Britain’s biggest property company spliting up

November 14, 2007 at 10:11 am | In commercial, ftse, land securities | 1 Comment

Big FTSE news this morning as Land Developments PLC, Britain’s biggest property company announces a 3 way split of its commercial property business. Currently this morning, the stock is trading down, but less than 1%

Gherkin sold

February 5, 2007 at 1:15 pm | In commercial, deals, london | Leave a Comment

Reports are that London’s iconic Gherkin (aka Swiss Re building) has just been sold for £600m, making it the largest ever sale of a single property asset in the U.K.

From FT:

In its early months the tower was often portrayed as something of a folly, having struggled to attract tenants because of the awkward nature of its floor plates.
Now, however, it is fully let, with Swiss Re occupying the first 16 out of 34 office floors and an array of other occupiers on the other floors. These include Hypo Real Estate, a German mortgage lender, Allianz, the German insurer, and Cardinal Asset Management, an investment firm.
The Gherkin’s sale shows there is still a strong appetite for commercial property investments in the UK despite fears that rising borrowing costs could restrain the market’s interest.

The "race" for London office space

January 22, 2007 at 4:36 pm | In commercial | Leave a Comment

London’s booming residential market seems to get the most press attention, the WSJ recently highlighted the capital’s tight race for office space amongst hedge fund operators:

The proliferation of hedge funds and private-equity firms has sent rents skyrocketing and vacancy rates plunging in London’s Mayfair district — home to many of London’s largest and best-known financial firms. Some buildings are being snapped up even before they are finished. In the past year, prime rents have jumped 22% to nearly $180 a square foot for the best space in Mayfair … [but] the party could crash amid a market meltdown or large scandal involving hedge funds. Roughly 1,300 hedge funds have liquidated in the past two years, according to Hedge Fund Research.

Tenants May Gain Clout in Office-Rental Market

January 4, 2007 at 9:36 am | In commercial, investment, research | Leave a Comment

By JENNIFER S. FORSYTH

Office landlords had a heyday in 2006 as rents rose at the fastest pace in six years. Yet there are signs that conditions could be turning a little more in the favor of tenants.

Newly released data by Reis Inc., a New York real-estate research firm, show that office rents rose 9% nationally last year, the heftiest increase since the height of the technology boom in 2000. However, the report also found that demand for new office space slowed sharply near the end of last year, a sign that large rent increases may not continue.

Demand for office space is measured by tracking the “absorption” rate, a closely watched number that quantifies the change in the net amount of occupied space. In the fourth quarter, tenants in the nation’s 79 largest markets absorbed a net 7.6 million square feet of space, according to Reis, compared with 11.6 million in the third quarter and 15.9 million in the second.

“It is clear that investors cannot expect the same pace of rent growth without a more cooperative level of net absorption,” said Lloyd Lynford, Reis’ chief executive. He noted that slowing growth in demand for office space tracks closely with the slowdown in employment growth in the second half.

Throughout most of last year, many companies took big blocks of office space, hoping to lock in rents before they moved higher. But several months ago, the mood began to change, real-estate experts say. “Now people are waiting to see what will happen in the economy,” said Barry Gosin, chief executive of Newmark Knight Frank, a real-estate services firm. “It’s not an ominous sign, but it’s certainly not as heated as it was.”

If companies continue to hold off renting more space, landlords are unlikely to be able to command the hefty rent increases they saw last year. In the fourth quarter, the increases in effective rent — the amount tenants pay after concessions — were as high as 5% in some markets and averaged 2.3% nationwide.

Real-estate experts say it is too early for property investors to panic, even at a time in which office buildings continue to sell at record prices and yields, or initial returns on investments, are at an all-time low.

The national absorption number somewhat masks the strong demand that continues in some markets — often in the very ones where record sales have caused mouths to drop, said Chuck Schreiber, chief executive of KBS Realty Advisors, Newport Beach, Calif.

Moreover, Mr. Schreiber said, the biggest risk to the office market — overbuilding — doesn’t seem to be a concern, at least in many of the hottest markets, as land and construction costs continue to limit new supply. According to Reis, 72 million square feet of office space should be opened nationally this year — the highest level in several years but well below the 126 million that opened in 2001.

Even so, that amount of new construction is enough to put upward pressure on vacancy rates, said Reis’s Mr. Lynford. The national vacancy rate finished last year at 13.3%, sustaining its tiniest drop in 10 quarters, at 0.2%.

Some of the cities that saw the strongest growth in effective rents in the fourth quarter will be hard-pressed to replicate those numbers going forward, Mr. Lynford said. Flashy results in some markets over just one quarter could indicate that landlords cut back significantly on concessions designed to lure new tenants — such as a year of free rent.

Now, Mr. Lynford said, to sustain similar levels of effective-rent growth, they must cut back further on concessions or drastically raise their asking rental rates — options which may be hard to justify with demand slowing.

Yet, in Houston, a city that saw 4.9% effective rent growth in the fourth quarter, brokers said demand for space — particularly in the central business district — is as strong as they can remember, thanks to the energy sector’s continued growth. Though rents per square foot in Houston remain low by the standards of pricier markets such as Boston, San Francisco, and New York, some landlords there were able to raise their rates twice or three times in 2006, said Steve Biegel, senior vice president for Studley, a tenant representation firm.

