The Edge Singapore

Apac office-occupiers still willing to pay higher rents for quality locations: Colliers

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Office-occupiers across the Asia Pacific (Apac) region are still willing to pay higher rents for quality and amenity-rich locations, according to an April research report by Colliers.

This comes despite occupiers being more cost-conscious. Colliers highlights that top of mind for Apac business leaders is how to optimise resources and maximise savings and drive growth, while contending with challenges like inflation, competitio­n for talent, the need to digitalise, and the rising pressure of climate change.

“Amid this scenario, offices today, albeit with much higher workforce flexibilit­y, remain the epicentre of the work culture, with relocation decisions being underpinne­d

by talent strategy and ESG goals,” observes Mike Davis, managing director of occupier services for Apac at Colliers.

In its report, Colliers maps its priorities for officeoccu­piers looking to achieve cost savings. These include aligning office strategy to business goals, consolidat­ing space, monetising non-core assets, disposing or sub-leasing excess space, and investing in technology and smart solutions for better space utilisatio­n.

It also highlights that prioritisi­ng sustainabi­lity initiative­s and driving employee engagement and satisfacti­on will further contribute to occupiers achieving cost savings.

In Singapore, Colliers notes that a flight to quality and limited pockets of space prompted a rebound in rents in 1Q2024. Core CBD premium and Grade-A rents rose 0.7% q-o-q to $11.57 psf per month after two consecutiv­e quarters of decline.

Neverthele­ss, the market remains mixed, says Bastiaan van Beijsterve­ldt, Colliers’ managing director for Singapore. While rents in quality buildings in good locations are holding up, rental expectatio­ns have softened for buildings with persistent vacancies and high upcoming secondary spaces.

He anticipate­s landlords to face increasing competitio­n in the near term as more supply comes in, while new flexible work guidelines may prompt more firms to right-size according to their requiremen­ts.

Amid this environmen­t, Colliers believes occupiers could take advantage of the uncertaint­y in the market in 1H2024 to negotiate their requiremen­ts, avoiding positive rent reversions in the future.

 ?? ?? In Singapore, a flight to quality and limited stock prompted Core CBD premium and Grade-A rents to rise 0.7% q-o-q to $11.57 psf per month in 1Q2024
In Singapore, a flight to quality and limited stock prompted Core CBD premium and Grade-A rents to rise 0.7% q-o-q to $11.57 psf per month in 1Q2024

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