The JLL and Glenigan UK Commercial Construction Index
Transcription
The JLL and Glenigan UK Commercial Construction Index
The JLL and Glenigan UK Commercial Construction Index Q2 2014 Construction activity expands The inaugural JLL/Glenigan Commercial Construction Index confirms that the UK’s economic recovery continues to strengthen. Work began on some £22.7 billion of commercial projects over the 12 months to June 2014, a year on year increase of 6.6%. This demonstrates that developers are responding to rising corporate confidence and in particular, there has been a notable increase in demand for high quality, modern, attractive spaces that can drive greater productivity and staff retention. Construction had been underperforming as a component of GDP until relatively recently, but in Q1 output rose by 1.5%, ahead of general GDP growth of 0.8%. Annual growth stood at 6.7%, compared to 3.0% for the economy as a whole. The JLL/Glenigan index suggest that this will continue, although a possible slowdown in residential development – which is not included in these figures – may counterbalance this. However, the volume of commercial space being started has not yet risen substantially since the recession and is still significantly behind the position before the crisis, as the graph below shows. There is evidence of an increasing supply shortage, particularly in the office market, and the amount of development needs to accelerate if this is not to hamper the recovery in the longer term. JLL Research suggests that the availability of finance is still the major issue. Refurbishment projects (£10.8 billion) saw a slightly larger increase of 8.7% perhaps unsurprising, given the recent uptick in demand, as these projects can be brought to market more quickly and with more certainty. However, most of the total is still composed of new build schemes (£11.9 billion, up 4.7%). 25 20 15 10 5 0 2000 Q1 2000 Q3 2001 Q1 2001 Q3 2002 Q1 2002 Q3 2003 Q1 2003 Q3 2004 Q1 2004 Q3 2005 Q1 2005 Q3 2006 Q1 2006 Q3 2007 Q1 2007 Q3 2008 Q1 2008 Q3 2009 Q1 2009 Q3 2010 Q1 2010 Q3 2011 Q1 2011 Q3 2012 Q1 2012 Q3 2013 Q1 2013 Q3 2014 Q1 New starts – annual total (£bn) Fig 1: UK Commercial property construction volumes New build Source: Glenigan/JLL Refurbishment The picture across the UK London is easily the strongest single contributor, accounting for almost a quarter of the entire UK total at £5.5 billion. Remarkably, the volume of new starts continues to accelerate strongly, with the total for the capital 27.2% ahead of this point in 2013. Clearly, with construction as with other parts of the economy, London’s recovery is perhaps 12-18 months ahead of the rest of the country. Significant projects over the past three months include the refurbishment of the Selfridges department store on Oxford Street, Stanhope’s 280,000 sq ft 1 Angel Court office scheme in EC2 and the Crown Estate’s refurbishment of St James’ Market (340,000 sq ft). SCOTLAND billion £1.90 15.2% Nevertheless, Northern Ireland saw the strongest increase (209%) but this is from a very low base; the yearly total of £0.7 billion also reflects the disproportionate impact of large single projects such as the GAA stadium in Belfast. However, Wales and Scotland also saw a substantial increase in new starts over the 12 months in question. NORTHERN IRELAND billion £0.69 208.5% NORTH EAST billion £0.77 YORKSHIRE & HUMBERSIDE £1.74 billion -12.7% 7.3% NORTH WEST billion £2.40 -2.2% £bn Total construction billion £1.01 The Yorkshire total was buoyed by a number of significant starts over the past three months, such as the Flemingate redevelopment in Beverley and Central Square, a 220,000 sq ft office scheme in Leeds. 12.7% WALES EAST OF ENGLAND £1.09 £1.38 65.1% billion billion -11.3% LONDON £5.46 billion 27.2% SOUTH WEST £1.64 -5.7% SOUTH EAST £2.58 billion Increase/decrease compared to year end Q2 2013 -15.0% billion % £2.03 starts by value, year to end Q2 2014 EAST MIDLANDS billion WEST MIDLANDS The picture is much weaker for the English regions outside London, where new activity fell by 6.3% over the 12-month period to £13.6 billion. Perhaps surprisingly, the southern regions saw a greater slump than elsewhere; indeed, the only increases were seen in Yorkshire & Humber (£1.7 billion, 7.3% up) and East Midlands (£1.0 billion, 12.7% up). -11.6% RETAIL LEISURE MEDICAL EDUCATION 3.3% £2.00bn 18.1% £6.20bn 19.1% £3.26bn £2.69bn 0.1% 19.2% £2.33bn OFFICES -23.6% INDUSTRIAL 7.7% £3.69bn £2.52bn The sectors: Retail sees biggest increase COMMUNITY Year