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Copyright 2007 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Canary Wharf sells 400,000 sq ft building to KPMG

November 24, 2006 at 6:02 am | In canary-wharf, commercial, deals | Leave a Comment


Canary Wharf Plc has sold 15 Canada Square, a 400,000 sq ft building site in the heart of the Docklands, to big four accountant KPMG for £260m; making it the first major accounting firm to locate its headquarters in the area. Construction is due to be completed by April 2009.

Knight Frank planning £600m European property IPO

November 6, 2006 at 8:49 am | In agents, commercial, europe, ftse, ipo | Leave a Comment

Knight Frank, is planning a £600m European property IPO. The move comes amid a surge of new investment on the continent by an array of international investors, notably from the US and the UK. Investors are drawn by commercial property yields of 6 per cent or higher. In Britain and North America this margin no longer exists for many grade-A properties.

Manchester’s answer to Canary Wharf

October 23, 2006 at 10:48 am | In city, commercial, manchester, wall street | Leave a Comment

The Sunday Times highlighted Manchester mayor Sir Howard Bernstein’s attempt to “woo” Wall Street firms to the north England city; along with Mike Ingall CEO of Allied London, the company behind Spinningfields – Manchester’s answer to Canary Wharf.
According to the article, Bank of New York is bringing 750 new jobs to the city, which Bernstein and Ingall hope will convince more to do the same. In the next few years a slew of financial regulation is expected to increase the amount of back-office work that banks have to undertake in Europe. There are 42 new directives being foisted on the EU financial-services sector in the next three years.

Banks such as Goldman Sachs or Merrill Lynch are never going to give up their prestigious Wall Street or City of London addresses. But, Bernstein and Ingall hope, they may be convinced to ship the burdensome back-office work up north rather than out east. Rents in the City are about £55 a square foot and in the West End they are close to £100. Rents in Manchester are about £25 a square foot. Rents and wages in India are far lower, but they are rising and there are other factors at play. “How sustainable is it for people to ship off everything to Bangalore in the long term?” said Bernstein. He pointed to Powergen’s decision to move its call-centre operations back to Britain to improve customer relations. “And if you look at the City of London or Wall Street, it’s obvious that financial and professional-services companies want to be close together,” he said.

Americans set to buy London City Airport

October 11, 2006 at 7:43 am | In UK, city, commercial, deals, ken livingstone, london, politics | Leave a Comment

American International Group, GE Capital, and Credit Suisse are reportedly putting the finishing touches to contracts to purchase London City Airport for £750 million after Madrid based Sacyr Vallehermoso pulled out of the deal, late last month. City handled almost 2 million passengers last year, compared to Heathrow’s 70 million and in related news, London mayor Ken Livingstone is reportedly `close” to a £10 billion funding agreement with the UK government over Crossrail; a railway system that would connect the West End, City and Docklands with Heathrow. We reported last month that London business leaders were eager to see Crossrail developed; many expressing frustration that Gordon Brown had not yet resolved the project’s funding. This is seen as an urgent transport priority and has been the subject of concerted lobbying by the capital’s business leaders.
Mayor Ken is apparently planning to “bust a gut” to see that Gordon Brown, replaces Tony Blair as the UK’s next prime minister, when he steps down as party leader next year.

Another City of London office block on the market

October 4, 2006 at 7:13 am | In city, commercial, deals, london | Leave a Comment

Following the recent announcement that Swiss Re’s iconic Gherkin is now on the market, The FT’s property correspondent Jim Packard is reporting this morning that the 600,000 sq ft Cutlers Gardens Estate is reportedly up for sale; asking price £400 million, and if achieved will be the second biggest property deal ever in the City:

It is understood that owners JPMorgan, the US investment bank, and O’Connor Capital, a US fund management business, have hired agents BH2 to advise on options. These range from an outright sale to bringing in new partners or launching a fund.
The buildings, at Devonshire Square – between Liverpool Street and Swiss Re’s Gherkin – are multilets but include the European headquarters of Aon, the insurance company. Other tenants include Prudential-Bache, the US broker and Hammonds, the law firm.
At a price of £400m and rents of about £22m, the initial yield on the property will be about 5.5 per cent.
This is somewhat higher than the 4.5 per cent yield being sought on the Gherkin, which has just been put on the market by Swiss Re at a record asking price of £600m. Cutlers Gardens is the last UK asset owned by Peabody Global Real Estate Partners, a joint venture between JPMorgan and O’Connor Capital, which bought the estate from Standard Life for £300m five years ago.
The possible sale comes amid a frenzy of demand for UK commercial property from pension funds, overseas investors, high net worth investors and foreign companies.
The value of deals in the City alone hit £2.8bn in the second quarter – more than the annual totals for City office deals for 15 of the past 23 years. The high value of deals is set to continue with a large number of buildings on the block.

[via FT]

City of London skyscraper gets planning approval

September 20, 2006 at 10:04 am | In city, commercial, design, development, london | 4 Comments

An office tower nicknamed the “walkie-talkie” will be the latest exotic addition to London’s skyline after getting planning permission from the City of London planning committee. 20 Fenchurch Street, designed by architect Rafael Vinoly for Land Securities, Britain’s largest listed property company, will be a 37-storey tower with 600,000 sq ft of space. It will have a public “sky garden” on the roof with panoramic views from the 160-metre high building.
The news came as the consortium behind the Shard of Glass, a rival skyscraper at London Bridge – which would be the tallest in western Europe – announced it had completed a £190m funding package from Nationwide and Kaupthing Singer & Friedlander. The deal, secured by developers Irvine Sellar, Simon Halabi and CLS Holdings, follows the letting of 190,000 sq ft of office space to Transport for London.
[via FT]

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