Tag Archives: australia
UK sees record investment in student housing market
Total investment volumes in the UK student housing market reached record levels in the first three quarters of 2015, exceeding US investment volumes for the first time, new data shows. In terms of larger deals of $7.5 million plus, excluding land sales, the UK saw investment of $6.5 billion, compared to just over $3 billion in the US, according to research from international real estate advisors Savills. The firm’s World Student Housing Report states that the UK’s record levels have been driven by foreign investment, led by North America which was the source of 80% of all cross border deals in the 12 months to September 2015. All the top global student investment deals in 2015 have been into the UK, led by the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board’s $1.7 billion purchase of the Liberty Living Portfolio and Greystar/PSP’s purchase of the Nido London Portfolio for $920 million. ‘Reflecting the maturity of the UK market, the major transactions have all been portfolio deals. Increased investment activity has brought with it yield compression, particularly for investments in prime London where net initial yields on direct let properties are now around 5%,’ said Paul Tostevin, associate director of Savills World Research. After the UK, Savills cites The Netherlands, with its English language education offer, emerging as a highly investible proposition. The Netherlands has seen average annual investment of $200 million in the last three years, the majority of which has come from private, domestic capital, but foreign investment is growing. In Germany early investors have successfully launched a premium product, filling a gap in the market next to the not for profit Studentenwerk offer, while France’s student housing market is characterised by growing investor interest but limited available supply. This has put downward pressure on French prime student yields, which stand at 5.4%. Beyond Europe, Australia is a key emerging market given its high quality of life and proximity to two of the top five source markets for international students in 2015 which are China and South Korea. ‘This is the first time the UK has outpaced the US in student housing investment which is quite remarkable given their disparate sizes. North American, Middle Eastern and Russian investors have led the charge into the UK,’ said Marcus Roberts, the firm’s director of Student Investment and Development. ‘We expect continued global competition for stock, combined with limited opportunities, to lead to further yield compression in the near term, but with the UK remaining the second most popular destination for international students, top tier university cities with low supply, such as London, Bristol and Edinburgh, still offer potential,’ he added. Continue reading
Call for Build to Rent in the UK to be expanded and include more affordable homes
Build to Rent development in London is over double that in the rest of the UK, with a new manifesto calling for more affordable homes to be included in such schemes. There are over 14,276 units in planning, completed or under construction in London compared to 7,112 in the rest of the country, according to the new data from the British Property Federation. They also show that there are at least 3,404 completed units in London, compared to 240 in the rest of the UK. The organisation has published a new manifesto for the Build to Rent sector, in which it urges government to follow the lead of the Greater London Authority (GLA), and change national planning policy to stress that the appropriate affordable housing on new Build to Rent developments should be discounted market rent. It says that this helps development viability, but also allows the investor to manage the ‘affordable’ and ‘market rented’ elements as one, in a tenure blind manner. The BPF has long championed the role that Build to Rent has to play in expanding housing delivery, attracting long term investment that has the potential to significantly boost housing supply. Recent research has shown that Build to Rent can deliver homes at 2.5 times the speed of developments for sale, and that there is £10 billion of firm commitments and as much as £30 billion that the sector has ready to invest this Parliament. The £10 billion of investment identified for Build to Rent would create around £28 billion of wider economic benefit. ‘It has felt for a long time that Build to Rent has been on the cusp of becoming a sector in its own right. Today, we are proud to show that the sector has really taken off, and it is great to see how many fantastic projects are either underway or completed, and that residents have quality rented homes,’ said Melanie Leech, chief executive of the British Property Federation. ‘There is more that can be done to encourage the sector to grow, however. The GLA has paved the way for Build to Rent, introducing both ambitious targets and supplementary planning guidance, and the map launched today shows that this has really paid off,’ she explained. ‘Government has everything to gain from encouraging this sector, which will attract significant institutional investment into UK housing supply, deliver new homes quickly, and drive up standards in the private rented sector, and we hope to see it continue to support it,’ she added. Andrew Stanford, residential fund manager at LaSalle Investment Management and chairman of the BPF’s Build to Rent Committee said that the momentum behind Build to Rent continues and it is moving firmly beyond theory and into reality. ‘With continued support from both national and local government this progress can continue. The growing number of long-term institutional investors in the sector will then find a suitable home for their capital, ensuring that housing supply and tenant choice… Continue reading
Residential rents in Scotland up at less than a third in England and Wales
Scottish rents are rising at less than a third of the rate seen in the rest of Britain, amidst the controversy of the new Private Housing Bill, according to a new buy to let index report. Average Scottish rents have risen just 1.7% in the past year, less than a third of the rate currently being witnessed in England and Wales, according to the data from lettings agent network Your Move. Year on year the index show that while rents across England and Wales have increased by 6.3% in the past 12 months, annual rent growth in Scotland has plateaued after a summer uplift. The data also shows that rents in Scotland fell 0.3% from August to September 2015, the second consecutive monthly drop in Scottish rents, meaning that the typical rent in Scotland is now 0.8% lower than at its summer peak in July. The average monthly rent in Scotland was £545 in September 2015, compared to £549 in July 2015. However this is 33.3% cheaper than in England and Wales during September. ‘All eyes are on the proposed reforms to the private rented sector in Scotland, but there is a crucial element missing to the debate. Rents are not going up quickly enough to warrant the staggering rise in tenant arrears we’re seeing. Rather, tenant finances have much more to do with deeper rooted societal problems of salaries and employment levels,’ said Brian Moran, lettings director at Your Move Scotland. ‘Over the summer we witnessed a short term surge in rent prices, but this has been superseded more recently with a slower rate of rent growth, which doesn’t even come close to what we’re witnessing south of the border. Scottish rents have been falling for the past few months, and realigning to calmer levels for the autumn. This is even more extraordinary when you consider we’ve just weathered peak lettings season. It’s certainly not a sector spiralling out of control,’ he explained. ‘This auto-correction, and natural flow of the lettings market will be disrupted by artificial interventions from the Government. Private sector landlords could soon face a regulatory minefield, and this may dissuade future investment into buy-to-let at a time when we need to be the sector to grow, not contract. Ultimately, where the supply of rental properties uncouples from demand, rent growth will be massively thrown out of kilter, and tenants will find themselves even more exposed,’ he added. A breakdown of the data shows that all but one region of Scotland has seen rents increase over the past year. The strongest annual rent growth has been recorded in the Highlands and Islands, with rents up 6.4% since September 2014 to reach a new high of £572 per month. This represents the fifth consecutive month that annual rent growth has accelerated in this region, and the fastest year on year increase on record… Continue reading




