Global investment in commercial property fell 59 per cent in 2008 to $435bn down from 2007’s
record total of $1,050bn. This was the lowest annual total since 2004 with a significant
decline in investment from foreign investors. Figures in international property adviser
Cushman & Wakefield’s Investment Atlas 2009 (to be published later this month) also predict
that volumes will fall again this year, albeit marginally, to around $412bn.
The largest fall in 2008 was in North America with a 73 per cent drop in investment from
$437bn to $116bn. As a result North America ceded its position as the top global
investment target in 2007 and fell to third place in 2008 behind Europe and Asia.
There were large falls in investment outside of North America, however, with Europe
declining 52 per cent to $178bn (down from $367bn) and Asia declining 45 per cent to $131bn
(down from $237bn). Latin America proved to be the most resilient market with investment
falling by only 9 per cent to $8.9bn (down from $9.8bn). As the world’s most popular
investment destination, Europe accounted for 41 per cent of all transactions followed by Asia
with 30 per cent.
At a country level the USA accounted for 25 per cent of all global investment at
$107.1bn. China, for the first time, overtook the UK as the second most popular
destination with $50.3bn or 12 per cent of global investment. The UK accounted for 9 per
cent or $37.1bn of investment with Japan and Germany each accounting for around 7 per cent, or
$29.3bn and $28.8bn respectively.
David Hutchings, head of research, Cushman & Wakefield EMEA, said: “Although virtually
all global markets had a decline in investment it’s been the mature markets which have suffered
most. Emerging markets now account for 22 per cent of global investment when as recently
as 2006 they only accounted for 9 per cent. China is by far the most dominant of these
markets but Russia, India and Brazil all increased their share of investment coming in at
15th, 16th and 20th overall.
“It is clear that pricing in many countries at the market peak was aggressive and became
divorced from the reality of underlying growth and income that could be produced and
sustained. It is equally true, however, that pricing may now be becoming too conservative
in some markets, again ignoring the fundamental potential of the underlying market.
“On average, mature markets are now probably at least half way through the pricing
correction. Globally however, it is likely to be those countries which fell first that
will also be the first to recover. The US and UK markets are likely to be favoured
(certainly by the latter half of 2009) and investors are already identifying value
opportunities there. We also expect to see a slight improvement in demand in France and
possibly Germany later in 2009 and after further falls in activity in the next few
months. Latin America may also end the year well if the regional economy holds up as
predicted. Asia meanwhile seems set for a further drop in activity this year before
values correct sufficiently to draw in more investors. For most global markets in fact, a
recovery in activity is likely in the second half of 2009, even though a recovery in
performance may largely wait until mid 2010 when rental levels start to stabilise.”
The change in property pricing globally has broadly followed a west to east drift starting
in the US and UK and spreading through Eastern Europe, the Middle East and now most of
Asia. Recently it has been emerging markets such as Ukraine, Mexico and Russia which have
seen the most significant yield increases.
Europe has been most affected by the re-pricing. All sectors have seen substantial
yield shifts with Eastern Europe following the West. Shops have suffered somewhat less
than offices and industrial but other retail types including shopping centres and retail
warehouses are often seeing significant increases.
In North America figures show an average 31 basis point yield shift through 2008 against a
111 basis point increase in Europe. This underplays the true scale of the change in
values, however, with only limited transactional evidence. Opinion and valuation based
assessments indicate a US yield shift of somewhere closer to 100 basis points.
Latin American and Asian markets remained relatively robust throughout 2008 although by the
last quarter the impact of the global downturn was beginning to be felt and yields began
increasing.
All commercial property asset classes have been hit by the decline in investment although
there have been regional differences. In Europe retail and industrial have taken share
from the less favoured office sector whilst in Asia offices saw increased investment at the
expense of land and development. In North America sectors reliant on consumer spending
such as retail and hotels have been hardest hit but offices increased its market share with a
number of trophy assets changing hands. In Latin America retail was also out of favour
relative to offices.
Ends
For further information, please contact:
Chris Bond, UK Media Relations
Manager
Cushman & Wakefield
Tel: + 44 (0)20 7152 5006 / +44 (0)7793 808 006
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