The Pak Banker

Investors face coronaviru­s induced property dilemma

- LONDON -REUTERS

The coronaviru­s pandemic has emptied offices and shuttered shops but filled warehouses and highlighte­d demand for work-from-home spaces, leaving investors wondering if they should flee real estate or double down on their bets. Property has long been a staple of a balanced investment portfolio, favoured by pension funds and insurers seeking assets that combine capital value growth offered by stocks with secure income akin to bonds.

But government lockdowns to contain COVID-19 have spurred unpreceden­ted changes in the way billions of people live and work, denting values and rental prospects of malls and skyscraper­s and making property investment a far bigger gamble.

"It is unclear whether we will see more demand for real estate because of social distancing, or less because of the home office," Joe

Stadler, head of the ultrahigh net worth business at UBS (UBSG.S) told Reuters, describing the conundrum as a key focus for clients.

Millions of staff are now working from home while online shopping sales reported by Alibaba (BABA.N) and Amazon have soared. Savills is forecastin­g prime European office rents to drop by between 2 and 10% this year, while first-quarter yields on prime European shopping centres have softened by 39 bps to 5.1% compared to 2019.

In contrast, demand for logistics real estate could grow by 150-200 million square feet annually for the next two-to-three years in the United States, industrial property firm ProLogis (PLD.N) said.

And some of the boldest investors are not only sticking with the property asset class but raising their stakes. Data from alternativ­e assets research firm Preqin showed European focused property funds attracted $13.2 billion from investors between April 1 and May 28, the highest quarterly volume seen since Q4 2017, with one month of the quarter remaining.

Swapping offices and shops for storage and industrial property appears like a simple solution. But few analysts and advisers are certain that changes to the way the world uses real estate will outlast the pandemic, and radical portfolio shifts now could cost investors dearly.

Asset allocators like Columbia Threadneed­le (AMP.N) have confirmed "neutral" stances on property this week, while many of the world's biggest companies have given mixed signals on their future real estate needs, compoundin­g uncertaint­y for landlords.

Mastercard, Visa (V.N) and American Express (AXP.N) have ruled out rapid returns to the office and may consolidat­e buildings if staff prefer homebased working.

 ?? BRUSSELS
-REUTERS ?? European High Representa­tive of the Union for Foreign Affairs, Josep Borrell, during a video press conference.
BRUSSELS -REUTERS European High Representa­tive of the Union for Foreign Affairs, Josep Borrell, during a video press conference.

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