REAL ESTATE REPORT 2007
Transcription
REAL ESTATE REPORT 2007
REAL ESTATE REPORT 2007 TRENDS 07 07 TRENDS REAL ESTATE REPORT OFFICES IN SPAIN CB RICHARD ELLIS S.A. MADRID PALMA DE MALLORCA Edificio Torre Picasso Planta 27 Plaza Pablo Ruiz Picasso, 1 28020 Madrid Tel.: +34 91 598 19 00 Fax: +34 91 556 96 90 madrid@cbre.com Avda. Comte de Sallent, 2 esquina 31 de diciembre 07003 Palma de Mallorca Tel.: +34 971 45 67 68 Fax: +34 971 45 68 98 mallorca@cbre.com MÁLAGA BARCELONA Edificio Testa Diagonal Avda. Diagonal, 605, 8º-1ª 08028 Barcelona Tel.: +34 93 444 77 00 Fax: +34 93 419 02 85 barcelona@cbre.com Edificio Málaga Plaza Don Cristián, 2-4 Planta 1ª, ofic. 2 29007 Málaga Tel.: +34 95 207 07 10 Fax: +34 95 207 17 05 malaga@cbre.com VALENCIA MARBELLA Paseo de la Alameda, 35 bis 3º dcha. 46023 Valencia Tel.: +34 96 316 28 90 Fax: +34 96 316 28 91 valencia@cbre.com Edificio Golden Avda. Ricardo Soriano, 72 Planta 1ª 29600 Marbella Tel.: +34 95 276 51 30 Fax: +34 95 276 58 30 marbella@cbre.com ZARAGOZA Paseo de la Independencia, 21, 1º centro 50001 Zaragoza Tel.: +34 976 48 46 35 Fax: +34 976 48 46 33 zaragoza@cbre.com 4 CASABLANCA (MARRUECOS) 190, Boulevard d’Anfa Étage 2 20000 Casablanca Marruecos Tel.: +212 (0) 22953250 Fax.: +212 (0) 22364238 casablanca@cbre.com 1 3 SIGNATURES page 8 MARKETS AND IDEAS 5 2 BAROMETER page 20 4 page 32 page 68 NATIONAL MARKET 6 PIECES page 98 INTERNATIONAL MARKET page 58 Trends 2007 5 NEW SCENE SERGIO ACEREDA Director of Marketing and Communications CB Richard Ellis Spain 6 The market is calling for new solutions The publication of this year’s Trends report almost coincides with a new cycle in the property market. In Spain it is evident that the residential market is the reason for this new cycle which in one sense has closed opportunities, but at the same time has opened up others. We still don’t know what to call it (are we facing a crisis or a cooling down of the market? Has the bubble burst?) what is for sure is that the market is calling for new solutions, new focus areas and innovative approaches. If we look at the international market, uncertainty has been the overriding factor since last summer, when turbulence in the financial markets and the shake-up of the mortgage sector made their presence felt on stock exchanges around the world. Be that as it may, at CB Richard Ellis, thanks to our priveliged position as leaders in the property consultancy and services market, we have an obligation and responsibility to “guide” our clients and also institutions, organisations and public opinion in general in this new era that has already begun. In the following articles, the reader will be able to find information that will be helpful in getting to know this new environment better. There are articles from experts on specific markets, but also personal reflections, experiences and commentaries from highly qualified persons and professionals on both a national and international level. The 2007 edition of Trends is the seventh edition and is structured, as on previous occasions, with different articles and contributions, its aim is to give a genuine, trustworthy and at the same time, global vision of what is happening in the Spanish property market today. We have also included a market survey on the perceptions and intentions of companies, which yet again a large number of companies in the sector took part in. We would especially like to thank them for their participation. these figures will affect the market in the medium term. Trends also delves into the markets qualitative perception of the market: looking at what feelings and experiences this new era is producing, analysing new ways of looking at old problems, and also at CB Richard Ellis’ own experience when looking at the short and medium term future. In 2008 CBRE celebrates 35 years of doing business in Spain. We have grown with our clients in this process, (companies who today are now leaders on a national and international level), combining a long term vision with short and medium term actions. Also we have successfully learnt to focus on good times and not such good times. We have learnt from both our successes and failures and will continue to do so. It is from this perspective that we present Trends 2007. A good start and a good solution begin with good information. Once again, our goal has been to give our readers, clients, friends and collaborators an analytical tool that allows them to do just that: to lay the foundations for a good start. Aside from this, in this edition of Trends we go beyond just providing data and figures, and take an in depth look at how and innovative approaches Trends 2007 7 Experts typically say that your market is your data base. In times of uncertainty, focusing on the client is a good strategy. 8 SIGNATURES 1 Trends 2007 9 THE SUCCESS INTERSECTION As the articles that follow will clearly demonstrate, there are many aspects of the Spanish property market that are driven by the domestic economy, local market structures and conditions. MIKE STRONG President CB Richard Ellis EMEA 10 SIGNATURES Equally, as one of the major European property markets, Spain is also affected by broader international trends and influences that shape the decisions of landlords, tenants and developers. Understanding the interplay between international – sometimes global – influences and more local factors is critical to making fully informed property decisions. Starting with economic factors, European economies have generally performed strongly in 2007, with the most recent view from Consensus Economics indicating growth of around 2.8% across the EU economies in 2007. A number of economies - including Spain, but also including the Nordic markets and Ireland - will have seen growth above this level, with the Spanish economy in particular likely to have grown a full percentage point faster than the EU average in 2007. This growth has been mainly driven by the strength of household European economies have generally consumption and, to a lesser extent, capital investment: growth in both is now starting to ease but the Spanish economy should still grow by more than 2.5% in 2008. One of the most remarkable features of the European property markets in recent years has been the explosive growth in the investment market. From a total of just over €100bn in 2004, the turnover of the European commercial investment market reached €227bn in 2006. Total investment turnover in European commercial real estate in 2007 reached an estimated €236bn (another record year despite a relatively slower fourth quarter). The contribution of office investment to this total has been rising, and accounted for 58% of the first half total, driven in part by the completion of a number of very large transactions in key markets such as London and Paris. In aggregate terms, the Spanish investment market has seem comparable trends, with investment turnover reaching €4.8bn in the first half of 2007, 20% up on the first half of 2006, with a further €1.4bn invested in the third quarter. This growth has come about despite a reluctance to sell on the part of some owners due partly to the perceived difficulty in reinvesting. An important source of investment stock in recent months has come through the disposal of corporate real estate by large corporations looking to release capital and focus on core business. Property companies and collective investment vehicles of various kinds have been the main buyers. The office and retail sectors have dominated Spanish investment activity to an even greater extent than for Europe as a whole. However the two sectors do show some substantial geographic performed strongly in 2007 ONE OF THE MOST REMARKABLE FEATURES OF THE EUROPEAN PROPERTY MARKETS IN RECENT YEARS HAS BEEN THE EXPLOSIVE GROWTH IN THE INVESTMENT MARKET differences: office investment has been heavily skewed towards the Madrid and Barcelona markets alone, whereas retail investment has been much more evenly spread, with both multi-city portfolios and some provincial shopping centres being traded. Examples of major transactions over this period include GMP’s purchase of four Madrid office buildings from BBVA for €700m; the acquisition of the Telefonica HQ in Barcelona by the Carlyle Group for €225m; and British Land’s purchase of the Nueva Condomina in Murcia for €340m. The profile of buyers also highlights some interesting contrasts between Spain and the overall European picture. A major component of the growth in investment activity across Europe has been the rise of cross-border investment, including greatly increased activity by non-European investors. The first half of 2007 was the first time nondomestic buyers had accounted Trends 2007 11 THE SUCCESS INTERSECTION for more than half (57%) of all European investment transactions by value, and nearly half of these were purchases by non-European investors. It is here that the Spanish market displays some important differences against the wider trends : Spain remains dominated by domestics purchasers, who accounted for around 55% of purchases in the first half of 2007. Where overseas investors have been active in Spain, their focus has largely been on the shopping centre market, with limited involvement 12 SIGNATURES MIKE STRONG President CB Richard Ellis EMEA in office acquisitions: of the top ten European city investment markets, Madrid shows comfortably the lowest incidence of overseas purchases. Reflecting the broader European picture, investment yields have been relatively stable in 2007 after a long period of downward pressure. Madrid in particular has seen prime yields for offices and high street retail units static at 4.25% through three quarters of 2007, with shopping centres trading at 4.75%. Barcelona has seen some further tightening in yields in some sectors, with prime office and shopping centre yields down to 4.25% and 4.75% respectively. Office occupier markets across Europe have been generally robust in 2007. Through three quarters, the major markets In Spain, non-European investors only recorded total take-up of around 7.5m sq m, 10% ahead of the same period last year. Improvement in several of the German markets made a particular contribution to this picture. Against the backdrop of a strongly-expanding economy, the major Spanish markets have also healthy levels of activity in the leasing markets. Leasing activity in Madrid has been running at similar levels to those recorded in 2006 (which was an all-time high), although the second and third quarters were discernibly slower than the first three months. Take-up in Barcelona will, similarly, come close to last year’s level and it is notable that both markets are seeing rising activity in peripheral districts outside the CBD. Vacancy rates in both cities lie below 6.5%, and prime rents have been rising, markedly so in Madrid where office rents rose by over 20% in the year to September 2007, well ahead of the 9% recorded across the EU-15 as a whole over the same period. In response to recent rental growth, development activity is now growing sharply in both cities, and growth rates are set to ease as a result. In other respects too, a tougher market environment lies ahead. European economies are likely to grow more slowly in 2008 than they did last year, and the possibility remains that the current credit squeeze could induce broader adverse effects on economies and corporates. While the market numbers remain robust, we are already conscious of some European companies adopting a rather more cautious approach to real estate commitments. In the