West End rents trigger price war
HAMMERSON, one of London's biggest landlords, has pointed to further price increases in what is fast emerging as a runaway West End office market.
With a rush for the smartest addresses in Mayfair and limited supply of smart new offices, rents have been soaring and triggering a price war among investors.
Hammerson chief executive John Richards reckons rents in the area have increased between 5% and 10% since the start of the year.
'It is a story of very limited supply of grade A space. There has been quite a bit of market activity with some of the hedge funds to the fore, signing up for between £70 and £80 a square foot.'
This pushed the value of Hammerson's West End portfolio, accounting for around 2% of its £4bn office and retail portfolio, up 12.8% to £81.7m to the end of June.
'Our exposure to the West End is lower than it should be,' Richards added. A pick in demand for space there is beginning to have a knock-on effect for the beleaguered City office market where Hammerson's portfolio reported a 4.8% rise in the value of its offices to £540.8m at the half year stage.
The results coincide with findings from agents King Sturge showing the West End as the most expensive place to rent office space in the world. The cost of occupying a square metre of office space in the West End is about £1,100 a year, a 19% leap since the start of the year.
The market feedback on the West End follows news that US private equity firm Blackstone has taken another floor at the newly rebuilt 40 Berkeley Square, at an annual rent of at least £80 per square foot on a long lease.
That makes a lease in Mayfair or Regent Street more than four times dearer than Manhattan, where rents have fallen by a half since the second half of 2001, and 60% more than third-ranked Tokyo.
Meanwhile, Richards ruled out Hammerson making a bid for Minerva, the property developer and part-owner of Allders department store which put itself up for sale earlier this summer with a £1bn price tag including debt.
Hammerson is one of Britain's largest shopping centre owners. Richards said: 'We do not need to pay a hot price. The appetite for Minerva is based on trying to get hold of their development opportunities - we have our own pipeline. We do not need to be aggressive on Minerva.'
Hammerson's first half pre-tax profits rose to £64.6m compared with £47.4m a year earlier, after disposing of £245m of properties. Stripping out those exceptional gains and profits fell £1.5m to £42.2m.
Most watched Money videos
- Here's the one thing you need to do to boost state pension
- Phil Spencer invests in firm to help list holiday lodges
- Is the latest BYD plug-in hybrid worth the £30,000 price tag?
- Jaguar's £140k EV spotted testing in the Arctic Circle
- Five things to know about Tesla Model Y Standard
- Reviewing the new 2026 Ineos Grenadier off-road vehicles
- Richard Hammond to sell four cars from private collection
- Putting Triumph's new revamped retro motorcycles to the test
- Is the new MG EV worth the cost? Here are five things you need to know
- Daily Mail rides inside Jaguar's first car in all-electric rebrand
- Can my daughter inherit my local government pension?
- Markets are riding high but some investments are still cheap
-
How to use reverse budgeting to get to the end of the...
-
China bans hidden 'pop-out' car door handles popularised...
-
At least 1m people have missed the self-assessment tax...
-
Britain's largest bitcoin treasury company debuts on...
-
Sellers ripped carpets and appliances out of my new home....
-
Bank of England expected to hold rates this week - but...
-
Irn-Bru owner snaps up Fentimans and Frobishers as it...
-
One in 45 British homeowners are sitting on a property...
-
My son died eight months ago but his employer STILL...
-
Elon Musk confirms SpaceX merger with AI platform behind...
-
Civil service pensions in MELTDOWN: Rod, 70, could lose...
-
Overpayment trick that can save you an astonishing...
-
Satellite specialist Filtronic sees profits slip despite...
-
Shoppers spend £2m a day less at Asda as troubled...
-
Plus500 shares jump as it announces launch of predictions...
-
UK data champions under siege as the AI revolution...
-
AI lawyer bots wipe £12bn off software companies - but...
-
Prepare for blast-off: Elon Musk's £900bn SpaceX deal...

