According to property consultant Cushman & Wakefield, a flurry of activity in the final
quarter of 2009 generated annual turnover of £2.065 billion, approximately 42% ahead of
2008. The last quarter of 2009 saw eight shopping centre transactions totalling
approximately £810 million. These included the £297 million sale of Silverburn to
Hammerson and Canada Pension Plan, La Salle Investment Management’s £100 million purchase of
The Mall Bexleyheath, the Crown Estate’s £100m purchase of a 50% share in Princesshay in Exeter
and HP Properties’ purchase of Clydebank in Glasgow.
In addition, deals currently under offer total approximately £400 million including The Mall
schemes in Aberdeen and Preston, which are under offer to Rockspring and Orchard Street
respectively. These transactions should ensure that market turnover gets off to a strong
start in 2010.
Investor sentiment, which improved markedly in Q3, remained strong throughout the final
quarter of the year and the sector continued to see yield compression with some sub sectors
seeing 75bps inward movement. The strongest demand remains for prime assets with prime
yields returning towards their long term average. Secondary yields still offer a
significant discount, as fears over the occupational market and income sustainability,
understandably, continue to deter investors.
The 2009 development pipeline also peaked in the final quarter with the opening of St
David's 2 in Cardiff, Union Square in Aberdeen and the first phase of Southgate, Bath. On
the whole, tenant feedback from these schemes has been positive, but these schemes are carrying
relatively high vacancy rates which could negatively affect the performance in these towns in
the short term.
From an occupational perspective, we have seen significantly fewer year end tenant failures
than over the same period twelve months ago. Provided the January sales pass reasonably
well and the ‘big freeze’ does not have a disastrous affect on January trade, there appears to
be cause for cautious optimism for 2010.
In 2010, investors will need to focus on income sustainability in the short term with rental
growth and reversions being more medium term considerations. Prime assets are likely to
remain the safer bet, but shrewd investors may start to selectively consider the secondary
market as offering better value as the year progresses.
David Erwin, CEO of UK capital markets at Cushman & Wakefield said: “With
hindsight it could appear that 2009 was a missed opportunity for many
investors. The yield discounts offered at the start of the year probably
over-compensated for the weakness in the occupational market. With investment demand
exceeding supply in the second half of the year we have seen yields start to
correct. The question is, will yields continue to harden throughout 2010 and will those
who fail to act also look back on 2010 as a missed opportunity come January
2011.”
Ends