Emerging Trends in Real Estate: Europe 2016
Transcription
Emerging Trends in Real Estate: Europe 2016
#emergingtrends Emerging Trends in Real Estate: Europe 2016 Beyond the capital 4 February 2016 Agenda Presentation: Overview and in-depth look at selected European cities 1. Dr Holger Müller, Managing Director, Real Estate, PwC Russia 2. Oleg Malyshev, Partner, Real Estate Leader, PwC Russia Panel discussions: Panel discussions Panel 1 theme: Moscow 2016: how to make the most of the crisis Panel 2 theme: When will the money return to the market? PwC 2 About the survey Emerging Trends in Real Estate® (ETRE) Europe is a highly regarded, widely read trends and forecast report for the real estate sector. Published jointly by PwC and the Urban Land Institute, it is now in its 13th edition. The 2016 edition reflects the views of over 550 decisionmakers all over Europe, who completed surveys or were interviewed as a part of the research for this report. PwC PwC Poland Romania Finland Denmark Cyprus 1% 2% Norway Czech Republic Other Germany 22% 3% 3% 3% 3% 3% 4% Sweden Russia Portugal Australia Greece Spain Netherlands 12% 4% France Ireland 5% 5% Italy Belgium 10% 6% 6% Turkey European firm focused primarily on the country European firm with pan-European strategy 21 Global firm with global strategy 42 % 23 Other 13 #emergingtrends 3 Riding high Average city prospects Low interest rates and the sheer weight of capital bearing down on European real estate mean that most investors remain bullish about the industry’s business prospects in 2016. 3,7 As prime assets increasingly are difficult to find, investors are focused on cities and sectors rather than countries. 3,2 3,6 3,5 3,4 3,3 3,1 3 2,9 2,8 2006 PwC PwC 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 #emergingtrends 4 Business prospects in 2016 “Business is good; value is there for the right deals. However, we fully expect there to be shocks to the system along the way.” ETRE 2016 interviewee (global investor) Business confidence 2016 37 2015 47 PwC 53 10 43 10 45 7 Business profitability 2016 48 2015 56 33 11 Business headcount 2016 38 2015 48 Increase Увеличилась PwC % 55 7 43 Stay the same Сохранилась на прежнем уровне 9 Decrease Снизилась #emergingtrends 5 Business profitability in 2016 % “The last three or four years it’s just been a straight line going up, and that is not the case, now.” ETRE 2016 interviewee (German lender) PwC PwC #emergingtrends 6 European business environment in 2016 % 39 13 Improve Stay the same 12 10 46 50 48 65 10 Get worse The European economy 41 42 24 Political uncertainty Issues impacting business Cost of finance Availability of prime assets Shortage of suitable assets to acquire 56 25 9 10 Occupier/market fundamentals impacting demand for real estate 44 41 12 3 Cost of finance 19 32 30 19 Sustainability/resilience 16 PwC 41 Significant PwC 30 Moderate Low No effect 13 #emergingtrends 7 Interest rates and inflation 2016 Increase significant Increase somewhat Inflation Stay the same Decrease somewhat Decrease significantly “We are close to the top … the end of the yield compression story.” ETRE 2016 interviewee (CEO of a London-based REIT) PwC PwC Short-term interest rates Long-term interest rates #emergingtrends 8 1% Availability of equity and debt in 2016 9% 11% Increase significant 35% Increase somewhat Equity for refinancing or new investment Stay the same Decrease somewhat 44% “Everybody wants to increase allocations to real estate because it offers returns that you cannot achieve with a similar risk level in bonds.” ETRE 2016 interviewee (global investor) 1% 6% 38% 3% 7% 11% Debt for refinancing or new investment PwC 8% Debt for development 48% PwC Decrease significantly 32% 46% #emergingtrends 9 Relative real estate yields – higher than ever % The margin between bond and property yields has never been higher over the past 10 years. Leveraged yields of 12% and higher are possible in prime locations. PwC PwC EURIBOR Euro bond yields Euro property yields Five-year swap been #emergingtrends 10 Movement of cross-border capital into European real estate in 2016 Increase significant Increase somewhat The Americas Stay the same Decrease somewhat Decrease significantly Europe PwC PwC Asia-Pacific #emergingtrends 11 Development is seen as an attractive way to acquire prime assets. Agree Strongly agree Neither agree nor disagree Disagree PwC PwC Strongly disagree #emergingtrends 12 Alternative real estate sectors offer good opportunities. Agree Strongly agree Neither agree nor disagree Disagree PwC PwC Strongly disagree #emergingtrends 13 Reasons for considering alternatives include: Demographic demand drivers % 66 Higher yield 55 Stable income return 49 Diversification 49 Other 10 PwC PwC #emergingtrends 14 Sectors being considered include: Student accommodations % 59 Hotels 51 Healthcare 37 Serviced offices 24 Other 12 Self-storage 10 Data centres 10 PwC PwC #emergingtrends 15 Very good Sector investment prospects 2016 Good Fair Poor Very poor 23 5 High street shops 34 30 Retirement living 30 60 Data centres 28 10 22 Student housing 27 Shared/serviced offices 23 58 23 43 Hotels 41 6 42 27 22 53 22 57 Logistics facilities 21 The best prospects are seen in high street shops and retirement living, while the worst are in social housing and suburban offices. 