Research Briefing | Sep 6, 2023

Big challenges remain for CRE development viability in the UK

Since our previous report on UK commercial real estate a year ago, construction materials price inflation has retreated rapidly and supply chain bottlenecks have eased, reducing pressure on construction costs.

Some are therefore asking if this is a good time to get back into the market and re-initiate development activity. But we think a widespread pick up in development activity is unlikely.

What you will learn:

  • New development looks difficult to justify without underwriting strong rental growth. We estimate that developers would need 7%-9% per annum rental growth for a typical office, logistics, or residential scheme to be viable. This is more than double our UK CPI forecast over 2023-2025.
  • Financial pressures from surging material costs and supply chain disruption are easing in the UK. However, material prices are still almost 50% higher than pre-pandemic levels and wage growth remains strong.
  • The transition to net-zero and the effect of workforce ageing on labour supply are both likely to push construction costs up over the medium term.
  • In the short-term, the scale and likely persistence of recent interest rate rises is the chief headwind to development activity, placing a premium on new space in the market.
Back to Resource Hub

Related Posts

Post

MINGTIANDI: Oversupply weighs heaviest on China’s office markets

China’s office markets have been flooded with new supply, evidenced by higher vacancies relative to other global markets.

Find Out More

Post

Chinese office markets look set for a lost decade

Office markets across China's major cities continue to deteriorate after consecutive years of rising vacancy rates and falling rents. Vacancy rates are now 20%-40% across the major cities – the highest among all major global markets.

Find Out More

Post

Relative return index signals improving CRE attractiveness

Our latest global relative return index (RRI) signals that risk-adjusted investment opportunities in commercial real estate (CRE) should start to emerge this year before becoming more widespread in 2025. At this point, our baseline expected returns move higher than required returns, pushing the global all-property index above the 50 mark.

Find Out More