Real estate advisor Savills Germany reports that commercial real estate transactions reached €22.6 billion in Germany last year and is expected to exceed €20 billion again this year. Retail investment dominated the market in 2011, accounting for nearly half of all sales, while the office market made up most of the difference with 35% of all transactions. Strong consumer confidence in the retail sector is helping to stabilize rents, which investors find attractive in an uncertain market that is overshadowed by the Eurozone financial crisis. Regions seeing the most investment last year included Frankfurt, Berlin, Hamburg, Düsseldorf and Munich. For more on this continue reading the following article from Property Wire.
Transaction volumes for Germany’s commercial real estate market will exceed €20 billion in 2012 with continued strong demand from both domestic and foreign investors, it is claimed.
According to research by international real estate advisor Savills real estate worth €22.6 billion changed ownership in Germany in 2011, marking a 20% increase on 2010.
‘The final quarter of 2011 recorded the second best investment volume of the year at approximately €5.8 billion, showing little evidence in the investment market of a deteriorating macro economic environment,’ said Lars-Oliver Breuer, head of investment at Savills Germany.
‘Given a number of uncertainties it is difficult to provide an outlook to 2012 but what will be crucial is whether the situation in the financial markets stabilizes and if the eurozone succeeds in convincing investors of its stability,’ he explained.
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‘Financing will be the predominant issue this year but if the continuously strong demand for German real estate can be translated into deals the 20 billion mark is realistic for 2012,’ he added.
Savills research shows that as in previous quarters the retail sector dominated German markets in the last quarter of 2011. Overall retail generated an investment volume of over €11 billion, making up almost half, 49%, of total transactions in 2011 and representing an increase of 60% on 2010.
The office sector, which has historically dominated the German investment market, accounted for just below 35% of all transactions in 2011. Overall offices accounted for €6.58 billion of the investment volume in 2011, up from €4.88 billion in 2010.
According to Matthias Pink, head of research at Savills Germany the reason for the increase in retail investment is partly due to the higher rental stability of retail properties. ‘Investors who continue to focus on secure investments appreciate this characteristic. Another reason is the stable and currently very good consumer sentiment in Germany,’ he said.
Overall almost half of Germany’s 2011 total transaction volume was invested in the leading five markets of Frankfurt, Berlin, Hamburg, Düsseldorf and Munich. Due to several large volume deals Frankfurt led the way generating a single asset transaction volume of over €2.3 billion, making up 14% of the total German transaction volume.
Munich also recorded a strong increase almost doubling its volume invested in single assets in 2011 to €1.6 billion. In Berlin volumes were up 11% and in Hamburg they were up 14%. But in Düsseldorf the transaction volume decreased by approximately 40% compared to 2010.
The share of foreign buyers was approximately one third in 2011 with investors of Anglo Saxon origin accounting for over half of all foreign investment. As in the first half of the year open ended and closed ended funds were among the strongest buyer groups and jointly invested €7.6 billion.
The second half of 2011 saw a notable increase in investment activity from insurance companies and pension funds as well as listed property companies and REITs.
This article was republished with permission from Property Wire.