The firm also predicted that the strong start means sales could beat the euro 9.73 billion ($11.72 billion) of deals in 2004, forging a new record. "It's full steam ahead for the market," says David Erwin, head of retail investment at CWHB. "The volume of transactions mirrors last year's record figures and a significant weight of money is still allocated for the sector."
He adds that pension funds, property companies, private equity buyers and debt-backed private investors were continuing to buy into the sector, despite concerns over the downturn in consumer spending. Many investors had raised funds for shopping-center investments this year and were committed to proceeding with deals, despite a slump in consumer sales and concerns of retailers about rising rents and property-tax bills. CWHB believes that shopping centers continued to look like a good value for investors, with prime assets generating rental returns of over 5%.
The report further says that deals worth euro 3.08 billion ($3.71 billion) were completed in the first quarter of this year and euro 1.06 billion ($1.28 billion) of shopping centers sold in the second quarter. Roughly euro 2.4 billion ($2.88 billion) of shopping assets are "under offer." Sales expected to complete in the third quarter include a stake in the Whitgift Centre in Croydon and the Headrow centre in Leeds.
© Touchpoint Markets, All Rights Reserved. Request academic re-use from www.copyright.com. All other uses, submit a request to [email protected]. For more inforrmation visit Asset & Logo Licensing.