investment market, increasing constraints on the availability and cost of debt finance will in all likelihood reduce transaction volumes for a time. Investment performance will again come to be driven by property fundamentals, such as rental income growth, rather than by yield shifts. In these conditions, detailed understanding of markets and rigorous investment selection become critical. Even in difficult markets, opportunities will arise for those able to spot and act quickly on emerging trends. seem to consider commercial assets INVESTMENT TRENDS WILL DEPEND ON THE REVALUATION OF THE LEASING PRICES Trends 2007 13 MANAGEMENT IN UNCERTAIN TIMES EDUARDO FERNÁNDEZ-CUESTA, President CB Richard Ellis Spain 14 SIGNATURES It is clear that we have entered a new phase in the market, characterized by a general sense of greater uncertainty. Already in the real estate sector, this is translating into a sharp drop in residential sales, greater difficulty in financing land and large projects, and a marked slowdown in decision-making due to the more rigorous analyses of transactions, especially those of significant size. Nevertheless, we continue to move forward. From the perspective of a firm such as ours, these situations are twofold: on the one hand, there is the internal point of view which demands that we adapt to the new scenario, as is characteristic of a real estate company. On the other hand, inherent in our responsibility as a professional service provider, in moments of uncertainty, we are duty-bound to guide our clients and the sector as a whole. Therefore, I believe that the best recommendation we can make to our clients and to those companies (that are not clients) who follow our lead is to reflect upon what work must be done in order to deal this new phase. In summary, our general proposal is based on the following points: Clients cling to brands that communicate stability, FOCUS ON THE CLIENT Experts typically say that your market is your database. In times of uncertainty, focusing on the client is a good strategy. The loyalty of our own clients has been crucial at a time when acquiring fresh clientele is more complex and more costly. But what is loyalty? We believe it is based on an intimacy with our clients, in order to better understand their needs, to anticipate their difficulties and be a part of the solution. I think that this method applies fittingly to real estate market clients in times like these, whether they be residential or tertiary. At CB Richard Ellis we have already begun to analyse clients global strategies, but we have also initiated precise measures which enable us to offer a better service: the formation of interdisciplinary teams to provide global perspectives to concrete problems, and greater support for our international network, are but two examples among many that we are currently implementing. We have already begun to create an internal mechanism of coordination which allows us to be more effective and more efficient when identifying and developing international opportunities for our clients. IN THESE UNCERTAIN TIMES, WE AT CB RICHARD ELLIS, MORE THAN EVER ENCOURAGE THESE PROCESSES OF INNOVATION, WHICH FROM OUR POINT OF VIEW, RELATE TO DIVERSIFICATION those that represent prestige, sound performance, and security Trends 2007 15 EDUARDO FERNÁNDEZ-CUESTA, MANAGEMENT IN UNCERTAIN TIMES President CB Richard Ellis Spain Our objective for the coming years is to base a large part of our revenue in international business, and today, in a situation of considerable uncertainty, we are laying the foundations for this task. Our job is to form long-term, enduring relationships with our clients. To that end, and in addition to providing the best service possible, we must strive to be imaginative and effective for the business to move forwards and on behalf of our clients. INNOVATION: R+D Perhaps the difference between those who lead and those who follow lies in the amount of risk one is willing to assume in a specific circumstance or moment, – but also how we apply that risk in order to continually grow. The result is innovation. In these uncertain times, more than ever, we at CB Richard Ellis, encourage these processes of innovation, which from our point of view, relate to diversification: new and better services in new geographical areas. It is only normal that at times we may feel more insecure or less sure of our footing, but it is vital that we come out on the other side of this current phase feeling stronger than before. Crises pass. Businesses can also pass too. Clearly, as a situation declines, we must stop and reflect upon where we are headed, think about how we can improve, and apply the necessary tools to moderate the circumstances. Rather than wasting time during this crisis with “positive thinking,” we are focusing on improving the outcome. A new way of relating to our clients, new ways of marketing products, encouraging imaginative, effective, and useful solutions are a few examples of how innovation can help us position ourselves for medium and long-term success. THE ANSWER LIES WITHIN A while back the experts began talking about the importance of human resources strategies in the organization of successful business development plans. In a professional services firm like CBRE, with an international 16 SIGNATURES Our job is to form long-term market profile, finding and retaining talent is a key aspect to answering the challenges of a tentative economy. Given the current situation, we have already begun to talk about the “human cost” of a crisis in our sector, bearing in mind that within our own organization, and the company at large, we look for solutions to emerge from any situation with flying colours. Trusting in talent (and I do truly mean trust, with imaginative solutions that inspire and motivate the best of us), being sincere but also human will make our path to success shorter and more bearable. Furthermore, we will be better-equipped to begin the race to a new, more expansive economic phase. Relying on the best resources strengthens our organization’s ability. At CB Richard Ellis, for example, making the most of our global network and our understanding of international markets will create this. At the same time, by diversifying, this allows us to create new services, which allows us to have a meeting of minds. We have already put specific initiatives in to action, like the development of a unit in the Polish residential market, the creation of a local office in Casablanca (Morocco), the launch of our Asset Management and Debt & Equity Finance services, and the integration of a full team of architects (FM Architectural Firm) in the Building Consultancy division. Eighty percent of success in times of turmoil comes from having the right team. An effective formula to focus our new outlook on is dependant on recognizing the importance of the people working alongside us. OUR BRAND REPRESENTS AND DEFINES US IN THE MARKET Psychologists have established that in trench-warfare and hand-to-hand combat, the motivation to fight is born out relationships with our clients AN EFFECTIVE FORMULA TO FOCUS OUR NEW OUTLOOK ON IS DEPENDANT ON RECOGNISING THE IMPORTANCE OF THE PEOPLE WORKING ALONGSIDE US Trends 2007 17 EDUARDO FERNÁNDEZ-CUESTA, MANAGEMENT IN UNCERTAIN TIMES President CB Richard Ellis Spain of our relationships with those who fight with us. We fight for them. According to this theory, the flag performs a secondary, though critical function: the identification of and devotion to “something big,” bigger than ourselves. In moments of economic crisis or recession, brands function as our flags and anthems: they comfort us, unite us internally, and they represent the courage and character of each organization. The significance of the brand intensifies in periods of financial disquiet. Clients recognize dominant brands, those that persevere despite the changing currents. In times of fluctuation, people cling to those brands that communicate stability, that represent prestige, sound performance, and security. We haven’t always been conscious of the importance of brands in the real estate sector. Immoderate partitioning within the sector, and the creation of numerous small businesses, has precipitated a flood of corporate transactions in the big companies – mergers, integrations, sales – sometimes without much consideration of the message it sends to the 18 SIGNATURES market, other times without much respect for the brand that unites the professionals and their clients. Without a doubt, what will most effectively sustain the companies that will lead the domestic and international real estate market in the next few years are the treatment, analysis, and development of the brand as a corporate asset. WARINESS OF INCREASING COSTS Finally, I would like to point out that the management of the aforementioned elements must be accompanied by an evermore acute awareness of costs and allocated resources. This will make us more efficient and will allow us to adapt our operations to a slower economy. In the current market, these five elements (client management, innovation, human resources, branding, and efficiency) 80% of success in times of turmoil shape our focus at CB Richard Ellis. These fundamentals provide us with infinite possibilities as we reconfigure our organization to suit this new phase. Each company and every management team must identify their own particular objectives: maybe it means emphasizing the brand, or organizing a structure which is more devoted to internal efficiency, through cost control or processing. In any case, we must act, moving swiftly and wisely, without ever forgetting who we are (the professionals), how we can improve daily (be innovative), what we represent (our brand and our reputation) and above all, to whom we are committed, which is our market, and where it is positioned. The “when” is now, this very moment, which will undoubtedly determine the course of your company and ours in the years to come. comes from having the right team WE BELIEVE THAT LOYALTY IS BASED ON AN INTIMACY WITH OUR CLIENTS; WE MUST BETTER UNDERSTAND THEIR NEEDS, TO ANTICIPATE THEIR DIFFICULTIES AND BE A PART OF THE SOLUTION Trends 2007 19 Among those polled, 35.07% hoped for slight increases in their foreign investments this year, and 20.15% believe they will strongly intensify. 