The Scotsman

Property market eyes road to recovery

- By SCOTT REID

Scotland’s property investment market may be on the road to recovery, despite activity remaining below the longterm average, a new report suggests.

Scotland’s property investment market may be on the road to recovery, despite activity remaining below the longterm average, a new report suggests.

Lismore Real Estate Advisors’ quarterly review points to more positive times ahead as deal activity gathers pace following the economic fallout from the pandemic.

Transactio­n volumes in quarter two have increased by 71 per cent since the opening three months of 2021, with some £300 million traded, though activity remains some 30 per cent below the five-year average.

The firm predicts that the second half of the year will be more positive, with three “significan­t” transactio­ns north of £50m understood to be in the pipeline.

The review indicates that prime logistics yields are continuing to harden at 4.5 per cent. Prime Edinburgh office yields are likely to sharpen before the year end, Lismore noted, with limited stock and strong occupation­al demand the key drivers.

In the “value-add” sector, offices capable of re-positionin­g, first-generation retail warehousin­g with underlying industrial or residentia­l potential are in demand, albeit the market remains relatively tight for these kind of deals, the firm added.

Chris Thornton, associate at Lismore, said: “Activity in the last quarter has continued to see the wall of overseas equity targeting our best long income assets.

“This has included the emergence of American REITS [real estate investment trusts] in the Scottish market, mainly focused on longer income retail warehousin­g, with schemes anchored by food stores and value retailers, being particular­ly liquid. We have also seen the continual growing appetite for anything close to the life sciences sector.

"On the downside, city centres are taking time to regain momentum with footfall remaining fickle and retailers and restaurate­urs having to work very hard to attract customers back through the doors.

“Retail re-purposing has started in some of the strongest streets but there remains significan­t challenges for those city centre locations unable to attract alternativ­e use investment.”

He added: “Overseas investors with a UK presence (and capable of travel) remain active, with US and middle eastern being the two most active sources of equity.

"The weight of capital waiting to be deployed is considerab­le, suggesting it should be a busy end to 2021 with more stock to come to the market.”

The report noted that speculativ­e developmen­t was becoming more feasible and with a demand/supply imbalance, those developers brave enough to get in early will be “well-placed to achieve letting and investment sale success”.

It highlighte­d Knight Property Group, which is at the forefront of speculativ­e logistics developmen­t in Scotland at Belgrave Logistics Park. When complete, it will extend to some 250,000 square feet of accommodat­ion on the 14-acre former Devro factory site in Bellshill.

Simon Cusiter, director of Lismore, said: “Appetite is strong across the board in the industrial and logistics sector, but we are certainly witnessing a ‘tiering effect’ when it comes to sub-sectors and rents.”

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