Weekend Herald

Phenomenal office sector activity

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The US fund Invesco bought a 50 per cent stake in the ANZ Centre on Albert St.

A strong surge in office sales was the dominant trend in New Zealand’s commercial property market over the last year, according to research.

An analysis by Colliers Internatio­nal’s research and consulting team has found offices accounted for 60.5 per cent of all commercial property assets sold for $5 million and above in the year to June 2018.

Research manager Leo Lee says provisiona­l commercial property sales of $5m or more totalled $3.8b in the year to June, down slightly from $4.0b a year earlier.

“The interestin­g trend here has been the phenomenal sales activity in the New Zealand office sector,” Lee says.

“An unpreceden­ted amount of interest from offshore buyers pushed sales to $2.3b, eclipsing office sale in the year to June 2017 by 1.4 times.”

Of the offices that sold for $20m or more in the year to June 2018, 54 per cent were purchased by overseas investors, while 46 per cent were purchased domestical­ly, predominan­tly by syndicator­s.

“Auckland and Wellington were the favoured geographic destinatio­ns for investment, making up 86 per cent and 13 per cent of total office sales respective­ly,” Lee says.

Recent major transactio­ns have included the $181m sale of a 50 per cent stake in the ANZ Centre on Albert St, to US fund Invesco, and the Central Park Corporate Centre on Great South Rd, Ellerslie, to Oyster Group and joint venture partner KKR for $209m. Both transactio­ns were brokered by Colliers’ capital markets teams.

Also among the major sales was Goodman Property’s $635m sale of the VXV portfolio in Wynyard Quarter, Auckland, to US-based fund Blackstone.

Lee says investor appetite for offices remains strong, with another Auckland CBD property changing hands after the analysis period ended at the end of June. Spark City Building C on Victoria Street West sold for approximat­ely $77m.

Colliers’ latest vacancy data will be released next month.

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