20 22 BARÓMETRO BAROMETER Trends 2007 21 CAUTION AMIDST UNCERTAINTY FIFTH CB RICHARD ELLIS REAL ESTATE BAROMETER Caution has taken root in the real estate sector, prompted by changes in the residential cycle. In the fifth CB Richard Ellis Real Estate Barometer, the directors stress internationalisation and the diversification of products in order to progress to the next stage and avoid feeling apprehensive. Where we were optimistic a year ago, now we are cautious. Most real estate directors are pessimistic about the future of the sector, though they believe the economy will readjust reasonably well in 2008. Nearly all indicate that current uncertainty stems from the residential sector. In 2007, 78.74% of directors predicted the average price of homes would increase. Now, 50% are persuaded prices will drop, and 26.87% more estimate that they will continue unchanged. After a four-year surge, it appears the cycle has exhausted itself and reached its turning point. The expected drop in prices denotes a more profound lethargy. In 2007 residential investment rates began to slow. Among the directors participating in the Barometer, 19.05% hoped to increase their investments in residential 22 BAROMETER products. Currently, only 8.21% – nearly 11 percentage points less – foresee their residential projects getting larger. If the origin of this hesitation is residential, its effects will extend to include real estate professionals. The success rate of agents among the different sectors has plummeted in as little as 12 months. In 2007, directors gave developers an average of 3.27 points, on a scale of one to five; they have now been downgraded to 1.47, less than half. Real estate property agents (Agentes de la Propiedad Inmobiliaria, or API) faired equally poorly. From an average of 3 points last year, in 2008 they barely reach 1.62 points. The remainder of agents suffered similar declines. Evaluations of builders sank from 3.39 to 2.05 points, and real estate consultants plunged from 3.56 to 2.38 points. Internationalisation is a central Only real estate investment funds maintain notable value according to directors: from a previous average of 3.71 to the current 3.43 points. It appears directors place great importance on investment funds for the future of the property market. SUPPORT FOR INTERNATIONALIZATION In the real estate sector, caution usually breeds defensive strategies. Internationalization is a central element of almost all projects. It has gained significant support in recent years and is likely to be the backbone of corporate strategies for the majority of developers in the future. A foreign presence is a mandatory profile for any real estate company, according to 43.28% of directors, 16 percentage points more than last year. It is followed by property and multi-product strategies, 23.88% and 20.9% respectively, while policies of land reserve and project development reduced insignificantly. Among those polled, 35.07% hoped for slight increases in their foreign investments this year, and 20.15% believe they will grow substantially. Another 38.6% will invest similar amounts as last year. Product diversification is also spreading among foreign investments. In 2006, 60% of directors planned to invest in offices outside Spain, and last year residential and offices accounted for 34.86% and 33.71% of responses, respectively. In 2008 offices regained first place, with only 31.34% of the total, as residential investments dropped to 25.37% of responses, nearly 11 percentage points less than a year ago. Contrary to this, shopping centres grew in importance with 23.88% of responses, and hotels took a qualitative leap to 13.43%. Diversification also succeeded in the domestic market, where different products tend to balance out in portfolios. DIRECTORS STRESS INTERNATIONALISATION AND THE DIVERSIFICATION OF PRODUCTS IN ORDER TO PROGRESS TO THE NEXT STAGE WITHOUT BEING APPREHENSIVE element of almost all projects Trends 2007 23 FIFTH CB RICHARD ELLIS REAL ESTATE BAROMETER Surveys reveal that 26.12% believe that the most growth this year will be in offices, and another 20.9% think this dynamism will extend to shopping centres. A further 18.66% of those surveyed expect strong investments in industrial real estate, and 10.45% in hotels. We have already cited the drop in residential investments, an option preferred by a meagre 8.21%, though local retail only solicited 5.97%, perhaps due to the difficulties in finding quality product in the best locations. TERTIARY PRICES SOFTEN Product diversification implies greater caution in the evolution of the office market, the big sector for the majority of predictions according to last year’s Barometer. In 2008, nearly 56% of those surveyed expect a minor slowdown in office rental prices, and 44% believe office sales prices will also drop slightly. A further 80.59% foresee that takeup in office area will match (or nearly match) that of 2007, one of the most successful years in recent history. Apart from offices, a large part of directors trust that most products will maintain longterm price and take-up stability, perhaps with better success in shopping centres. Responses to the Barometer vary in this sense, with the forecast of slight rises in urban centre take-up, and 31.34% even expecting moderate price hikes in shopping centre sales, the highest figure of all the segments. Diversification and caution have also influenced the services that companies demand of property consultants. The importance of transactions has diminished, accounting for 36.57% of the demand for consultants, and asset valuation only solicits 11.94% of responses, while commissions for market research and due diligence increase, two features which clearly attest to the need for careful reflection and analysis in the current market. FIFTY PERCENT OF DIRECTORS ARE PERSUADED PRICES WILL DROP, AND 26.87% MORE ESTIMATE THAT THEY WILL CONTINUE UNCHANGED. 24 BAROMETER Product diversification is also Relative to last year, how do you think the GDP will evolve in 2008? GENERAL ECONOMY 10,71 8,96 STRONG INCREASE 35,71 36,57 SLIGHT INCREASE 45,71 NO VARIATION 34,33 7,87 SLIGHT DECREASE 20,15 STRONG DECREASE 2007 2008 Relative to last year, how do you think the CPI will evolve in 2008? STRONG INCREASE 12,86 0,75 31,43 SLIGHT INCREASE 8,96 39,29 NO VARIATION 26,12 14,29 SLIGHT DECREASE STRONG DECREASE 2007 42,54 2,13 21,64 MARGIN OF GROWTH. Real estate directors expect the economy in 2008 to remain very stable. They believe it is likely to grow at a slower pace, but in a more level and solid fashion in the main indicators. One in every five believes that the Gross National Product will drop slightly this year relative to the 3.8% attained in 2007, but 34.33% do not expect great variations, and even 36.57% trust that the GDP will increase somewhat in the next 12 months. Some 64.18% of those surveyed think the Consumer Price Index will drop in 2008, nearly 50 percentage points more than a year ago. If in 2007, 71.43% assumed there would be a slight recovery in interest rates, now 76.87% expect stability or declines. Nearly 70% believe employment will rise, when last year 55% did not foresee great variations. 2008 Relative to last year, how do you think interest rates will evolve in 2008? STRONG INCREASE 20 0,75 71,43 SLIGHT INCREASE 22,39 7,86 NO VARIATION SLIGHT DECREASE STRONG DECREASE 2007 46,27 0,71 22,39 0 8,21 2008 Relative to last year, how do you think employment will evolve in 2008? STRONG INCREASE 3,57 27,61 28,57 SLIGHT INCREASE 41,79 55 NO VARIATION SLIGHT DECREASE STRONG DECREASE 2007 11,94 11,43 12,69 1,43 5,97 2008 spreading among foreign investments Trends 2007 25 FIFTH CB RICHARD ELLIS REAL ESTATE BAROMETER REAL ESTATE SECTOR THE FOREIGN GUARANTEE. Prudence on the part of directors has bolstered foreign interest. Of those interviewed, 43.28% consider a foreign presence the best real estate strategy, 16 percentage points more than a year ago. Property and multi-product strategies continue to be valued by more than 20%, a level nearly equal to last year, while land reserves and development projects drop marginally. In your opinion, which real estate company profile is most significant? 27,14 FOREIGN PRESENCE 43,28 16,43 LAND RESERVES DEVELOPMENT PROJECTS ASSET PURCHASES 5,97 9,29 2,24 2,86 3,73 22,86 23,88 PROPERTY STRATEGY 21,42 20,9 MULTI-PRODUCT STRATEGY 2007 2008 Contributions expected from the following real estate professionals (valued 1-5) CONFIDENCE COLLAPSES. Overall, confidence on the part of directors as to the leading real estate players contributions has collapsed significantly. On a scale of one to five, the average value of developers barely reached 1.7 points, and agents 1.62 points – both devalued by more than half. Average confidence in builders dropped by 1.34 points to 2.05, and real estate consultants hit 2.38, after obtaining 3.56 a year ago. Notable contributions are only expected from real estate investment funds, who maintain an average of 3.43 points, merely 28 hundredths of a point less than in 2007. 26 BAROMETER 3,07 BUILDERS 3,39 2,05 2,85 DEVELOPERS 3,27 1,47 2,73 INVESTMENT FUNDS 3,71 3,43 2,35 3 AGENCIES 1,62 2,78 CONSULTANTS 3,56 2,38 2006 2007 2008 Only real estate investment funds In which sectors does your company plan to go abroad? REAL ESTATE SECTOR 6,67 SHOPPING CENTRES SHOPPING CENTRES 16,73 23,88 5 5 13,43 INDUSTRIAL REAL ESTATE 10 5,71 4,48 LOCAL RETAIL 6,67 4,29 1,49 60 33,71 31,34 OFFICES 11,66 RESIDENTIAL 2006 2007 34,86 25,37 2008 MORE FOREIGN OPTIONS FOR DIVERSIFICATION. International presence is prone to diversify. Real estate directors consider office projects the primary foreign option, but relevance is distributed increasingly equally among the sectors. Some 31.34% opt for offices, nearly 30 percentage points less than two years ago and 2.34 percentage points less than in 2007. A further 25.37% plan residential projects, almost 10 percentage points less than last year, as if the mistrust of the residential sector has permeated the foreign market. Plans to enter the foreign shopping centre sector are being researched by 23.88% of directors, 7.45 percentage points more than twelve months ago. The most significant rise is in hotels, which are now being considered by 13.43% of those surveyed, 8.43 percentage points more than in 2007. ONLY 8.21% – NEARLY 11 PERCENTAGE POINTS LESS THAN LAST YEAR – FORESEE TAKING ON MORE RESIDENTIAL PROJECTS maintain notable value according to directors Trends 2007 27 FIFTH CB RICHARD ELLIS REAL ESTATE BAROMETER REAL ESTATE YIELDS AND INVESTMENTS NO SURPRISES IN YIELDS. In 2007, Spanish initial yields across the different real estate products were among the lowest in Europe. Their evolution over the course of the year seemed to foreshadow imminent short-term recoveries, but directors participating in the Barometer still haven’t seen them. In fact, 38.06% think yields will remain stable, only 32.84% expect a slight increase (less than two percentage points more than a year ago), and a meagre 2.24% predict strong increases (nearly five percentage points less than in 2007). Some 23.13% of directors expect a slight decrease in yields, which is a five percentage-point increase over last year. Of the following, which is your forecast for prime yields in Spain in 2008? 7,15 STRONG INCREASE 2,24 30,95 32,84 SLIGHT INCREASE 43,65 38,06 STABLE 18,25 23,13 SLIGHT DECREASE STRONG DECREASE 2007 0 3,73 2008 How will your investment in other countries evolve in 2008? MORE FOREIGN INVESTMENT. Foreign investment has become the key strategic ingredient in the real estate sector for 2008. Increases are predicted by 55.22%, up slightly more than a percentage point from 2007. Those predicting stability for investments account for 38.06%, and less than 7% of the total predict declines. 23,8 20,15 STRONG INCREASE 30,16 35,07 SLIGHT INCREASE 42,86 38,06 STABLE SLIGHT DECREASE STRONG DECREASE 2007 1,59 4,48 1,59 2,24 2008 AMONG THOSE POLLED, 35.07% HOPED FOR SLIGHT INCREASES IN THEIR FOREIGN INVESTMENTS THIS YEAR, AND 20.15% BELIEVE THEY WILL STRONGLY INTENSIFY 28 BAROMETER Nearly 56% of those surveyed expect REAL ESTATE YIELDS AND INVESTMENTS In the Spanish market, which sector will see the greatest increase of your investments in 2008? 29,37 26,12 OFFICES 9,52 LOCAL RETAIL 5,97 18,25 20,9 SHOPPING CENTRES 15,08 18,66 INDUSTRIAL 7,14 HOTELS 10,45 19,05 RESIDENTIAL OTHER 2007 8,21 1,59 9,7 2008 In your opinion, the average price of homes in Spain in 2008 will... RESIDENTIAL MARKET THE MAJORITY OF THOSE QUESTIONED EXPECT A DROP IN THE AVERAGE PRICE OF HOMES. Of the directors participating in the Barometer, 50.75% believe the average price of homes in Spain will drop in 2008. Only in 2004, when 24% predicted a decrease, has this statistic been so highly endorsed. One in four thinks prices will remain the same this year, eight percentage points more than last year, and 17.16% expect there may be incremental increases of up to 5%, though only 5.22% believe increases could rise as much as 10%. 