Daily Mail

UK commercial property facing £14bn price crash

- By Calum Muirhead

Goldman Sachs has sounded the alarm over commercial property in the UK – and warned the sector could see a crash fuelled by soaring interest rates.

The investment bank predicted that values across the sector could fall by 15pc to 20pc between June this year and the end of 2024, effectivel­y wiping up to £14bn off the portfolios of some of the industry’s biggest players.

Goldman analysts said the sharp ‘price correction’ would come as a result of the rising cost of funding as interest rate hikes from the Bank of England made it more expensive for developers to take out loans.

The bank added that due to the darkening outlook for the economy, retail landlords would come under ‘renewed pressure’ over the next 12 months as consumerfo­cused businesses faced a slowdown in demand caused by the cost of living squeeze.

The Wall Street giant also highlighte­d an ‘ increasing risk of vacancy’ as some businesses went bust, and warned rising energy costs for remaining tenants would not be ‘unfelt’ by landlords with slim profit margins.

‘The overall impact of rising energy costs may be small, but for lower-margin business will not be insignific­ant in our view,’ Goldman analysts said.

despite the bleak outlook, the investment bank said it was ‘not all doom and gloom’, noting that shares in both FTSE 100 group Segro ( up 1.5pc, or 10.8p, to 711.8p) and mid-cap firm Derwent London ( up 0.7pc, or 13p, to 1920p) looked ‘oversold’ following sharp declines earlier this year.

The bank added that weakness in the sector could increase the potential for mergers and acquisitio­ns as buyers looked to snap up firms on the cheap.

despite Goldman’s warning, shares in london’s major commercial property firms moved higher following recent sharp declines. FTSE 100 firm British Land gained 1.6pc, or 5.3p, to 330.1p and rival Land Securities rose 3.1pc, or 15.1p, to 504p.

But both businesses are still nursing brutal losses in the yearto-date, with British land down nearly 40pc since early January and landSec falling 35pc.

The FTSE 100 recovered to end the day up 0.35pc, or 24.12 points, to 6850.27 and the FTSE 250 rose 1.91pc, or 318.10 points, to 16,929.26. The blue-chip index was headed for its seventh consecutiv­e session in the red after higher- thanexpect­ed US inflation data sparked fears of more sharp interest rate hikes from the Federal Reserve.

But it rallied towards the close following a rebound in US markets as well as reports the Government was considerin­g scrapping more parts of Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng’s mini-Budget.

UK-focused banking stocks rose on hopes the turbulence in Britain’s markets could subside, with NatWest surging 7.7pc, or 16.3p, to 228.7p, Lloyds climbing 6.9pc, or 2.68p, to 41.77p, Barclays bouncing 5.1pc, or 6.86p, to 142.54p and HSBC rising 2.3pc, or 10.2p, to 459.25p.

oil prices were on the back foot amid worries fuel demand will be hit by a global economic slowdown, a fear exacerbate­d by the prospect of ever-higher interest rates. Internatio­nal benchmark Brent crude slipped to below $92 a barrel, but Shell shares recovered from an early slide to rise 1.5pc, or 33.5p, to 2302.5p.

BP climbed 2pc, or 8.9p, to 458.25p on the day its electric vehicle-charging business signed a deal to support the fleet of london car hire firm addison lee.

AB Foods, the owner of High Street retailer Primark, rose 2.9pc, or 36.5p, to 1286.5p after revealing its discount clothing store would be launching a click-and- collect trial service at 25 of its stores before the end of the year.

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