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Confidence continues to recover across the UK commercial property market

As restrictions lift, results from the Q2 2021 RICS UK Commercial Property Survey sees further signs of recovery with 56 per cent of respondents reporting the market is in an upturn.

This is mirrored in investor appetite as +15 per cent of contributors reported an increase in all-property investment enquiries over the quarter. Unsurprisingly, the industrial sector still leads the way (net balance of +64 per cent) and is the strongest reading on record. Office sector investment demand also picked up from -18 per cent in Q1 to +4 per cent in Q2, pointing to a more stable trend coming through.

Across all sectors, occupier demand recorded the strongest reading since 2016, with a net balance of +16 per cent of respondents reporting a pick-up. Demand trends are now beginning to stabilise across the office sector, mostly for prime space. Interestingly, there is now a positive demand for office space in the South (+7 per cent), and the net balance in London is flat (-3 per cent), up from a net balance of -79 per cent in Q4 2020. As in previous surveys, industrial property continues to lead, with both investor and occupier demand growing again. Now retail has fully reopened, only -25 per cent of respondents reported a fall in demand, noticeably less downbeat than -55 per cent in Q1.

The availability of space unsurprisingly mirrors the demand picture, with availability still running low within the UK industrial sector, as -48 per cent of respondents reported a decline. This is the eighth year in a row that respondents have reported a lack of available industrial space in the UK. While there is plenty of available leasable office and retail space, the recent rise in vacancies does appear to be slowing, although respondents have reported an increase in the use of incentives on offer to encourage take up.

Looking at rents, prime industrial rents are expected to rise by 5 per cent in the year ahead and secondary industrial rents by 3 per cent. With the pickup in demand for office space, prime office rents have turned significantly less downbeat and are expected to fall by 1 per cent in the coming twelve months, whereas secondary office rents are seen to be falling by 4 per cent. Retail rents are expected to continue to fall, as projections stand at -5.5 per cent for prime and -8 per cent for secondary.

For the year ahead, capital value growth remains broadly unchanged, and looking beyond the mainstream markets, respondents expect values to rise for multifamily residential properties, data centres and aged care facilities. Hotels are now only marginally negative (-1 per cent) and student housing moved into neutral territory.

Tarrant Parsons, RICS Economist, said:“Confidence continues to recover across the UK commercial property market, a point supported by the fact a majority of survey participants now sense overall conditions are consistent with an upturn. Aided by the growth in online spending seen during the pandemic, demand remains robust throughout the industrial sector, producing strong expectations for both rents and capital values in the year to come. Although, on the other side of the equation, changes to work and lifestyle preferences continue to create challenges for the retail and office sectors, a more stable demand picture coming through across the latter over Q2 just hints that trends may be starting to turn in a more favourable direction.”

FMJ and Grundon Waste Management have launched the 2021 waste and recycling management survey. It’s the fourth year for the annual appraisal of how FMs manage their waste and recycling activities and one which marks an unprecedented period of disruption to services due to the pandemic.

In order to understand how FMs have navigated their way through the last year and their plans for meeting stringent waste and recycling targets we’ve posed a series of questions – aided by the advice and experience of our editorial steering committee.

The results of the 2021 survey will be published in FMJ magazine and form the basis of a white paper co-written by FMJ and the experts at Grundon on how to approach waste and recycling strategies.

To take part in the survey click here.

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