Tag Archives: stumbleupon
Central London office rental values hit double digit annual growth
Rental values in central London’s booming office market grew by 10.3% in the year to October 2015, the first time annual growth has hit double digits since April 2008. The capital saw 1.1% growth in October, as demand for office space continues to overwhelm limited availability, according to the latest CBRE Monthly Index. Despite rapidly rising rents, take-up of offices in central London continues to outpace the 10 year average. Some 3.6 million square feet of space was snapped up by businesses in the third quarter of 2015, with a further 3.8 million currently under offer and expected to complete before the end of the year. Office rents aren’t just rising rapidly in London. Rental values in the office sector grew by 1% across the UK last month, only the third time rents have grown this quickly since the financial crisis, and much faster than the 0.4% seen across commercial property as a whole. Capital values are also growing fastest in the London office market, at 1% in October, some way ahead of the 0.6% for offices outside London, and twice as fast as the 0.5% growth seen across all commercial property. Together, the rising rents and capital values in the UK office market are giving investors total monthly returns of 1.2%. This strong rental value growth means that UK offices are now highly reversionary. The average initial yield for UK offices is now 4.1%, below the pre-crisis low of 4.2%. This compares with the average equivalent yield of 5.4%. The position is even more marked in central London Offices where the average initial yield of 3.1% compares to an average equivalent yield of 4.5%, although strong income growth has closed the gap over the last few months. ‘London’s office market has been heating up for some time now, but there is still strong business demand across the capital,’ said Kevin McCauley, head of central London research at CBRE. ‘Rental value growth has not been this sustained since before the financial crisis, and together with rapidly rising property values, landlords and investors are experiencing a booming market,’ he added. Continue reading
Residential rent gap between London and rest of UK widens again
The gap between the pace of annual rent rises in London and the rest of the UK has widened again after converging over the summer months, the latest index report shows. Rents were up 7.5% year on year in London and 3.5% in the rest of the UK in the third quarter of the year, according to the date from the HomeLet Rental Index. On average London tenants paid £1,560 per calendar month, which is over £800 more per month that the rest of the UK and for the second month in a row rents are now rising most quickly in Scotland, up by 9%. While the pace of rent rises has slowed over the autumn, rent inflation has increased in nine out of 12 regions of the country with the exception of the North West, where rents were 4.9% down, Northern Ireland with a fall of 2.1% and East Anglia down 1.2%. The October index report also includes new research into tenants’ views about the rental market which reveals that a large proportion of tenants are renting their homes for the long term and that they value relationships of trust with landlords and letting agents. Some 64% said that they planned to continue renting for a year or longer and 90% said they were happy with their landlord. However 71% would prefer to buy a home with 66% believing that saving for a deposit is the biggest barrier preventing them from doing so. ‘Our survey showed that many tenants ultimately aspire to own their own home, but that just over half of them aren’t actively saving for a deposit yet. 66% of those questioned said that a deposit wasn’t affordable for them,’ said Martin Totty, chief executive of HomeLet parent company Barbon Insurance Group. ‘However, the positive news is that almost nine out of 10 tenants told us that they were happy with the standard of their current rented property and the majority of tenants told us they were happy with the service provided by their landlord or letting agent,’ he pointed out. ‘Whilst we are seeing upward pressure on the rental market it’s important that the sector continues to drive professional standards forwards for mutual benefit of tenants, landlords and letting agents,’ he added. Continue reading
Auckland and surrounding area sees most new home building
Auckland and its surrounding regions have driven most of the recent growth in building consents for new dwellings in New Zealand, according to the latest official figures to be published. In September 2015, some 2,242 new dwellings were given in permission in the country as whole, up 13% from the same month last year, the data from Statistics New Zealand shows. The regions with the largest increases were Waikato, Auckland, Bay of Plenty and Northland while the regions with the largest decreases were Wellington and Canterbury. However, Canterbury still accounts for almost one quarter of the national total. However, in seasonally adjusted terms, the number of new dwellings consented fell 5.7% in September after a 5.3% fall in August but this is following on from a 20% surge in July, and the trend is increasing. ‘In the regions surrounding Auckland, growth is being driven by new houses, while in Auckland itself, apartments are also a big part of the picture,’ said Statistics New Zealand business indicators manager Clara Eatherley. ‘While we see a bit of volatility from month to month, the overall picture recently has been growth in building consents, both on the residential side and the non-residential,’ she added. Continue reading