16 21 45 38 44 40 10 48 9 32 7 33 Social housing 5 PwC 55 12 2 39 7 50 32 Business parks Suburban offices 10 34 Self-storage facilities 2 10 25 Industrial/warehouse 10 5 31 50 11 0 1 27 Regional shopping centres 14 3 22 44 Parking PwC 12 22 Serviced apartments 15 7 24 56 20 4 28 City centre shopping centres Central city offices 2 2 15 Private rented residential Healthcare 0 44 Housebuilding for sale 22 1 28 6 28 37 4 22 25 3 2 15 #emergingtrends 16 Europe’s 10 most active real estate markets, Q4 2014-Q3 2015 (€ billion) Source: Real Capital Analytics PwC PwC London Berlin Paris Frankfurt Madrid Hamburg Munich Milan Dublin Amsterdam #emergingtrends 17 Changes expected in occupiers’ space requirements, 2016 “Twenty years ago we had tenants, now we have customers. In 20 years’ time we will have guests.” ETRE 2016 interviewee (CEO of a major European REIT) PwC PwC Retail Increase Stay the same Industrial and logistics Office Decrease Other #emergingtrends 18 Impact on occupiers’ space requirements over the next 3-5 years Access to adequate transport network/ infrastructure Increase Stay the same Flexible working Decrease “Megatrends are about changing business practice and urban density is changing how real estate is used.” ETRE 2016 interviewee (real estate investor) PwC PwC Urbanisation of business Proximity to complementary businesses/ innovative business environments #emergingtrends 19 Investment 2016 European city rankings Development 1 Berlin 2 Hamburg 3 Dublin 4 Madrid 5 Copenhagen 6 Birmingham 7 Lisbon 8 Milan 9 Amsterdam 10 Munich 11 Stockholm 12 Barcelona 13 Budapest 14 Istanbul Good = above 3.5 15 London Fair = 2.5 to 3.5 16 Helsinki Poor = from 1 to 2.5 17 Warsaw 18 Edinburgh 19 Prague 20 Frankfurt 21 Brussels 22 Paris Note: Respondents scored cities’ prospects on a scale of 1 = very poor to 5 = excellent. Source: Emerging Trends Europe Survey 2016 23 Vienna 24 Zurich 25 Rome 26 Lyon PwC PwC 27 Athens 28 Moscow #emergingtrends 20 Ups and downs 2015 No. 1 Berlin: No. 1 (2015: No. 1) 2016 “[The] city … is still underdeveloped from a real estate point of view.” - Real estate investor No. 1 “Berlin will have probably all-time historic high levels of leasing.” - International fund manager Athens: No. 27 (2014: No. 5) The optimism [about] Athens … has evaporated entirely after a year of political and economic chaos. 2014 No. 5 2016 No. 27 PwC PwC Only forced sellers are likely to dispose of assets in a market in which values have fallen by 60% to 85% … since 2007. “[But] by the end of 2016, Greece could become interesting.” - Fund manager #emergingtrends 21 Safe havens are losing their appeal 2015 2016 No. 10 No. 15 2015 2016 No. 24 No. 22 London: No. 15 (2015: No. 10) London has again fallen five places. “Current prices … are way above where they should be if you follow the normal trend line” - International investor “Suddenly everybody is beginning to look to sell.” - Real estate investor Paris: No. 22 (2015: No. 24) Still a major, go-to destination for real estate investors worldwide, Paris is one of the few European cities to offer enough liquidity and depth to attract major international players. But, high prices and political instability are now major deterrents to investors. PwC PwC #emergingtrends 22 2015 2016 No. 11 No. 10 2015 2016 No. 26 No. 23 2015 2016 No. 25 No. 24 PwC PwC Munich: No. 10 (2015: No. 11) While one of the priciest real estate markets in Europe, the city is often described as “healthy” and “stable” by interviewees. “[Munich is] one of the few rental growth stories on the continent.” - International investor Vienna: No. 23 (2015: No. 26) The Austrian capital is seeing increased interest from Asian and Russian buyers. Strong occupier demand bodes well for office rents, while the recent influx of refugees will further stimulate demand for housing. Zurich: No. 24 (2015: No. 25) “We are generally optimistic but not euphoric.” - Local investor Buying remains difficult, and “most of the capital is domestic”. - Local investor The strong revaluation of the Swiss franc has raised a lot of concerns, but so far the effect has not been overly detrimental. #emergingtrends 23 Out of fashion Moscow: No. 28 (2014: No. 13) A common view is that things are so bad, they can only get better. 