to Q2 (£bn) • % change on Q2 2013 Of the main commercial sectors, retail was the leading improver, with new project values increasing by 19.2% to stand at £2.3 billion. Alongside the Selfridges project mentioned above, the total for the twelve months to June also includes the refurbishment of the Mailbox in Birmingham (Q4 2013), as well as Westfield’s restarted Broadway Shopping Centre in Bradford (Q1 2014), which also buoyed the Yorkshire total highlighted above. While still below historic levels of development, there are signs of life in the pipeline. Following a relatively buoyant 2013 (Trinity Leeds, Whiteley Village Hampshire, Wembley Designer Outlet), further select developments will come to the market in 2014 and 2015 (Old Market Shopping Centre, Hereford and Grand Central, Birmingham), which will impact the retail hierarchy in these locations. On a wider UK perspective, city centre developments are re-emerging, with Crawley, Oxford and Bracknell joining the Bradford scheme mentioned above. Looking forward, the appetite for direct development and indirect development funding is likely to increase as investors seek modern retail schemes with longer income, and real potential for rental growth. Developers may look out of town, to locations that are easier to develop, have great transport links, and the flexibility and space to enable the development of new destination ‘power centres’, to perform the role of new regional retail centres. However, offices, at £3.7 billion, still represent a far more significant slice of work, and activity rose by a very respectable rate of 7.7% over the period, higher than for the index as a whole. Looking over the longer 12-month period, this total includes some major starts in the City of London and surrounds, including Derwent London’s White Collar Factory (293,000 sq ft) as well as Land Securities’ schemes 1 New Street Square (260,000 sq ft) and New Ludgate (379,000 sq ft). These projects also helped produce the large increase seen in the capital, although all were dwarfed by the start on the relocation of the American Embassy from Grosvenor Square to Battersea. However, other cities also saw significant office projects begin, including Mountgrange and M&G’s One West Regent Street in Glasgow (143,000 sq ft) and Salmon Harvester and NFU Mutual’s Two Glass Wharf (100,000 sq ft). Fig 2: UK commercial construction volumes by sector Fig 3: Speculative development in Birmingham, Manchester, Leeds, Bristol, Glasgow and Edinburgh, by year of completion 10 3000 8 2500 7 2000 6 000s sq ft Annual project value (£bn) 9 5 4 3 1000 2 500 2000 Q4 2001 Q2 2001 Q4 2002 Q2 2002 Q4 2003 Q2 2003 Q4 2004 Q2 2004 Q4 2005 Q2 2005 Q4 2006 Q2 2006 Q4 2007 Q2 2007 Q4 2008 Q2 2008 Q4 2009 Q2 2009 Q4 2010 Q2 2010 Q4 2011 Q2 2011 Q4 2012 Q2 2012 Q4 2013 Q2 2013 Q4 2014 Q2 1 0 1500 Offices Industrial Retail Source: Glenigan/JLL While this is encouraging, the rate of increase needs to accelerate. There is an urgent need for more office space, particularly in London and the major regional cities. Indeed, much of the shortfall in construction activity compared to the early to mid 2000s is the result of the lack of activity in this sector – as the chart Fig 2 shows. According to JLL, Grade A vacancy rates are below 2% in the West End, Manchester, Bristol and Leeds. Across the Big 6 there is 1 million sq ft of office space currently under construction speculatively, compared to a peak of 2.5 million sq ft in 2009. This is shown in the chart Fig 3 above. In the aftermath of the financial crisis, development completions in the Central London office market have been well down on historic averages, reflecting both weaker demand and a shortage of credit. From early 2013 however, there has been a rapid pick-up in confidence across the wider economy, leading to the release of pent-up demand for office space and a jump in take-up levels, exposing a significant shortfall of new supply. The vacancy rate in the West End has now fallen to 3.2%, the lowest since 2001. In the City, supply has temporarily been boosted by the completion of some large schemes including The Leadenhall Building (610,000 sq ft), but the development pipeline 0 2007 2008 Completed Leisure 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Under construction Source: JLL is limited over the next two years. Occupiers are responding to the scarcity by pre-letting well ahead of their actual occupation, leading to rapid erosion of the speculative supply pipeline. The shortfall is set to become acute from 