still attempting to assess the knock-on effects of the closure since Tuesday of Washington functions, thanks to an impasse between lawmakers over setting the US budget. The US Grains Council, whose funding beyond 2013 is threatened by the crisis, became one of the latest to caution over the severity of the shutdown, terming it a “matter of great urgency” which, if not resolved “in a timely manner” will cause “significant damage” to crop export programmes. “This is no time to be in lockdown mode. Delay costs sales,” the council, which promotes US grain exports, said. “We have a good crop coming on that needs to be marketed.” ‘Moving to the sidelines’ However, there is increasing talk that the shutdown, in halting the flow of US Department of Agriculture data, is prompting investors to shun the market, over fears about the vacuum of official information. One of the purposes of the USDA’s normally extensive dataflow is to promote transparency, with the daily export sales alerts system, for instance, introduced after the so-called Great Grain Robbery in 1972 when Russia, below the market radar, undertook huge purchases of US grain. The void in “fundamental data has many traders moving to the sidelines,” Kim Rugel at Benson Quinn Commodities. “If not necessarily leaving the market, the speculator is not adding to new positions with Thursday’s volume down from Wednesday.” ‘Massive data dump’ Particular concern has focused on the potential for the shelving of the USDA’s Wasde crop report, a much-watched monthly crop briefing, which was due on October 11, but is looking increasingly unlikely to be released given the lack of adequate time for preparation. “Concern that the USDA’s October report could be delayed may lead to some additional short-covering as speculative shorts look to take risk off the table,” another trader said. However, a surfeit of information may also be a concern once the USDA does resume operations, with the potential for a “torrent” of backlogged data, Richard Feltes, at RJ O’Brien, cautioned. “A massive data dump could trigger sizeable market moves, similar to the volatile market reaction to recent quarterly corn stocks updates,” Mr Feltes said. “The potential for elevated price volatility later this month is increased, a reality that may push selected players to the sidelines.” ‘Removes a constructive factor’ In fact, the shutdown has produced one positive factor for agricultural commodities in depressing the dollar, a factor which “always prompts some buying”, Darrell Holaday, Country Futures said, with a cheaper greenback making US exports that much more competitive. However, Jefferies analyst Anne Frick flagged some negative pressures stemming from the dearth of USDA data which, in meaning no daily export sales announcements, “removes a constructive factor from the market. “The seasonal pick-up in soybean export inspections would likely go unnoticed,” Ms Frick said, also noting a potential setback should the Wasde be released late. A delayed report “may allow enumerators to pick up some yield improvement in late-maturing soybeans from the late season rains”, and confirm rumours of harvest results proving better than had been feared. Continue reading

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