Positive rental growth will prevent a hard landing for the commercial
property market, says RICS’ Commercial Property Forecast.
RICS expects
commercial property to provide an 8% return over the course of
2007 as strength in the economy and rising capacity constraints
continue to encourage business expansion.
2008 will
see a slowdown to 5% although critically investor returns will
remain in positive territory held up by advancing rents.
RICS believes
that the recent high profile sale of the Citigroup tower and the
HSBC building does not forebode an imminent market crash .
The listed
property market signals a sharp downturn in prime commercial property
prices in 2008 with the average property share trading at a 30%
discount to net asset values.
RICS believes
that the listed market has become overly pessimistic with only
modest declines in capital values envisaged by year end 2008.
The office
sector will continue to see the greatest rental advance peaking
between 8-9% although a return to the 20% plus performance of
the late 1980s is not expected.
Global trade
and ever expanding strength in financial services continues to
push the office sector beyond both the retail and industrial markets.
Rents in the
retail sector will be unspectacular , rising a little above inflation
as caution returns to the high street.
Interest rate
rises and the growth of internet retailing have instilled efficiency
pressures on retailers in recent years despite more optimistic
moods in the retail industry in recent months.
The ongoing
recovery in the Eurozone has supported the industrial sector but
a strong pound, higher interest rates and rising oil prices will
bear down on industrial rents.
RICS senior
economist Oliver Gilmartin said:
"Despite the
much-trumpeted rise in nominal bond yields during 2007, support
for commercial property into 2008 will come from strong economic
growth and rising commercial property rents .
"Stock market
volatility during May 2006 and the first half of 2007 highlights
the need for diversification within portfolios , with the insatiable
appetite from retail investors unlikely to dry up into 2008.
"The evolution
of the market with the growth of property derivatives and REITs
will allow commercial property to firmly assert itself as a core
asset alongside bonds and equities in the years ahead."
Source: RICS
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