2,6 17,5 INCREASE MORE THAN 10% 4,4 5,51 0 39,2 40 INCREASE BETWEEN 5.1% AND 10% 30,1 37,01 5,22 23,7 17,5 INCREASE UP TO 5% 39,1 36,22 17,16 10,5 12,5 REMAIN THE SAME 4,4 SHOPPING CENTRES, WAREHOUSES, AND HOTELS ON THE RISE. Diversification as a corporate principle also extends to domestic real estate products. Offices and shopping centres continue to be the preferred investments, with 26.12% and 20.9% respectively, two percentage points less than a year ago. The main increases are among industrial real estate, which reached 18.66%, and hotels at 10.45%, both gaining around three percentage points since 2007, while residential products drop nearly 11 percentage points to a mere 8.21% of the total. An even smaller proportion favours an increase in local retail at 5.97%. 13,39 26,87 12,5 13 7,87 DECREASE 2004 2005 2006 2007 24 50,75 2008 a minor slowdown in office rental prices Trends 2007 29 FIFTH CB RICHARD ELLIS REAL ESTATE BAROMETER CONSULTANCY AND FORECASTS In which of the following areas will your company solicit recommendations from real estate consultants? A TIME FOR MARKET RESEARCH AND DUE DILIGENCE. The services demanded of real estate consultants are changing due to more cautious strategies on the part of developers. The importance of transactions has declined with only 36.57% planning to solicit consultancy services, 11 percentage points less than last year. There is a similar trend in asset valuations which dropped 2.5 percentage points to 11.94%. Contrary to this, market research is gaining relevance with 14.18%, and due diligence nearly reached 10%. CONSULTANCY 8,96 0 14,18 11,38 MARKET RESEARCH PROPERTY MANAGEMENT SEARCH FOR FINANCING SEARCH FOR PARTNERS COMPANY VALUATIONS 1,49 8,94 2,24 2,44 4,48 0,81 0,75 0,81 11,94 14,63 ASSET VALUATIONS BENCHMARKING 2,99 0,81 9,7 5,69 DUE DILIGENCE 6,72 1,63 FEASIBILITY NEGOTIATIONS 0 4,88 36,57 TRANSACTIONS 2008 47,98 2007 How do you believe rental prices will evolve in the following real estate segments? HALF-EMPTY REALITY. Sectorial mistrust has extended to the rental prices of certain tertiary products, and in a particularly surprising way among offices. If last year we interpreted conditions as half-full, in 2008 they appear to be half-empty. In 2007, nearly 70% of those interviewed expected price increases in offices; now 55.97% predict slight decreases, and another 31.34% think prices will remain the same. Among the rest of the products, the majority foresee no significant price variations, though the inclination is toward slight decreases, which was the second most voted-for option overall, while last year the second most popular option was slight increases. 30 BAROMETER STRONG INCREASE SLIGHT INCREASE 2007 2008 SLIGHT DECREASE 2007 2008 2007 0 51,22 BUSINESS PARKS 6,50 1,49 35,77 14,93 49,59 47,76 8,13 34,33 0 1,49 INDUSTRIAL REAL ESTATE 9,76 0 34,96 14,93 41,46 52,24 12,20 30,60 1,62 2,24 4,88 29,10 4,48 26,83 31,34 2007 2008 STRONG DECREASE 18,7 CENTRALLY-LOCATED OFFICES 2008 REMAIN THE SAME 3,25 55,97 2007 2008 0 8,21 17,07 0,75 34,96 16,42 42,28 51,49 0,81 2,24 SHOPPING CENTRES 9,76 0 45,53 22,39 34,15 50,00 10,57 24,63 0 2,99 HOTELS 8,94 6,72 29,27 17,16 43,90 49,25 16,26 23,88 1,63 2,99 LOCAL RETAIL Real estate directors are soliciting commissions for market research CONSULTANCY AND FORECASTS How do you think sales prices will evolve in the following real estate segments? STRONG INCREASE CENTRALLY-LOCATED OFFICES SLIGHT INCREASE REMAIN THE SAME 2007 2008 SLIGHT DECREASE STRONG DECREASE 2007 2008 2007 2008 2007 2008 2007 2008 17,89 0,75 49,49 11,94 28,46 42,54 4,07 38,81 0 5,97 BUSINESS PARKS 7,32 1,49 34,96 28,36 47,97 42,54 8,13 24,63 1,63 2,99 INDUSTRIAL REAL ESTATE 8,94 3,73 35,77 20,90 42,28 47,76 11,38 23,88 1,63 3,73 LOCAL RETAIL 19,51 0 39,84 26,12 31,71 47,01 8,94 23,13 0 3,73 SHOPPING CENTRES 15,45 2,24 36,59 31,34 38,21 43,28 9,76 20,15 0 2,99 HOTELS 12,2 11,19 27,64 23,13 46,34 46,27 7,32 14,93 6,5 4,48 HIGHER SALES PRICES FOR SHOPPING CENTRES. Mistrust dominates the forecast in office sales prices, with 44.78% predicting a drop this year, forty percentage points more than in 2007, while only 12.69% expect increases, compared to 67.38% twelve months ago. The survey reveals more optimism in business parks with 42.54% expecting comparable prices, and another 28.36% trusting there will be slight increases. Optimism is still greater in the shopping centre market, where 43.28% predict no notable variations and 31.34% of the total expect slight increases (the highest figure of all the segments). How do you think area take-up will evolve in the following real estate segments? STRONG INCREASE SLIGHT INCREASE 2007 2008 2007 CENTRALLY-LOCATED OFFICES 33,33 0,75 39,84 BUSINESS PARKS 13,82 1,49 33,33 22,39 INDUSTRIAL REAL ESTATE 14,63 1,49 36,59 23,13 LOCAL RETAIL 18,7 1,49 SHOPPING CENTRES 11,38 8,13 HOTELS 2008 REMAIN THE SAME 2007 2008 SLIGHT DECREASE 2007 2008 2,44 31,34 0 6,72 43,09 40,30 8,94 32,09 0,81 3,73 39,84 46,27 8,13 26,87 0,81 2,24 39,02 27,61 39,02 46,27 3,25 21,64 0 2,99 0,75 34,96 24,63 47,15 50,75 0,81 5,22 3,73 22,76 24,63 38,21 48,51 8,13 4,48 11,94 24,39 49,25 2007 2008 STRONG DECREASE 5,69 18,66 22,76 18,66 STABLE TAKE-UP. In 2008, 80.59% of directors predict similar (or only slightly less) take-up in offices compared to 2007, which is a record for this category. The trend recurs in the various tertiary sectors, maintaining equivalent (or again, slightly less) levels to those of 2007. The only exception is among shopping centres where 24.63% predict a slight increase in take-up, and 18.66% expect a slight drop. and due diligence, in efforts to ensure clear, confident transactions Trends 2007 31 The coming years forebode greater volatility and higher demands on directors and executives in real estate, but they certainly also offer great opportunities. 32 3 MARKETS AND IDEAS Trends 2007 33 WHEN THE STORM PICKS UP IT GETS STRONGER More than ten years of practically idyllic conditions had gone by. Sunny days accompanied by a good southerly breeze helped maintain a gentle swell. The currents guided the boats on their return to port with their bellies laden with all manner of fish. ADOLFO RAMÍREZ-ESCUDERO, Managing Director CB Richard Ellis Spain 34 MARKETS AND IDEAS Several years had past since the elderly townsfolk had announced the end of such a constructive and long lasting run. Those savvy to nature’s ways warned the younger ones, as well as many of those less familiar to the local seas that had arrived from foreign climbs, that these good times would not last forever. They begged them never to lose their respect for the sea, to never let their guard down when it came to maintenance and good management of their ships or to neglect the necessary precautions when coming into shore, where there were many undercurrents which could sink a vessel to the sea bed in a matter of minutes. One day in August circumstances changed in a sudden and unexpected way. The sailors set off at dawn with a strong northerly wind blowing that had not been seen for some time, this brought with it dark One day in August, circumstances storm clouds and whipped up surf on the horizon, sending a warning that what was to come would be even worse. The powerful storm overwhelmed many of the small ships and even some of the larger ones that were unprepared and found themselves too close to the reef, or too far out on the high sea or were simply just too complacent and more than a handful lost their cargo to the depths. However, it was not all bad news. In a certain way the storm came as somewhat of a renaissance and ushered in a return to the old art of fishing, particularly for the old skippers who over the past few years had been left behind by the modern ships and were unable to compete with their speed. Their keen knowledge of sailing would allow them to take advantage of the constant winds, without having to rely on fuel, which was now in severe shortage after the storm that had cut off communications. Whilst many ships had to remain in port, the traditional boats, larger and better equipped for the deep waters, returned to sea, making the most of a less intensely fished ocean and rejuvenated by the storms that gave more and bigger fish to the seasoned seafarers. This simple parable offers a wealth of analogies that we can apply to the last few months we have experienced in the real estate sector. The anticyclones of consumer spending fuelled by capital gains in property and record employment levels in construction for Spain. Then squalls came in by force from other latitudes generating financial instability causing a rise in finance costs, a current account deficit and inflation. As always occurs in such stormy times, on rough and rudimentary waters, it is the seasoned and experienced skippers, with well-prepared vessels for such adventures, that succeed. The coming years forebode greater volatility and higher demands on directors and executives in real estate, but they certainly also offer great opportunities. Growth will be found predominantly in market fundamentals, in asset management and in new products and markets rather than through capital changed in a sudden and unexpected way THE STORM CAME AS SOMEWHAT OF A RENAISSANCE AND USHERED IN A RETURN TO THE OLD ART growth derived from yield compression, which was responsible for 60% of growth in the last three years. Our prediction for the next few years suggests the following “climate conditions” in which we will have to work: • In the global market returns on property will show more moderate growth than in previous years although there will still remain a good riskreturn factor. • The two main drivers behind Spain’s miraculous economic growth will show clear signs of exhaustion: consumption and construction. • GDP growth in Spain will slow down and converge with the EU15 average without the backup of EC funding. • The financial markets will display further uncertainty, with finance becoming much more selective and interest rates showing few signs of lowering in the face of threatening inflation, and few signs of rising in the face of a fear of a cooling down of Trends 2007 35 ADOLFO RAMÍREZ-ESCUDERO, WHEN THE STORM PICKS UP IT GETS STRONGER GDP GROWTH IN SPAIN WILL SLOW DOWN AND CONVERGE WITH THE EU 15 AVERAGE the economy. The search for capital and finance through the sale of property assets will be the norm. • The world will keep growing. The EU-15 arena will perform more dynamically and will offer some form of relief for exports and tourism, as well as a destination for cross border investment, particularly France and Germany. • The fundamental factor to watch out for when making our predictions for the property sector will be job creation. • The high cost of raw materials, driven by strong growth in emerging economies, accompanied by repeated injections of liquidity by central banks will put slight upward pressure on worldwide inflation. • There will be less liquidity in the markets, but clearly enough to allow growth in commercial property. New liquidity from emerging markets will influence global investment through Sovereign Wealth Funds (SWFs). We will see the development of regional REITS in environments with a common 36 MARKETS AND IDEAS Managing Director CB Richard Ellis Spain currency, such as the Euro, Dollar and Yen. Under these weather