Bangkok Post

London’s West End rebounds

-

London’s West End has seen retail, hospitalit­y and leisure venue sales return to pre-pandemic levels, boosting rent and property demand, commercial landlord Shaftesbur­y said on Tuesday.

From Carnaby Street to Piccadilly Circus and China Town, shoppers, diners, drinkers and theatre-goers have been packing central London’s streets in the build-up to Christmas, with many drawn by the festive decoration­s.

London had lagged other parts of Britain in recovering from Covid-19 as workers were slow to return to offices, but pubs have reported stronger demand in the run-up to Christmas and internatio­nal tourists have returned since the summer.

Shaftesbur­y said it had not yet seen a “significan­t impact” on the number of shoppers or visitors to its properties from a downturn in Britain’s economy but noted that inflation rates at a 41-year high could hit consumer confidence over time.

“Although London and the West End cannot be immune from the unpreceden­ted range of challenges which are now dominating the national outlook, their long-term prospects remain bright,” chief executive officer Brian Bickell said.

The property firm said in its full-year results that its retail and hospitalit­y tenants were reporting average monthly sales 6% ahead of pre-crisis levels.

Surveys and official data shows that British consumer confidence is near an all-time low and overall sales volumes are below pre-pandemic levels as inflation limits shopping.

Shaftesbur­y said that restaurant­s and pubs in the central London hotspot were primed to benefit from a Christmas season free of lockdowns and crowds watching the World Cup.

Earlier in November, pubs group Fuller, Smith & Turner reported a 67% jump in comparable sales in central London in the first half. JD Wetherspoo­n posted a 9.6% rise in like-for-like sales for the first quarter.

Shaftesbur­y owns around 600 buildings in the heart of the West End. More than a third of the FTSE 250 firm’s property portfolio is occupied by hospitalit­y and leisure firms, while about 27% is retail.

 ?? AFP ?? People walk past Christmas decoration­s on Carnaby Street.
AFP People walk past Christmas decoration­s on Carnaby Street.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand