The Citizen (Gauteng)

Activity at 14-year low

NEW DEVELOPMEN­T SLOWDOWN: LACKLUSTRE ECONOMIC GROWTH A FACTOR

- Suren Naidoo, Moneyweb

Average national office vacancy rate remains in the double digits.

New developmen­ts under constructi­on in SA’s office property sector have decelerate­d to their lowest level since the last quarter of 2005, while average national office vacancies remain in the double digits at 11%.

This is according to the South African Property Owners’ Associatio­n (Sapoa) office vacancy report for the third quarter of 2019.

The report, published last week, was compiled by global research group MSCI on behalf of Sapoa.

“Developmen­t activity in the office sector has been on a downward trend since 2015 amid poor business confidence and low growth,” notes the report, adding that by the end of the third quarter “developmen­ts under constructi­on totalled 378 000m2 – the lowest level since Q4 2005”.

The report points out that SA’s “muted employment growth” and low economic growth continues to dampen the office property sector’s hopes for a short-term recovery.

It states that for the sector’s vacancy rate to drop to 5%, it will require at least 75 000 new office-based jobs to be created.

Speaking to Moneyweb, Sapoa CEO Neil Gopal says it all comes down to SA’s lacklustre economic growth over the past decade. “Everything is underpinne­d by GDP growth. We need much stronger GDP growth to kick-start the economy and to create jobs.”

Reiteratin­g the sentiments in the report, Gopal notes that uncertaint­y around government policy, the country’s credit rating and Eskom remain major concerns.

“Policy certainty will no doubt help, but the government will also have to address Eskom, which remains the elephant in the room.

“The sudden bout of load shedding [on Wednesday] is not good and could not have come at a worse time..”

Gopal says government will also need to up its investment into infrastruc­ture to bolster growth.

“I don’t have a crystal ball to know how things will turn out, but if government sorts out policy issues and significan­tly increases spending on infrastruc­ture, it will lead to the private sector increasing its investment in SA.”

Commenting on the newly released Sapoa office vacancy report, Simon Wilkins of commercial property brokerage Galetti says the reduction in developmen­t activity is a direct result of falling demand.

I am happy that developers have pulled back

“Office tenants are typically renewing leases in their existing buildings at very competitiv­e rates currently, and landlords are on strong retention drives, seeking to actively manage their renewals,” he notes.

“Most developmen­ts you see going up now were largely committed to three years ago and, therefore, the supply is still coming to market, albeit at a reduced level,” adds Wilkins.

Phil Barttram, an executive director at MSCI, says the decline in office property developmen­t activity is not necessaril­y a bad thing, considerin­g the double-digit vacancies in the market.

“I am happy that developers have pulled back and are not adding massive new office supply in a tough SA market.”

The Sapoa report shows that SA office vacancies slightly improved from a national average of 11.3% in the second quarter of 2019, to 11% in the third quarter. “The improved vacancy rate did come at the cost of rental growth, as asking rentals nationally declined by 1% year on year,” notes the report.

 ?? Picture: Supplied ?? TO LET. Sandton lays claim to the highest concentrat­ion of new office developmen­t in SA, but this has contribute­d to a rise in vacancies.
Picture: Supplied TO LET. Sandton lays claim to the highest concentrat­ion of new office developmen­t in SA, but this has contribute­d to a rise in vacancies.

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