Yorkshire Post

Firm is‘ recovering’ after£ 3.6m virus hit

Firm aims to expand residentia­l stake

- ROS SNOWDON ■ Email: ros. snowdon@ ypn. co. uk ■ Twitter: @ RosSnowdon­YPN

BUSINESS: Property firm Town Centre Securities said it is recovering after taking a £ 3.6m hit from the pandemic.

The firm, which owns the Merrion Centre in Leeds, said its results for the year to June 30 were disappoint­ing, but the impact of Covid- 19 has been unpreceden­ted and a high degree of uncertaint­y remains.

PROPERTY FIRM Town Centre Securities said it is recovering after taking a £ 3.6m hit from the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The Leeds- based firm, which owns the Merrion Centre, said its results for the year to June 30 were disappoint­ing, but the impact of Covid- 19 has been unpreceden­ted and a high degree of uncertaint­y remains.

The group reported a strong performanc­e in the first two thirds of its financial year, with good numbers and progress made on its strategic initiative­s.

However, from March to June, the lockdown resulted in a £ 3.6m Covid- 19 hit, including £ 2m in lost car parking income, a £ 1.2m impact in the property business, primarily due to bad debt, and a £ 400,000 hit from reduced bookings for its ibis Styles hotel.

TCS said its retail and leisure tenants were hardest hit. These assets have seen valuations drop by 12 per cent year on year, accounting for £ 23m of a total £ 26m fall in valuation.

The firm reported a statutory loss for the year of £ 24.2m, down £ 11.7m year on year, largely due to the negative impact the crisis has had on the value of its portfolio, which is down seven per cent year on year.

Planning consent for Whitehall Road in Leeds to develop a 180,000 sq ft Grade A office space and 513 space multi- storey car park has been implemente­d and TCS is currently marketing the site in a bid to secure a pre- let.

Retail and leisure now account for 47 per cent of the firm’s portfolio,

down from 50 per cent a year ago and 70 per cent in 2016. This level reduces to 42 per cent following the sales announced earlier this week, TCS has sold four retail properties in Scotland and London for a total sum of £ 35.2m. The units include two Waitrose stores, an Aldi/ Home

Bargains store and a high street retail store in London.

TCS said the refurbishm­ent of 123 Albion Street, Leeds ( previously The Cube), continued during lockdown and has now completed, further reducing exposure to retail and leisure. The £ 4m office investment is expected to deliver an investment yield of over 8.5 per cent and TCS said interest in the space is strong.

Chairman and chief executive, Edward Ziff, said: “We’ve got two ( potential) occupiers for 123 Albion Street. Both are in discussion­s with us about possibly taking the whole building.”

He said that residentia­l is going to become a bigger part of the group’s portfolio.

“Retail will always be a meaningful part of our portfolio as long as we own Merrion Centre, somewhere between 33 and 40 per cent is where that number is going to settle in the short to medium term.

“We want to move away from retail. There is still a shortage of homes in this country, whether that be city centre residentia­l, edge of city or suburban residentia­l, I think that should be the most sustainabl­e, predictabl­e source of long- term income.

“Residentia­l is just six per cent at the moment. I can see that going to 20 per cent quite quickly. From before Covid, during Covid and now, that part of our estate has been virtually fully let throughout.”

The car parking business has seen good trading.

“Since we’ve seen a return to some sort of normality, the pick up in demand for our car parking has been really strong,” said Mr Ziff.

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