conditions, choosing one’s route and type of ship, along with her experienced crew, can be determining factors in order to fish successfully. Some of the more experienced captains who have ridden out several storms like these in the past have shared some of their more apt techniques with us, to do just that: • Keep a safe distance from the shore. Less favourable financing conditions and greater financial instability are indicators that debt should be reduced as a precautionary measure so that no leaks are sprung. The measures for debt coverage should outweigh gearing against Net Asset Value. The most pronounced falls in value will be seen in residential use land, as by definition its residual value entails a certain degree of operational gearing. Furthermore, on many occasions, transactions of this nature have been financed with a considerable Loan to Value Ratio. Should we enter a stage of negative job creation, it will be beneficial to go back to basics and stick to core strategies. • Choose the ships most suited to deep-sea fishing. Although there will be fewer buyers in the market, purchasing power, in our opinion will be sufficient. The low-geared buyers such as REITs, pension funds, open-ended funds, Sovereign Wealth Funds etc... will replace developers, family enterprises and opportunistic buyers who tend to be highly geared. We will have to sail to further flung oceans, less tested and riskier waters, but the returns will be in line with the risk assumed. • Look for new fishing spots on other shores; reduce dependence by searching for new types of fish. We will continue to see growth in cross border operations. Emerging markets, including Asia and Latin America, will offer greater returns than domestic markets. In Western Europe, we will have to look to the East, particularly to Russia and Turkey, where possibilities of high growth in exchange for greater risk will be on offer. Morocco provides a close alternative destination There will be less liquidity in the for investment and a close eye should be kept on it. It has clear tourism potential, a shortage of affordable housing and a large capital city; Casablanca has over 5 million inhabitants. The depreciation of the dollar is causing a relative increase in value for assets listed in that currency. In the mature markets, the tendency for corporate divestment will continue to rise through instruments such as sale and leasebacks, and we will see new products coming into favour with investors such as parking, lifestyle retail centres, hospitals, retirement homes, self-storage, etc... • Integrate suppliers, search for new affiliations, grow in size, and expand new distribution channels. The residential development markets will suffer from inflexible environments. One will need to work on gaining market share, generate cost savings by economies of scale, and serve the growing market segments such as social and rental housing and new regions whose populations are growing. The increased difficulty of raising finance will bring about contributions in kind and the trading of shareholdings in projects. The commercial property markets will benefit from favourable structural change; new products, new markets and new capital looking to diversify. Vehicles with tax breaks such as REITs will grow and structurally converge in areas with a common currency. Commercial property with long leases offers an excellent refuge for more inflationary environments with traditionally very low real interest rates. The public sector will be looking for private finance to serve demands on infrastructure and amenities without infringing on public spending limitations. There will be a harmonisation in the availability of exposure to commercial property within the sphere of financial vehicles such as risk management funds and the use of real estate derivatives. We will see a lot of balance sheet rationalization prompted by the financial institutions and opportunistic investors who together, will steer consolidation in the industry, the sale of underperforming assets, internationalisation and the strive for business model synergies. As in our story of the fishermen, in the markets, there is never a period of calm which is not followed by more turbulent times. The coming years will without a doubt separate the best captains from the mediocre, but they will also offer good opportunities for those who know how to markets, but clearly enough astutely navigate their ships in those waters that are abundant with fish and where less boats have already trawled. In a more interconnected economy the cycles tend to get shorter and shorter and internationalisation of the markets always allows us the sanctuary of new seas in which we can mitigate risk of nature’s caprices, and develop new techniques for meeting new sailors with whom we can exchange knowledge and skills. When the storm worsens, we should prepare ourselves with the best material and experience for the long and uncertain journey, but the adventure will be far greater and more exciting than that offered by the already explored docile waters. Trends 2007 37 OFFIMORPHOSIS Office properties are adapting to new working practices. It is important to understand where changes are taking place and why. ALFONSO GALOBART, Managing Director CB Richard Ellis Spain 38 MARKETS AND IDEAS The Czech intellectual Roger Fidler christened the radical transformation that new technologies triggered in communications mediamorphosis. Something similar is happening with offices, which has logically begun to be dubbed offimorphosis. In recent years, offices have undergone many changes. Offices are traditionally a more stable sector; they do not see too many organic changes and are a consolidated economic activity. It will continue to be like that, but with hither to unheard of transactions and changes and other new elements that warrant more in depth study. When this market first began, office transactions were ordinarily carried out in the traditional central areas of the city, by definition, commercial and financial districts. Since then, development has extended to the urban periphery, generating a vast supply of modern buildings. This change of location has created other modifications as well. Urban expansion has brought with it new areas of decentralised offices. Due to market demand, this has become the market norm Taller buildings are being URBAN EXPANSION HAS BROUGHT WITH IT NEW, DECENTRALISED OFFICE AREAS in all major Spanish cities. Madrid, for example, has excellent transport networks, but traffic jams are beginning to spread to the outskirts. A central location is no longer the only motivating factor when choosing office space, as it was in the past. Other conditions now prevail, like efficiency, the guarantee of a comfortable working environment, or conveying the right image. Fulfilling these mandates requires modern, decentralised solutions. This change is occurring in Madrid and even more so in Barcelona and Valencia. NEW DESIGNS Even the design of properties has changed. In the periphery, business parks are the norm; these are areas that attest to a new business philosophy. The solutions are aesthetic, practical, and innovative, with more flexible spaces, in more agreeable, relaxed environments, with more services, and the contractual option for exclusive or shared use. At the same time, taller buildings are being constructed on the outskirts of cities. Up until now, there were very few office towers in Madrid; however, there are now four new additions, which although they are still under construction, are about to supersede the previous emblematic buildings on the Paseo de la Castellana. The same is happening in Barcelona, with similar examples being the properties at Diagonal Mar and District 22@, as well as new developments in Plaza de Europa in Hospitalet. Be that as it may, current demand is split between traditional offices and modern constructions, and across the two aforementioned development variants – vertical and horizontal. Another important transformation centres on the technological innovations in constructed on the outskirts of cities office construction. Exterior design has been modified and above all the performance and quality of the properties. SPACE AND TECHNOLOGY In the first office only buildings, technology was limited to a centralised air-conditioning system, smoke detectors and fire alarms, false acoustic ceilings, and cable boxes for lights and telephones. Then came the phase of intelligent buildings, so called because they had information networks to control communal area facilities. The final phase has given us sustainable or ecologically-sound buildings that are constructed from recycled materials, designed to reduce contamination and save energy. 70% of current office take-up is in periphery areas of cities, which is logical given that there is a larger amount of supply in these areas. Prices are more reasonable, and can be up to 60% less than in the city centre. But the main reason that companies have begun to exodus to the outskirts of the city is the need for more space. As a result, many corporations have moved or plan to move. Among the numerous examples are: Banco Santander, Telefónica, Trends 2007 39 ALFONSO GALOBART, OFFIMORPHOSIS Managing Director CB Richard Ellis Spain Iberdrola, and BBVA. Their approach reflects care and intelligence, which includes financial considerations. In certain cases, they have chosen to exchange previouslyoccupied buildings for new acquisitions; in other cases old buildings are sold in order to construct new head offices with the profits. At other times, as is the case with Endesa, they buy land, develop it and set up a leaseback agreement, which provides the financing for core projects and frees them up from investing in property. Changing headquarters in order to restructure the business makes sense, and even more so when one can take advantage of real estate market cycles. When supply is greater, prices drop and options increase. The sale of centrally located offices or those in areas that have increased in price is a way to cash in on accumulated equity, especially since they are very likely not to be as practical as when they were first taken on and they normally require substantial expenditure. Current conditions have created many changes in business CHANGING HEADQUARTERS IN ORDER TO RESTRUCTURE THE BUSINESS MAKES SENSE, AND EVEN MORE SO WHEN ONE CAN TAKE ADVANTAGE OF REAL ESTATE MARKET CYCLES 40 MARKETS AND IDEAS organisations: mergers, sales, new operating strategies, diversification in other sectors. In each of these instances, it makes sense to rationalise ones real estate portfolio. It is not profitable, for example, to duplicate head offices, which results in inadequate maximisation of space and operational disjointedness. However, we must not assume that all movement is towards the periphery of cities, or that all companies want to leave the centre. When the need to relocate arises, the first element to be considered is proximity. After the fire in the Windsor building, for example, displaced tenants quickly moved to buildings in nearby Azca and the Castellana. In other words, prime offices have a strong following. In Barcelona, the vacancy rate in the centre is at only 1.8%, while the global average is 5.5%. GROWTH AND MATURITY Madrid’s office park has doubled in the last 15 years. Since the 1992 Olympic Games, Barcelona’s office area has expanded by 46%. Valencia is growing at a comparatively quicker rate. The market was very parochial in the beginning, with many