King Sturge: Signals still mixed from Europe's office markets


After two years of upheaval, there are signs of recovery in Europe’s office markets at last. But the outlook remains mixed with markets recovering at very different speeds. This is the view of the latest edition of King Sturge’s European Office Property Markets, a survey of Europe’s most important office markets.


        

A few lead markets are now characterized by rising take-up and rents, and falling vacancy and yields. “Here, global links have been the critical in the early rebound,” comments Andrew Burrell, Head of Office Research at King Sturge.

“In western Europe, the green signals are clearest in London, Geneva and Paris, where businesses have benefited from well-established global connections, particularly in finance. In Eastern Europe, it is in the emerging economies of Russia and Turkey where the office rebound has been strongest, fed by a recovery in exports and commodity prices.”

In Central London, a 40% drop in vacancy and doubling of take-up are in prospect this year. The revival has already lifted prime rents by 10%, while the UK’s capital is virtually the only place in Europe where speculative office development is re-starting. Paris and Geneva are seeing a less dramatic recovery, but growth in these centers is expected to help lift take-up for Western Europe as a whole for the first time in three years.

Outside of these isolated hotspots, the picture is weaker. In the west, economic divisions run deep, with recovery in the south stalled by the Greek debt crisis. Most notable office market laggards are Athens and Madrid, where the slump is expected to continue and the lights remain firmly on red. Outside of Moscow and Istanbul in the east, demand has also stabilized at a low level and rents remain under pressure.

But the early stages of recovery are not the best guide to future prospects and performance differences should narrow as the recovery spreads in the next two years. A number of factors will ensure the health of office occupier markets:

The supply pipeline remains limited and vacancy is set to ease in most markets over the next year or more. In addition, speculative development is unlikely to return soon, with rents low and banks still rebuilding their balance sheets.

Economic recovery is expected to continue, though at different rates. The euro zone will lag the UK and Nordics on GDP growth, with the emerging economies of Eastern Europe putting in the strongest performance.

In line with this, office employment growth is expected to resume next year and will support office floor-space demand over the medium to long term.


“Economic forecasts suggest that the larger international centers in the west will continue to perform well,” says Andrew Burrell. “The global reach of London ensures it is the largest creator of office jobs over the next five years. Bucharest, Frankfurt, Paris, Amsterdam, Munich and Milan are also set to expand at healthy rates.”

Source: King Sturge
10/04/2010



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