2015. Volumes in the industrial sector fell back by 23.6% to £2.5 billion. This reflects the fact that a major government facility, as well as a number of large automotive facilities in the West Midlands, were started over the twelve months to 2013. This hides an underlying upward trend in the remainder of the market. Indeed, JLL’s market statistics show that starts, particularly for speculative space, are accelerating, particularly in the distribution space; at the end of Q1 2014 there was 7.1 million sq ft under construction, compared to 2.1 million sq ft a year previously. As of February 2014 the amount of industrial space being speculatively built had risen by 182% over the year. This trend should continue given the wider revival in the industrial sector as well as the ongoing need for retailers to reconsider their logistics facilities as the impact of multichannel retailing becomes more apparent. Activity within the Hotel and Leisure sector remained relatively flat at £2.7 billion. This includes major projects in Bournemouth and Aberdeen which involved significant hotel components. This total should increase over coming years reflecting the ‘leisurefication’ of shopping centres, with catering options in particular taking up a greater share of shopping centres and high streets. There are currently just over 30,000 new hotel rooms actively in the pipeline. Aberdeen currently has the largest room pipeline relative to current supply (+17.3%), followed by Newcastle (+14.4%), Manchester (+12.8%) and Glasgow (+11.3%). Manchester already has a relatively high room supply (approximately 14,800 rooms), suggesting that developers and operators anticipate strong demand growth in the city. The figures imply further increases in hotel construction later this year. The medical and education sectors brushed off austerity to see a continued rise in activity – 19.1% and 18.1% respectively. Major hospital projects at Kings College, St Bernards Southall and the Royal Orthopaedic Hospital Stanmore also helped the London total detailed above. Summary Commercial construction is clearly beginning to revive, but it is still lagging the wider economic recovery. The provision of modern, attractive offices, industrial premises and shopping and leisure facilities is clearly essential if businesses’ growth plans are not to be constrained, with implications for the whole economy. It is however evident that there are already pressures building, particularly in London and the other major cities where the availability of grade A space is reaching very low levels, especially in the office market. There are signs that development is accelerating but far more needs to commence over the next few months. Contacts Helen Gough Lead Director JLL Buildings & Construction +44 (0)20 7087 5090 [email protected] Robert Davis Content Director Glenigan +44 (0)1202 786 707 [email protected] Jon Neale Head of UK Research JLL +44 (0)20 7087 5508 [email protected] Allan Wilén Economics Director Glenigan +44 (0)20 7715 6433 [email protected] The new quarterly JLL/Glenigan Commercial Construction Index is aimed at tracking the construction of commercial property and its contribution to the wider economy. As a vital leading indicator of construction trends, the next few quarters’ results will demonstrate whether this revival is beginning to occur. Glenigan JLL Buildings & Construction Glenigan is the trusted provider of project data, contract leads and market analysis for the UK construction industry. Combining comprehensive data gathering and exhaustive research with detailed statistical modelling and expert analysis, it delivers a trusted insight into construction trends and activity. Provide Building Consultancy, Project Management and Cost Management services for investors, occupiers and developers. A team of 230 operate from 15 UK offices as part of our Pan EMEA group. With exclusive content from leading industry bodies such as The Builders’ Conference, Glenigan offers the widest coverage of construction contracts in the UK. Glenigan customers include government agencies, construction companies and suppliers of materials and services to the industry. 0800 373 771 glenigan.com The team provides a full set of solutions through the acquisition, development, management and disposal phases of the property life cycle. Working with both the commercial and public sectors, we can offer a range of sector and technical specialists. jll.co.uk © COPYRIGHT JONES LANG LASALLE 2014. 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