mixed-use buildings, but over the last five years the amount of new space has grown considerably and additional business areas have been developed and the total office space is forecast to grow by 48% in the coming years. With so much growth, buildings that were constructed before 1990 are already considered to be old. Some have been refurbished, mainly the communal areas and elevators, although HVAC and fire-prevention upgrades are also common. In reality, clients prefer newly constructed buildings, perhaps because they symbolise dynamism, vision, and progress. New supply entering the market typically gets sold or let before second-hand properties. Presently, only 8% of available space is new. Just by looking at how much available space there is in the market, this indicates that the turnover and letting of second-hand buildings remains complicated. Take-up of new areas and pre-lets currently represents 28.3% of the total gross take-up. In Madrid, new business districts are primarily forming in the north and northeast. Together, they account for 55% of the annual gross take-up. The main business district, located along the Paseo de la Castellana, is extending progressively northward, as far as the Burgos highway, Las Tablas and Sanchinarro. La Moraleja and Arroyo de la Vega also remain strong areas in the Madrid market. In the east, Campo de las Naciones and the exhibition area is considered a good option for blue chip companies. Worthwhile opportunities for business parks are also available along In Barcelona, there are two bussiness districts the Barcelona highway, where the occupancy rate is currently higher than 90%. The west has consolidated as a business area dispersed amongst a primarily residential area. In Pozuelo, Majadahonda, Boadilla and Las Rozas, and likewise along the La Coruña highway, plenty of office space has been built. These properties have a current occupation rate of 93%. In Barcelona, there are two business districts in addition to the traditional urban centre: Diagonal Mar and District 22@ in the northeast, and El Prat and Hospitalet in the southeast periphery, as well as the main business avenue along Gran Vía and Plaza de Europa. In addition to these areas, one must add the new constructions on the perimeter of Sant Cugat and in other outlying areas of the city. While vacancy in the centre, as previously noted, barely reaches 2%, in these outlying areas it is nearer at 13.5%. However, the take-up rate will be higher in the new business areas, which account for 79% of the accumulated take-up, as opposed to 21% in the central districts. Valencia’s figures are similar, indicating a transition from older buildings to newly constructed properties in new areas. Some 90% of projects currently under development are outside the city’s centre. FUTURE BUSINESS DISTRICTS In the future, these processes will be intensified. There will continue to be a pocket of demand that is reluctant to leave urban centres. In Madrid, this demand will be concentrated within the Calle 30 ring road, an area that undoubtedly will continue to see continued growth in the future, although the in addition to the traditional urban centre Trends 2007 41 ALFONSO GALOBART, OFFIMORPHOSIS periphery option will continue to win support. It is likely that possible future locations will expand to other business districts as well. Madrid’s preferred option is the Valdebebas development, an area which already has all the necessary resources and infrastructures in place, although it will be sometime before it welcomes in its first tenants. More business parks are being constructed along the Barcelona 42 MARKETS AND IDEAS Managing Director CB Richard Ellis Spain highway, which will strengthen take-up capacity in the area. Projects in different areas are also expected, because the city is expanding and it is illogical to concentrate all tertiary office activities in two or three locations, which are ever further from employees and clients. By way of example, areas like Ensanche de Vallecas, Carabanchel, Valdecarros or Villaverde will have land for office use, in order to provide services or simply because they trust the demand for decentralised business areas will continue. Clients demand location, quality, innovation, services, and provisions, but are conscious of economic costs. The office market in Madrid is healthy because it has understood how to expand without suffering high vacancy rates. Barcelona, on the other hand, has learned from previous errors in judgement, and now it is not so easy to market offices in unconsolidated areas. At the same time, they have worked out the most effective methods of reforming old buildings by converting them into residential properties and hotels, dependent on which is more profitable. These decisions, as well as the production of outlying business parks, help strengthen the new peripheral markets. Owing to this, the availability of space becomes more flexible, preventing bottle-necks and imbalances in demand that could affect prices. OPEN INTERIORS When choosing between various properties, the most important consideration is flexibility, always bearing in mind that a company could be subject to changes in the future. Office design has completely changed. Partition walls have disappeared in favour of open-plan workspaces, with only a few meeting areas and one or two managerial offices, sometimes none. It is the new work philosophy, one of integration and communication among colleagues. As a consequence, office space is more efficiently used and offices cost less. Some decades ago, the calculation of office space required per worker was around 12-15 m2 including passageways, private offices and meeting rooms. Today, that figure has dropped to 10 m2 per worker, and may continue to drop even further. The efficiency cause has received additional support for being environmentally sound and encouraging sustainable construction. The objective is to design properties that are good for the environment, that reduce the current levels of contamination, and that are constructed of sustainable, recyclable materials, so as not to compromise the future of the planet. The efficiency cause has received additional support for being There are systems that reduce contaminants, that generate clean, renewable energy, and that minimize consumption. Furthermore, there is growing concern among proprietors and tenants about worker’s health and safety. We already know there are buildings with maintenance problems that could cause illness or transmit viruses through ventilation ducts. Many companies are interested in joining the movement to save the environment, believing that consumers of their products are conscious of the dangers inherent in the deterioration of the planet’s health and the depletion of its natural resources. It is a convincing argument for future business plans. Legislation is beginning to impose certain measures, and from January 2008, the European Union will require energy-saving accreditations for every new construction. Moreover, there are international bodies that certify environmental quality and a given property’s level of commitment to nature conservation. For example LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) accreditations are issued by the U.S. Green Building Council, and are available to any interested property owner or developer. All of these innovations are good news for the market and one can be sure that clients will appreciate proprietors’ conservation efforts. This brief review of offimorphosis serves to emphasise the extent to which the office concept has changed over recent years. It will undoubtedly continue to change as efforts to improve the efficiency and comfort of clients persist. CLIENTS DEMAND LOCATION, QUALITY, INNOVATION, SERVICES, AND PROVISIONS, BUT ARE CONSCIOUS OF ECONOMIC COSTS environmentally sound and encouraging sustainable construction Trends 2007 43 ASSET MANAGEMENT, THE BEST OF EVERY ASSET ‘Managing complexity’ has become the common denominator of many Spanish real estate companies. As they enter new markets and expand their product portfolios, a comprehensive vision of their assets is indispensable. This is what Asset Management is for. Not long ago, most real estate managers concentrated on one geographical market, the local market, and their portfolios were dominated by a single product type. Today this rarely happens. It has become vital to control a selected multiple scenario, within the many possible variants of the matrix of products and markets. ENRIQUE MARTÍNEZ LAGUNA, Managing Director CB Richard Ellis Spain 44 MARKETS AND IDEAS ACCURATE TERMINOLOGY Firstly, one needs to thoroughly define the concept of Asset Management and the various principles it entails. Often the term is confused with Portfolio Management, Equity Management, or Property Management, none of which are synonymous. In the Anglo-Saxon market, terminology is much more precise. Property Management and Portfolio Management are clearly differentiated from Asset Management, which is a much broader concept, entailing every facet of real estate assets, from acquisitions to sales. In mature and professional markets, real estate companies are dedicating more and better resources to Asset Management, incorporating it into operations Establishing a foreign subsidiary requires changes of marketing, human resources, client management, and diversification. Consequently, as in any economic sector, defining a strategic plan is more and more essential. The complexity of the market – its cycles, its competitive character – favours the comprehensive development and consequent professionalism of any sector, and this has been the case in Spain over the last decade. The real estate field has ceased to be dominated by business and enterprise, and is currently comprised of authentic companies with considerably more professionals and specialists. In the early days of real estate, management was concentrated almost exclusively on the acquisition of assets and their subsequent turnover. Nowadays, as the profession has matured, investment and divestment strategies are key elements to success, but must be accompanied by the comprehensive management of assets, as well as an adequate organization and business structure. VALUE AND CYCLES Focusing on Asset Management, adding value requires an informed selection of different product cycles, potential markets, the creation of brands, and the repositioning of obsolete assets, throughout the entire process – from design to occupancy. Asset Management is a complex function for every organization, especially in Spain, where domestic real estate companies are immersed in an ambitious process of diversification, prompted undoubtedly by the changes in market conditions. Nowadays, the principal national companies are immersed in product diversification processes, predominantly, international geographical diversification. They are classified as follows: Diversification of Products: • The primary consequence is greater complexity in the Scope of asset Management Services at CBRE SERVICES PROPERTY MANAGEMENT BUILDING CONSULTANCY INVESTMENT LETTING VALUATIONS ACCOUNTANCY & TAX COMPLIANCE ACCORDING TO LOCAL NORMS CONSOLIDATE ACCOUNTING ACCORDING TO SPANISH ACCOUNTING OVERALL CONTROL REPORT TO CLIENT PROVIDED BY CBRE CROSS BORDER CBRE SPAIN PORTFOLIO MANAGER COORDINATION in the management structure of the parent company Trends 2007 45 ASSET MANAGEMENT, THE BEST OF EVERY ASSET management of assets. Each product can be in a different phase of the cycle, with distinct