Overall investment down, but international cash remains stable
Overseas buyers gave a welcome boost to UK regional office investment in 2016, with international money accounting for 45% of all investment into offices across the 10 cities tracked by Knight Frank鈥檚 newest Regional Office Market Report, up from 35% in the previous year.
While overall investment volumes fell from 拢3.2bn in 2015 to 拢2.5bn in 2016 - with the finger of blame pointed squarely at political uncertainty - overseas investment remained stable at 拢1.1bn.
Across the 10 cities surveyed Edinburgh led the way, surpassing expectations with volumes reaching 拢445m, the highest annual level achieved since 2006. Overseas investment represented 70% of this total, with German buyers the most active.
The Scottish capital was one of only three UK regional cities to record investment levels above that of 2015, along with Bristol and Sheffield.
The continued strength of the leasing market supported investor interest in the regions. Despite being less than the previous year, 2016 occupier activity held firm, with the level of combined take-up across the regional centres finishing well above the long-term average.
Notably, overall take-up in Manchester reached 1.3 million ft虏 for the third consecutive year, with the 81,000 ft虏 letting to law firm Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer being the largest inward investment deal on record for the city.
The highest year-on-year growth however, was in Bristol where take-up reached 783,000 ft虏, a 60% increase on 2015.
Knight Frank said each of the regional cities was evolving through innovation and development, together with both public and private investment. The influx of overseas money across many regional markets can be attributed not only to the opportunity they saw in the devaluation of the pound 鈥渂ut also to the significant demand from occupiers, which has encouraged refurbishment and development of new office space鈥.
Alastair Graham-Campbell, head of the Regions at Knight Frank, said there was now the political will to empower the regional cities, something that arguably was missing in the past.
鈥淭he built environment is a fundamental component of this change agenda, one that is creating the right conditions for innovation and growth.
鈥淩egional UK offices remain an attractive property investment offer for overseas investors attracted by the weak pound, the sophisticated property market and relative political stability.
鈥淣ot only are yields in excess of those in London and the South East but investors are benefitting from a substantial return on their equity from seeking prudent bank lending at competitive rates.鈥
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