2014 “We have experience how to get through a crisis” - “moderately pessimistic” local investor No. 13 2016 No. 28 The market is seeing increasing “rouble-isation”. Local market players are expecting greater differentiation between good and poorer properties. How bad is it really? PwC PwC #emergingtrends 24 Moderately pessimistic sentiment Moscow’s relative rating 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 0 5 Moscow is now cut off from global capital: “Moscow is out. Unknown, unloved”, said one interviewee. But there is a lot of repatriated domestic capital. As one interviewee claimed: “Russia is full of money.” PwC PwC 10 15 20 25 30 Investment Development #emergingtrends 25 Russian focus: ХХ What do investors think? Moscow real estate market: a mood of moderate pessimism? 15% Офисы Office Торговые Retail центры 14% Warehouse Склады 12-13% 13% 12% • The total commercial real estate investment volume has declined, according to various estimates, by 20-40% in USD terms. • Capitalisation rates are high while average values changed only slightly in 2015. PwC PwC 10-11% 11% 10% 9% 8% 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 #emergingtrends 27 Moscow real estate market: investment volume trends by segment 2015, USD million 2014, USD million Industrial Multifunctional business centres 300 751 162 488 Office 624 864 Hotels 439 563 Retail 739 526 Residential 323 75 Source: JLL (data), PwC (analysis) PwC PwC #emergingtrends 28 Investments: the balance of supply and demand Most market players rate residential properties as the most attractive. The greatest shift in the balance of supply and demand has been seen in the office segment. Source: JLL (data), PwC (analysis) PwC PwC Attractive for investments Oversupply Residential 50% 50% Retail 31% 46% Apartments 23% 19% Hotels 15% 23% Office 15% 54% Multifunctional BC 15% 12% Industrial 15% 23% Street retail 12% 23% #emergingtrends 29 Moscow real estate market: Has there been a reduction in demand? Level of demand Consistent with 2014 level due to completion of major transactions The vacancy rate is 10%, the highest since 2003 Demand grew due to a 30% high level of activity among major retailers Source: JLL (data), PwC (analysis) PwC PwC Demand has remained the same due to lower prices for new properties, but we are seeing a shift in demand away from the apartments segment Rental rates 10-20% 15-20% 10-15% Sale prices 5-7% #emergingtrends 30 What market players are expecting Despite the negative macro environment, a number of market players are expecting rental rates and sale prices to grow. A significant number of respondents reported price stabilisation. Source: Survey of real estate companies, PwC PwC PwC Increase Stay the same Decrease Residential 19% 45% 36% Apartments 25% 38% 38% Office 44% 28% 28% Retail 30% 8% 62% Industrial 30% 56% 15% #emergingtrends 31 Will forecasts return to precrisis levels? 4% Yes, within 1–2 years The majority (42%) of market players surveyed believe the market will bounce back to 2013 levels for both demand and prices within five years. However, 35% of respondents do not think that reaching the 2013 level is feasible within this timeframe. 42% Yes, within 5 years 15% Yes, but only in the long term 35% No Source: Survey of real estate companies, PwC PwC PwC #emergingtrends 32 Moscow 2016: how to make the most of the crisis Panel discussion to be moderated by: Dr Holger Müller, Managing Director, Real Estate, PwC Russia; and Sergey Riabokobylko, Board member, ULI Russia Panel members: • Sergey Matyukhin CEO, KR Properties • Artyom Panin First Deputy General Director, Alcon Development • Elena Guseva Vice President, Lider Invest • Maxim Gasiev President, PSN Group PwC PwC #emergingtrends 33 When will the money return to the market? Panel discussion to be moderated by: Dr Holger Müller, Managing Director, Real Estate, PwC Russia; and Miles Jones, Board member, Urban Land Institute (Russia) Panel members: • Lee Timmins Senior Vice President, Hines • Adrian Baker Group Managing Director, Raven Russia • Christopher Van Riet Managing Director, Radius Group • Andrey Veselov Chief Investment Officer, Lenhart Global Investments PwC PwC #emergingtrends 34 Explore the full survey data and findings at: www.pwc.com/etreeurope www.europe.uli.org/research/emergingtrends PwC PwC #emergingtrends 35