requirements for profitability, unique demands, and various potentials of income growth. • Even among the same product type, diversification magnifies the differences in performance and valuation between prime products and those of lesser quality that present a major risk. Each instance demands highlyspecialized management. Geographical Diversification: Every move to another country requires radical change. Firstly, everything is new, and adaptation demands the best and most qualified resources, capable of controlling the levels of risk and supervising (at the very minimum) the following requisites: • Legal and fiscal framework. • Market and research. • Designated agents and businesses 46 MARKETS AND IDEAS ENRIQUE MARTÍNEZ LAGUNA, Managing Director CB Richard Ellis Spain • Attainment of credibility and recognition of the brand in a new market. As well as demanding considerable organizational effort in resources, the establishment of foreign subsidiaries requires changes in the management structure of the parent company, mainly in reporting and control. The growing complexity of Asset Management in the Spanish market is indisputable. Many companies have significantly increased their cross-border activities in the past two years, approximating in size and scope those real estate companies that have traditionally maintained a panEuropean presence. Using the evolution of real estate companies with wellestablished pan-European profiles as a point of reference, it is evident that organizational models are intricately linked to Asset Management strategies. These strategies can be broadly divided into three categories: strategies of companies whose cross-border expansion involves opening their own subsidiary, those who establish a subsidiary with a local affiliate, and those who conduct business abroad without establishing subsidiaries. The Asset Management strategy corresponding to the three aforementioned categories would evolve proportionately from one of minimal service outsourcing in the case of locally affiliated subsidiaries, to one of complete outsourcing in the case of no existing subsidiary. Benchmark: The foreign experience in Spain Leading Subsidiaries. Rodamco, Corio and ING are clear examples of pan-European companies with leading subsidiaries of long standing in Spain. In the beginning, both Rodamco and Corio outsourced a large part of their Asset Management operations, based in teams of Asset Managers with exclusively strategic profiles. In subsequent stages, these companies opted to vertically integrate most phases of the chain of value, primarily + - in acquisitions, development, commercialization, and management. Partial Outsourcing. Companies such as the Americanowned Hines and GE Real Estate, which focus mainly on development and investment, respectively, are among those who maintain a solid presence in Spain and who successfully employ an established outsourcing policy. The growth of their subsidiaries is due to greater activity rather than increased insourcing. That is to say, their Asset Management strategy continues to be one of partial outsourcing, especially in the operative components of business. CROSS-BORDER EXPANSION OPTION ASSET MANAGEMENT LEVEL OF OUTSOURCING 1. SUBSIDIARY IN FOREIGN COUNTRY WITH A LOCAL AFFILIATE (DEPENDENT ON LOCAL AFFILIATE’S PROFILE) LOW 2. OPENING OF OWN SUBSIDIARY (DEPENDENT ON COMPANY’S STRATEGIC PROFILE) 2.1. CONSOLIDATION ASSET MANAGEMENT LIMITED OPERATIVE 2.2. INITIAL PHASES PARTIAL OPERATIVE ASSET MANAGEMENT 3. NO SUBSIDIARY VERY CENTRALISED, GLOBAL STRUCTURES OPERATIVE AND STRATEGIC ASSET MANAGEMENT - INTERMEDIATE TOTAL + The growing complexity of asset management Operative Outsourcing. Pan-European fund managers like British Land, Henderson or AXA are examples of tactical outsourcing, where subsidiaries have one basic function, strategic Asset Management. They are supported externally by the operative components of the business, maintain thoroughly controlled organisational structures in the subsidiaries, and are highly coordinated with the parent company. Near-total Outsourcing. Finally, European companies located in Spain that use near-total outsourcing can be subdivided into two categories: • German funds with vast experience in the Spanish market, like Deka, WestInvest or Difa, who maintain no permanent base, who employ international teams of Asset Managers in their central headquarters, and who engage external local advisors in Asset Management operations. • New arrivals to the Spanish real estate market like Quinlan Private or Australian fund management companies like Babcock, IGIPT or APN/UKA, who opt for complete outsourcing of Asset Management operations. EXIT STRATEGIES What is the right course of action for Spanish companies in their cross-border activities? Though still at an early stage, we can already find examples of different corporate strategies, different approaches to Asset Management, and different methods of outsourcing. Principal fund management companies, like Banco Santander, clearly opt for outsourcing the operative component of Asset Management, in conjunction with strategic Asset Management which is maintained at their central headquarters. Due to the nature of their business, developers such as Acciona, Realia, Grupo Lar, Riofisa, Layetana, etc., previously chose to launch subsidiaries, thereby allowing them to analyze the market and potential projects, as well as seek out local affiliates in situ. Fadesa, Iosa (Comsa), Chamartín and others have already done the same in eastern countries. In short, the challenge of international expansion requires specific strategies for Spanish companies, and choosing the most efficient Asset Management formula will become a determining factor in the future. in the Spanish market is indisputable ASSET MANAGEMENT ENTAILS EVERY FACET OF REAL ESTATE ASSETS, FROM ACQUISITIONS TO SALES. Trends 2007 47 THE TREES AND THE WOODS We know that sometimes you cannot see the wood for the trees. In business something similar happens. That’s why we must never lose sight of the client and the team. JOSÉ MANUEL PEIDRÓ, Managing Director CB Richard Ellis Spain 48 MARKETS AND IDEAS In the corporate world we live in, speed is not always the best rule of thumb. We should remember that acceleration and deceleration count for nothing alone and that true value lies in knowing where you want to go, why, and on what terms. Prioritising objectives over pace seems to be a thing of the past. Now, due to increasing pressure in the field, companies are obliged to grow frenetically year on year. Ninety percent of for-profit enterprises must increase earnings annually, maximising their profits and improving their costeffectiveness. In achieving this, they seldom ask at what price. If we concentrate on the real estate sector, it is more than likely that in the last decade of prosperity we have all increased the volume of our business and our revenues. The key throughout this period has been the product. Buying the most land and selling the most homes in the shortest period of time. At what price? • At the price of overlooking the importance of planning that provides sustainable quality to the residents of the projects. • At the price of ignoring innovative architectural formulas that are original, Long term objectives always mean paying respectful, coherent, and integrated with the surrounding landscape. • At the price of ignoring the usefulness of separating clients into groups. Which is equivalent to disregarding the need to differentiate, because buying capacity, typologies, qualities, financing needs, methods of payment must be different. It is always an error to veer towards producing a job lot of the same type of properties, the same for everyone and at the same price. • At the fundamental price of marginalising the client, the nerve centre of our operations. Commercialisation has tended to obscure clients, rendering them indistinguishable in a vast, grey area; we have forgotten the one cardinal rule: looking after the client first and foremost, to the best of our ability, and always with absolute humility. TEAMWORK Professional teams seem to have been submerged in a similar fog. Ever more frequently, the general rule is that companies prioritise revenue above the employees who work to attain it. COMMERCIALISATION HAS TENDED TO OBSCURE CLIENTS, RENDERING THEM INDISTINGUISHABLE As a veteran basketball player, and even a captain, clearly it is my duty to impart a theory that equates managing a business with managing a basketball team. If you are on the court, playing defence, you are not likely to be the top scorer. Achieving your objectives individually is seldom successful. Alternatively, if you organise, motivate and manage the team as a whole, it is highly probable that your team will attain the points and the victories that it expects, perhaps even exceed expectations. I have tried to apply this principle at CB Richard Ellis. When I began, there were only five of us in the residential department; now we operate a staff of over a hundred, and throughout that time, I remain convinced that our greatest efforts must focus on motivating these professionals, making them feel happy and fulfilled in their jobs, giving them responsibility. In this way, team members attention to the client and the team commit themselves personally to the project, contributing as much as possible to their department and to their company. This team management strategy allows financial goals to be reached and often even surpass all expectations. Maintaining a friendly and approachable temperament, enabling pro-activity, supporting decisions, reflecting on them, amending them and updating them as a team, are key elements to team management. Realise that the objectives of any department can only be achieved as a whole, by each member feeling like they belong to the team, and that they are making an effort with them and that they enjoy themselves in the process. A united and motivated team is the best way to achieve goals in the business world. At this time of change in the real estate cycle, it is essential that companies and directors quickly realise that we have omitted the two most important people in our market: our client and our team. Trust, mindfulness, motivation, respect, listening, and observation. These are concepts and objectives that must be applied consistently and insistently to both groups, regardless of market conditions. Whoever grasps this key principal will weather the storm better, experience more growth, and obtain better results. Longterm objectives always mean paying attention to the client and the team; the woods. To concentrate on product and profit is to only see the trees, short-term goals that will not thrive until converted into the woods. And that’s where we are. Trends 2007 49 THE WHYS OF VALUATIONS In recent years there have been a multitude of technological and organisational changes in business, that increasingly distort the reflection of the true image of property and the financial situation of companies. In recent years there have been a multitude of technological and organisational changes in business, that increasingly distort the reflection of the true image of property and the financial situation of companies. PATRICIA GARCÍA DE PONGA, Finance Director CB Richard Ellis Spain MARK CLIFFORD, Managing Director CB Richard Ellis Spain 50 MARKETS AND IDEAS MARKET VALUE AND FAIR VALUE Moreover, the internationalisation of operations and the growing use of foreign financing have generated an increase in the