Whilst December was the ninth straight month of prime yield compression, the fall was the
smallest since July as signs emerged that market pricing was starting to stabilise. In
Cushman & Wakefield’s January Business briefing on the UK property investment market, the
company says that in December vendors were more willing to take advantage of better demand and
pricing - some of whom were selling stock only purchased earlier in 2009.
Cushman & Wakefield’s report shows that prime yields fell 11bp in December ending the
year at an average of 6.1% compared to 7.19% in December 2008 and a peak of 7.41% in March
2009.
The report suggests that to date the correction is in the main a return to fair value rather
than a bubble – at least where ongoing occupational risks are being fairly assessed.
Moreover, with occupier trends showing further signs of steadily firming, the outlook for the
early months of 2010 is for yields to move down, albeit with a slowing pace of compression, as
seen in December.
The retail market saw the strongest yield compression in December, with an average fall of
20bp, followed by the industrial market at 17bp and offices at 3bp. The recovery since
the high point for yields meanwhile has been the strongest for retail warehouses followed by
industrial, shops and then national offices. London offices and shopping centres have to
date seen a smaller correction, which for the former may reflect the fact that they saw yields
increase by less than the market average in the downturn. Shopping centres, however, were
most adversely affected than average and yields still stand 225bp higher than their 2007 low,
while for the average market the premium is now 167bp.
David Hutchings, head of research at Cushman & Wakefield said: “Investors are becoming
less risk-averse as they seek out investment opportunities but most are still chasing prime,
well-let assets and, to date, the correction is still a return to fair value rather the start
of a new asset price bubble – at least where occupational risks are being fairly
assessed. Whilst it is only in isolated areas such as City offices that a
return of rental growth is a realistic short-term possibility, with demand generally
up as tenants look to take advantage of the deals now on offer, activity is rising, the
availability of quality space is falling and incentives are set to reduce in early 2010.”
David Erwin, CEO of capital markets at Cushman & Wakefield said: “Only the very bold
expected the market to tighten as rapidly as it did in 2009, with prime headline yields down to
6.1% in December, 132 basis points lower than their peak levels. But there are now signs that
the rate of yield compression is easing, helped by an increase in the number of willing vendors
we are seeing ready to take advantage of better demand and pricing. Nonetheless, with
indications of at least more stability emerging in parts of the prime occupier
market, the outlook for the early months of 2010 is for yields to move down further and
for the increase in transaction volumes to be sustained. All eyes may be on
retailer results in the next 4-6 weeks as a bell-weather for the economy, but it is the
banks we should be watching more since they will shape the outlook for investment activity to a
large extent. Signs of better financing conditions are set to help the market but the
scale of refinancing needs provides both a real threat to the recovery as well as a major
source of opportunity for astute investors.”
Ends