The Scotsman

Scottish capital bags a top ten placing in major study of ‘cities of influence’

● Edinburgh ranked seventh overall in commercial property index from Colliers

- By SCOTT REID

Edinburgh has been given a top billing in a major survey of the most influentia­l cities in Europe for firms looking to occupy and invest in commercial property.

The Scottish capital was ranked seventh overall and the highest placed of those with a population catchment below two million, while Glasgow was placed 24th overall in Colliers Internatio­nal’s latest European Cities of Influence report.

The property adviser’s study reviews and ranks cities based on their occupier attractive­ness, availabili­ty of talent, and quality of life factors, alongside economic output and productivi­ty. Edinburgh was the highest ranking UK city in terms of “employee aspiration­al” factors.

Douglas Mcphail, head of Colliers Internatio­nal in Scot- land, said: “Scoring highly for its economic output and the availabili­ty, talent and aspiration­s of its workforce, it’s not surprising that Edinburgh has outperform­ed most commercial property markets in recent years.

“It is significan­t that the positions in our Cities of Influence index this year mirror investment volumes over the course of 2017, suggesting that investor activity is becoming closer aligned to broader, longterm drivers of occupation­al growth.

“In Edinburgh in particular, with its exceptiona­lly strong fundamenta­ls, investment activity is expected to increase further going forward. However, when compared to the German ‘Big 7’, and the major Nordic capitals, most UK cities look significan­tly under-invested.”

The 2018 report ranked London as the most attractive city in Europe for the second year running, with Paris, Madrid, Moscow and Birmingham making up the rest of the top five.

This year’s extended version of the survey examined 50 major European economic hubs – building on the 20 cities covered in the inaugural report – providing a broad geographic coverage of European markets that are of global, regional and national importance.

Peter Leyburn, a director at Colliers, added: “Office occupier strength is the engine room for a city economy and as a driver of all other forms of real estate demand: be it retail (and thus logistics), hotels, leisure and residentia­l.

“Occupation­al strength will also help drive rental growth and longer-term this is the most important driver of capital value – especially in an environmen­t where yields do not look capable of compressin­g any further in the vast majority of markets.”

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