UK commercial property values have fallen by 7.2 per cent in the last eight weeks according
to global real estate adviser Cushman & Wakefield. Figures in its latest Business
Briefing: UK Property Investment Market also show that average prime UK yields have
increased to 6.49 per cent as at mid-October, the highest since 1993.
The report concludes that whilst the UK remains at the frontline of the global
financial crisis it is continuing to see a rapid adjustment in pricing. Prime yields
moved out by an average of 27 basis points (bp) in the four weeks to mid-October; equivalent to
a 4.2 per cent fall in value. This followed a smaller 20 bp increase the previous
month. Faced with these shifting values investment trading fell still further with
volumes down 22 per cent on the previous quarter according to Property Data.
Cushman & Wakefield believes that prime yields will move out further but they should be
largely stable by June 2009 and may in some cases drop back later as excessive
market corrections are addressed. The firm forecasts that secondary yields, however,
will continue to rise further throughout 2009 as the weaker health of the occupational market
exposes their relative lack of income security and sustainability.
David Hutchings, head of research EMEA, Cushman & Wakefield said: “We expect to see a
negative total returns across all properties of -20 per cent to the end of this year and -6 per
cent for 2009. These could yet prove to be conservative estimates, however, with the
market very much driven by sentiment. What we need is an increase in investment activity
to reintroduce confidence and liquidity. The next few months will almost certainly see
greater activity as debt-starved businesses and investors look to make sales but on their own
these deals will not herald a return to normality. For that we need a fully functioning
debt market but we don’t expect to see significant lending against commercial real estate until
at least the latter part of 2009 and even then we only expect capacity to return to 2002/03
levels. This lack of debt will however throw up some excellent opportunities for cash rich
investors over the next 6-9 months.”
Bryan Laxton, UK CEO of capital markets, Cushman & Wakefield said: "There
is value to be seen in some areas of the market when taking a long term view as
many of the sub-sectors are standing at more than 100 bps above their 15 year average yield and
a larger number sub-sectors are standing at 200 bps above the long term risk free rate.
Sentiment is however a stronger influence on yields at the moment than long
term fundamentals."
Download the full report from the C&W Knowledge Center.
Chris Bond, UK Media Relations
Manager
Cushman & Wakefield
Tel: + 44 (0)20 7152 5006 / +44 (0)7793 808 006
Visit Cushman & Wakefield’s Knowledge Center at www.cushmanwakefield.com to access
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Notes to Editors:
Cushman & Wakefield is the world's largest privately held commercial real estate
services firm. Founded in 1917, it has 227 offices in 59 countries and more than 15,000
employees. The firm represents a diverse customer base ranging from small businesses to Fortune
500 companies. It offers a complete range of services within four primary disciplines:
Transaction Services, including tenant and landlord representation in office, industrial and
retail real estate; Capital Markets, including property sales, investment management, valuation
services, investment banking, debt and equity financing; Client Solutions, including integrated
real estate strategies for large corporations and property owners, and Consulting Services,
including business and real estate consulting. A recognized leader in global real estate
research, the firm publishes a broad array of proprietary reports available on its online
Knowledge Center at www.cushmanwakefield.com.