Every year, BNP Paribas Real Estate publishes the European Office Market Report during MIPIM (the leading worldwide property event), presenting the key office and investment market trends in Europe with a focus on 40 cities:
Best take-up volume in a decade
2017 was a very successful year for the office letting market which achieved the best result by far in 10 years. The market thrived in most cities over the year, especially in the three largest countries, where large occupational deals boosted the market. Thanks to Germany’s good economic performance, the country’s four main markets were particularly active, seeing 23% growth over last year.
Take-up grew (+11%) over 2016 in Central London, where large occupier deals were 55% ahead of average levels. The volume of take-up was much higher than last year in Central Paris (+9%), where large units were the busiest segment in 2017. Most European markets followed this healthy trend, particularly Dublin (+45%), Warsaw (+30%), Madrid (+29%), Milan (+20%) and Amsterdam (+16%).
Vacancy contraction in Europe pushing up prime rental values
The average vacancy rate shrunk again in Europe in 2017 and attained all-time record lows in several markets. The volume of vacant space dropped in the four largest German markets (-16% over Q4 2016). Vacancy also contracted in Central Paris, reaching 6.5% (-30 bps from 2016) but the largest falls were seen in Bucharest (-410 bps) followed by Amsterdam (-230 bps), Warsaw (-200 bps), Lisbon and Madrid (-160 bps). In contrast, vacancy increased in Central London to 6.2% (+50 bps vs. last year).
Prime rents mostly increased across Europe over the last 12 months. Rental values rose in Central Paris with €850/m²/year, in Berlin (+16%, €396/m²/year), Brussels (+13%, €310/m²/year), and Milan (+12%, €550/m²/year), whereas they slightly decreased in Central London.
Full year volumes increased significantly in 2017 with €253bn invested across Europe
The total commercial real estate investment volume in Europe reached €253bn in 2017, 10% above 2016’s result. “This is an all-time record year for the market, exceeding 2015’s high of €245bn. This year the market benefited from a real impetus, combining an improving economy, lower vacancy rates and cash availability. The upturn in the European economy and the performance of the occupier markets fostered real estate’s appeal as an investment”, commented Larry Young, Head of International Investment Group at BNP Paribas Real Estate.
Offices again led the field, with 43% of investment volumes. This year was characterised by the sale of trophy assets such as Cœur Défense in Paris, the Walkie-talkie and the Cheesegrater in London, also the Sony Center in Berlin.
2017’s performance was led by German cities. The total of the four leading German markets puts them at the top overall. Almost half of the volume were mega deals (>€100m), which is a record. Central London is back to the first place of the European city ranking in 2017 with €16.8bn (+45%). Investors’ earlier concern about the Brexit vote seems to have evaporated, since foreign investors continued to dominate the market. Central Paris is back to the second place and remained steady against 2016 (-1%).
Office yields continued their downward trend throughout Europe, reaching historic lows at the end of 2017.
Prime yields stood at 4.66% in Q4 2017 on average among the 40 markets analysed in this report, 30 bps down on Q4 2016. Berlin’s prime office yield fell below the 3% mark, to hit 2.9%. This is the lowest office yield achieved in the European market. Key to this development is the expectation of further strong rental growth. This is followed by Munich (3%), Paris (3.05%) and Madrid (3.25%). London office yields rose marginally, but this failed to gain traction and since stabilized as market activity improved.
“Most indicators point to positive momentum for the European office market in 2018. We anticipate that most occupier markets will record favourable trends, in vacancy rates, rental values and take-up. Office prime yields will most likely stabilise but average yields will continue to drop because of delay and spread effects. As a result, total returns for offices are expected to be robust again in numerous European cities in 2018. For investors, the main challenge will be to find assets that match their acquisition criteria. For 2018 we are expecting original strategies will be created to harvest more performance, by looking for market opportunities such as emerging locations, added-value assets and speculative schemes” concludes Richard Malle, Global Head of Research of BNP Paribas Real Estate.