
Colliers International
Global Investor Sentiment Survey: Property Clock Chimes Six for Serbia
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Real Estate Investors Worldwide See Market Ready to Rebound --
Respondents to Colliers International’s 2010 Global Investor
Sentiment Survey from Serbia view the market as near the bottom, putting the
recovery at 6 o’clock on the “Global Property Clock.” Respondents also expect
the Serbian market to reach 7 o’clock within 12 months.
The Global Property
Clock equates market cycles to specific times, with 12 o’clock representing the
top of the market and six o’clock representing the bottom. Each six-hour period in between designates
rising (after 6:00, to 12:00) or declining (after 12:00, to 6:00) cycles.
Real estate investors worldwide are painting a more
optimistic picture of the market, with many convinced that the next up cycle will
begin in the year ahead. That optimism
is reflected by two out of three respondents who expressed a desire to expand
their portfolios in the next 12 months.
Overall, findings from Colliers International’s inaugural Global
Investor Sentiment Survey – compiled from 244 major institutional and private
global investors with a total investment portfolio exceeding $300 billion – note
that a majority of respondents believe the market is at or near bottom and the
largest two groups, 41 percent, see the market between five and six o’clock.
“Investors clearly see the market resetting overall and about
to enter the next up cycle. In Serbia, the market is still struggling, but is
expected to reset by final quarter of the year,” said Jovica Jakovac, Managing
Director of Colliers International in Serbia.
Respondents view Latin America (8:30) and the Pacific region
(7:00) as already on the upswing. The Pacific region includes Australia and New Zealand. The USA and Asia at 6:00 were viewed as at the
market’s bottom, while the Middle East, Eastern and Western Europe and Canada
were all still viewed as in the down part of the cycle. With the exception of Eastern
Europe, respondents believe all these areas of the world will be
in various stages of the “up” phase of the market in the next 12 months.
While those seeking to expand their portfolios expressed a
higher comfort level doing so in their home markets, they also saw future opportunity
in several emerging markets, such as Poland, Ukraine,
Vietnam, Brazil and India.
(Jovica Jakovac)
“Despite this overwhelmingly positive outlook, investors are
still cautious and expressed some areas of concern,” said Mr.Jakovac.
One of those major concerns is financing. Respondents were evenly split on whether
financing is more or less accessible today than it was one year ago. However, their optimism shined through once
again when taking a look at the year ahead.
Nearly 90 percent of respondents believe that financing will be easier
to secure within the next twelve months.
Most, however, thought the cost of financing would increase.
Investors in the Middle East and Eastern Europe saw less
availability to financing. Investors from Asia, Canada, Latin America and
Western Europe indicated an improvement in access to financing over the last
year, while those in the USA and the Pacific saw no change.
Another theme running through the survey was a shifting
preference towards high-quality and income-producing properties. The move back towards income and less
emphasis on capital appreciation was best captured by the sentiment from one
survey respondent who said, “capital gains are just a bonus; we buy property
for income.”
On the capital markets side, the survey results also revealed
a considerable
divergence of opinion regarding the market’s return to “normal” (defined as 7.0
– 7.5 percent capitalization rates for office product), although most respondents
anticipate that their respective markets will return to “normal” within the
next 18 months.
On a geographic
basis, Serbian investors expect to see the domestic market return to normal by 12
months comparable to SEE region. Investors
in Asia and the Pacific expect a return to normal by the fourth quarter of
2010, followed by those in Canada, Latin America, Eastern Europe and Western
Europe by the first quarter of 2011, and the United States in the second
quarter of 2011.
Another important
conclusion to be drawn from the survey is the perception of how the market has
changed structurally, according to Jovica
Jakovac, Managing Director of Colliers International in Serbia.
“Many investors
expressed the view that real estate cycles are now shorter and more severe than
historical norms, which serves as a warning to others that going forward,
market participants will need to be more nimble. Access to current and
insightful analysis will be more important than ever,” Jakovac concluded.
Additional findings
from the survey:
·
Many
investors viewed the events of the last two years as a good reminder that
commercial real estate is highly cyclical and timing is critical to making
profits.
·
Globally,
rents are anticipated to hit bottom this year – the first quarter of 2010 for the
office sector was the most frequent response, followed by the second quarter of
2010 for industrial, and the third or fourth quarter 2010 for retail.
- There appears to be a
genuine feeling that despite a challenging economic backdrop, particularly
in the United States
and certain European countries, real estate prices today represent good
value, and many are willing to look past what could be a difficult period
in terms of rents and vacancies and to better times down the road.
The report can be found at www.colliers.com.