THE Brexit impasse is contributing to perceptions that the commercial property market in Scotland is in the midst of a downturn.
The latest Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors commercial property market survey has found anecdotal evidence suggesting that the process to leave the European Union is having an increasingly detrimental impact on market activity, with inquiries from potential investors in the third quarter lower than during the previous three months.
The latest results show that half of respondents in Scotland sense the overall market is in the downturn phase.
The highest proportion of respondents in Scotland since 2016 in the investment market said that inquiries from potential investors were lower than in the previous quarter.
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The net balance for overall investment inquiries in Scotland during the period was -34%, meaning that 34% more respondents said that investment inquiries fell than said they rose.
The retail sector continues to drive the overall decline, with the weakest reading since 2008, showing a net balance of -70%, which is the weakest across the UK.
Demand for office and industrial space in Scotland was reported to be broadly flat.
Interest in investing in retail was the weakest according to respondents, but investment inquiries were also reported to have fallen in the industrial, where there wasa net balance of -14%, and office, where it was a net balance of -20%, sectors.
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In the occupier market, tenant demand reportedly fell at the headline level in Scotland for the fourth consecutive quarter, with the net balance slipping to -22%, from -3% previously, RICS said.
Scottish surveyors are cautious looking ahead about rents in over the next quarter. The overall net balance for three-month rental expectations is its weakest since the second quarter in 2016 at -23%.
However, this is driven by pessimism regarding retail rents, with a net balance of -65%. Expectations for office and industrial rents are broadly flat.
RICS said Scottish respondents are more positive about the value of industrial and office property, with the balance of respondents pointing to modest growth in capital values in both sectors in the near term.
Richard Smith, of Allied Surveyors in Inverness, said: “The market over the last three months has been affected by political uncertainty. Clients tell us that they will invest when the uncertainty is removed, regardless of how that is achieved.”
David Castles, of Ian Philp Glasgow, said: “Office and industrial sector capital values will improve but supply of prime office developments is restricted, and more investment is required which hopefully will improve once market uncertainty is reduced.”
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Tarrant Parsons, RICS economist, said: “Although half of respondents in Scotland now perceive the market to be in a downturn, the fact that capital value expectations are still positive suggests a relatively soft landing for the commercial real estate sector is anticipated overall.”
Meanwhile, research from Grant Property has shown investors from South East Asia are cashing in on the opportunities provided by a drop in the value of the British pound and increasing yields and rents in the UK buy-to-let market, especially with student flats.
The firm reported a surge of interest from Hong Kong and Singapore as new and existing investors are purchasing more buy-to-let properties to add to their portfolios. An increase in rents as high as 15% over the last 12 months alone, combined with steady long-term capital growth on average 7% per annum, are factors which are making UK property an appealing investment prospect, it said.
Peter Grant, founder of Grant Property, said: “In the last year we have sold over £38 million worth of properties to overseas investors and we are currently dealing with 25% more enquiries than this time last year.
“Investors see the uncertainty of Brexit as an advantage and are capitalising on the opportunity to snap up traditional flats in UK cities, particularly where there is a student population.”
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