London retained its title as the largest global property
investment market for the second year running with the city’s 2010 commercial real
estate turnover rising 16% on 2009. Greater
London saw £13.3bn invested or contracted, while Central London saw £9.9bn. The office
sector was dominant, with £8.5bn invested. The
UK capital was followed by
Tokyo in second place and
Paris in third.
According to Clive Bull, head of Central London investment at Cushman & Wakefield,
“London is clearly seen as one of the safe havens of the global market, with strong
interest from a still-growing range of buyers from all corners of the globe. To many private
buyers - domestic and overseas - it is the combination of safety and a higher income than they
can get on cash in the bank which is attracting them to London.
“While the city has traditionally been one of the first ports of call for investors
looking at Europe or investing internationally for the first time, in this cycle it has also
enjoyed an earlier occupational market recovery and a supply squeeze in the next couple of
years points to further good rental performance ahead. This will keep investors coming and with
more investment opportunities as banks work through their loan books and some profit-takers
come forward, the stage is set for an even more active year in 2011 – with our current
prediction being for volumes to rise to around £12bn for Central London.”
David Hutchings, head of European Research at Cushman & Wakefield noted,
“London’s market has seen prime rents rise 23.4% since its low point in 2009. This
compares with 2.1% for global office markets and just 1% in
Europe, with much of Western Europe yet to see any growth at all. Even more extreme has
been the out-performance of London’s retail market, with the best streets continuing to
see excess demand and rental growth even through the recession, as cheap sterling helped London
cement its position as one of the key global hubs for retailers. Global retail rents are 4%
below their 2008 peak while London is ahead by 7.1% on average.”
Clive Bull continued, “While investment activity fell drastically in London when the
credit crunch hit, the market managed to maintain greater liquidity and recover more rapidly
than many competing global markets and it is clear that to today’s investor, size matters
more than it did before, keeping the spotlight on London.”
According to David Hutchings, “As recovery takes hold, more investors will seek out
growth not just security – as shown already by the steady rise of Asia as a target. Just
five years ago only three of the world’s top 20 markets were in Asia but this year it
rose to eight – versus just five in Europe and seven in North America. However while the
economic and macro business environment in 2011 should be less scary, it is still going to be
uncertain and this should keep core investors focused on the least risky markets. So long as
the investment community has faith in the UK governments’ debt reduction programme, these
will very much include London. Growth will be held back by financial sector changes and
government cutbacks but these are hardly unique to London and what is more, the retail sector
can look forward to a boost from possibly two royal weddings!”