Business Day

Hyprop sees safety in its strong balance sheet

- Denise Mhlanga Property Writer

JSE-listed Hyprop Investment­s says it is well positioned to weather the economic headwinds of rising interest rates and inflation thanks to improved trading at its malls and a strong balance sheet.

In a pre-close update on Monday, Hyprop said all of its dominant retail centres in SA and Eastern Europe have continued to enjoy more buoyant trading conditions over the past few months.

“We continue to focus on generating sustainabl­e total returns for shareholde­rs, reducing debt, and allocating capital prudently to diversify risk,” said CEO Morné Wilken.

He said that demand in SA for retail space is high, with vacancies of just 1.3%. Many retailers are trading better than before the pandemic.

Foot count rose 7.1% in the four months to end-October over the matching period in 2021. On Black Friday, foot traffic was 8% higher than in 2021, while tenant turnover for the four-month period rose 16.9%.

New retailers that recently opened stores include Scapegoat Gallery, George’s Grill House and Versailles Luxury at Hyde Park Corner; Huawei, Cosmic Comics and Freedom of Movement at Clearwater Mall; while at Canal Walk SA’s first Nike Live store opened as well as the Western Cape’s first Xiaomi and SPCC outlets.

Outside SA, Hyprop said it is working with Actis, a private equity firm, to implement the sale of Ikeja City Mall in Nigeria, and is considerin­g options, including a partial sale of its investment.

VACANCIES

Hyprop owns and manages a portfolio of mixed-use precincts underpinne­d by dominant retail centres in key economic nodes in SA and Eastern Europe. In SA, its shopping centres include Cape Gate, Canal Walk, Hyde Park Corner, Rosebank Mall, Somerset Mall, The Glen and Woodlands.

Retail vacancies in Eastern Europe were 0.5%. The Black Friday weekend saw foot count rise 19.6% on the Friday and 23.1% on the Saturday compared with the previous year.

Tenants at many of its centres continue to renovate their stores, while six new stores opened at The Mall in Sofia. However, increased costs of electricit­y, fuel and gas are driving inflation in the region, and this affects tenant occupation costs, said Wilken.

“We are closely monitoring tenant performanc­e on a monthly basis, and have granted temporary rent relief to some tenants in exchange for future rental escalation­s and longer lease tenure,” he said.

Up to October 31 Hyprop had R2.4bn of unutilised revolving credit facilities and R814m cash with a loan-to-value of 38.2%.

Hyprop will release its sixmonth

results for the period ending December 31 in March 2023. At the JSE’s close on

Monday, the share price had gained 0.63% to R33.69. mhlangad@businessli­ve.co.za

 ?? /Supplied ?? Done it: SA’s first Nike Live store opened recently at Hyprop’s Canal Walk shopping centre in Cape Town.
/Supplied Done it: SA’s first Nike Live store opened recently at Hyprop’s Canal Walk shopping centre in Cape Town.

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