need for uniform financial reporting, in light of which the European Union opted for the regulations issued by the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB), instead of developing specific new accounting principles for Europe. One of the initial objectives, was that in a few years, all European Union member countries would standardise the reporting of financial information, according to the same criteria. In the medium term, this accounting standardisation would mean, substantial savings in operating costs. The 2005 tax-year marked a turning point in the information submitted by listed companies, who, for the first time, adopted For years, the fair value method has been the the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS, previously known as the International Accounting Standards, or IAS; or according to their Spanish acronyms the NIIF, Normas Internacionales de Información Financiera, and the NIC, Normas Internacionales de Contabilidad, respectively). Currently, the Spanish Institute of Accounting and Auditing (ICAC, Instituto de Contabilidad y Auditoría de Cuentas) is finalising a draft of the new General Accounting Plan, which will be approved by Royal Decree at the end of 2007 and enacted on 1st January, 2008, thereby replacing the old 1990 Accounting Plan and marking another significant milestone in the accounting standardisation process. The introduction of fair value is one of the new elements that involves the adoption of IFRC norms in Spanish companies. The historical cost calculation has traditionally been accepted by the majority of international accounting systems, due to the objectivity and simplicity of its application. However, in recent years, there is a consensus that historical cost valuation has lost its credibility. It is clear that market value reflects the economic reality of a business more accurately than the historical value, not only because it is more relevant for incorporating the changes in asset valuations, but also because it is more reliable, since we know with greater confidence the price at which to sell an asset at a given time. Specifically, the IAS 40 considers the possibility of using the fair value model to appraise real estate investments (although it allows the possibility of continuing to value them in the traditional historical cost method). For years, the fair value method has been the most THE 2005 TAX-YEAR MARKED A TURNING POINT IN THE INFORMATION SUBMITTED BY LISTED COMPANIES frequently used method by the big European real estate firms, and currently in Spain approximately half of the listed real estate companies have opted to report fair value in their balance sheets, effectively increasing the uniformity of their accounts with those of other foreign companies. Reflecting the value of these properties on the balance sheet at the given date means a significant growth of their individual funds, but a decline of future profits derived from the sale of these assets; it introduces volatility in to the profit and loss accounts of the companies, because among other factors, they not only reflect the operating and business results but also those profits and losses stemming from value fluctuations – in this case of the properties – that do most frequently used method by the big European real estate firms Trends 2007 51 THE WHYS OF VALUATIONS PATRICIA GARCÍA DE PONGA, Finance Director CB Richard Ellis Spain not directly depend on business decisions but upon the market situation at a given moment. Nevertheless, in the case of unlisted companies, the ICAC has preferred to focus the application of this valuation method on financial instruments (not on real estate properties), which, when first implemented, allows one to update the value of specific assets. The IASB’s definition of fair value and the IVSC’s (International Valuation Standards Committee) definition of market value are completely identical. The IASB (International Accounting Standards Board, the relevant body to which the international accounting regulations refer) defines fair value of a real estate investment as the amount for which it could be settled, between knowledgeable and willing parties, in an arms’ length transaction. It is fundamental to point out that valuations must reflect the market conditions at the balance sheet date and more importantly that fair value will not reflect future expenditures or future synergies derived from fiscal, legal, or regulatory aspects. For its part, the IVSC (International Valuation Standards Committee, the 52 MARKETS AND IDEAS IASB’s counterpart in valuation regulations) defines market value as the estimated amount for which a property should exchange on the date of valuation between a willing buyer and a willing seller in an arm’s length transaction after proper marketing wherein the parties have each acted knowledgeably, prudently, and without compulsion. In accordance with the International Accounting Standards, the best fair value is obtained from current prices in an active market for similar property in the same location and condition, and it is recommended that fair value calculations of property investments are supplemented by an appraisal administered by a professionally qualified, independent expert with experience in the location and in the type of investment being valued. In fact, the IASB is unambiguous about the role of the valuer, specifically in the implementation of the IAS 40. In any case, it is essential that valuers recognise the fundamental concepts and principles of the IAS-IVSC; given that on many occasions appraisals will be used to add value to property assets in the company’s financial statements. In particular, estimated MARK CLIFFORD, Managing Director CB Richard Ellis Spain market values can be used in accounting for mergers, in recording fair value in the balance sheets (whose fluctuations directly impact profit and loss statements), in measuring the impairment of assets, as well as in calculating the Gross Asset Value (GAV). Given that there are different types of valuation reports, depending on their purpose, and that the work carried out by appraisers is specific depending on the final use of the reports, it is of vital importance that companies only use these reports for their intended purpose. In the specific case of valuations used to incorporate the fair value of real estate properties in the balance sheets of listed companies, auditors will verify the accuracy of these appraisals as part of the necessary field work involved in formulating their audit opinions, in view of the direct impact they have on annual reports. CBRE participates in a significant number of investment property valuations of listed Spanish real estate companies, and it is a fact that our valuations are increasingly gaining more relevance, for all the aforementioned reasons. In Spain, the majority of listed real estate companies present It is also necessary to have an understanding of a rental portfolio component, with real estate property investments on their balance sheets that represent up to 75% of their total assets, and approximately half of these groups have chosen the fair value method in appraising their real estate investments. With regard to non-real estate companies listed on the IBEX 35 (the Iberia Index, Spain’s principal stock exchange), some present a significant real estate component in their balance sheets, though they do not generally opt for the fair value method, nor do they provide valuation information in their annual reports. Nevertheless, in accordance with the international accounting standards, and independent of whether the entity chooses one method or the other, it must declare the fair value of its real estate investments, as well as the relevant methods and hypotheses applied in the determination of this value, indicating whether it is based on the appraisal of an accredited, independent expert or if the company itself has determined the fair value. Given the significance of valuations, the importance of guaranteeing that these values are being calculated by recognised and reputable appraisers is evident; there are issues of vital importance like the methodology of valuations, the responsibility that the valuer assumes in submitting his report, the orchestration and maintenance of independence among departments within the same company, and the compliance with regulations to which they are subject. We all talk of Market Value but do we all share the same interpretation of the concept? It soon becomes apparent to anybody working in the property sector that, very often, people have completely different ideas of what “Market Value” constitutes. Global Capital flows have made the harmonisation of accounting and valuation practices necessary. Only with the harmonization of these procedures will Investors really be able to compare the financial results of one company in one country with those of a similar type of company in another country. Countries that ignore this harmonisation and try to go their own way are likely to be the state of the market at the valuation date starved of Foreign Investment due to the inability of investors to understand or trust, for example, the basis of the valuation of the investment portfolio of a listed property company. THE IMPORTANCE OF GUARANTEEING THAT RECOGNISED AND REPUTABLE APPRAISERS ARE CALCULATING THESE VALUES IS EVIDENT For valuers worldwide an important step forward towards harmonisation was the adoption of a standard definition of “Market Value”. The International Valuation Standards Committee (IVSC) was set up by the RICS to help harmonise Global Valuation Standards and introduced a universal definition of Market Value, now used in over 75 countries. The Accountants who were also working towards Global Harmonisation of Accounting Standards, also had the idea of standardising the concept of Market Value but unfortunately did not speak Trends 2007 53 THE WHYS OF VALUATIONS to the IVSC nor the IVSC to the International Accounting Standards Committee (IASC), so for the time being we have the uncomfortable situation that the Accounting world talk of “Fair Value” and the Valuation world of “Market Value”. However International accounting standards do concede officially that we should consider the two concepts as identical. Hopefully, to avoid further confusion, the two definitions will be harmonised in the near future. So what is “Market Value” and how should the agreed definition be interpreted? To summarise the official definition, we have to imagine a hypothetical sale and the price that could be obtained for a sale between unconnected parties at a predetermined date, reflecting all the advantages and 54 MARKETS AND IDEAS PATRICIA GARCÍA DE PONGA, Finance Director CB Richard Ellis Spain disadvantages of the property at that date. We must imagine a sale under the conditions of the market at the date of valuation. Thus there is no element of conservatism or sustainability in Market Value, traditional concepts used by valuers in many European countries. Market values will rise and fall in rhythm with the market and with supply and demand. As valuers do not have a crystal ball and are therefore unable to foresee the future, the Market Value provided will not necessarily be attainable at any future date, due to changes in the market. Valuers have to imagine a transaction of the property, even if our client does not have any intention to sell or if the market is exceptionally poor and not a good moment to market a property. When MARK CLIFFORD, Managing Director CB Richard Ellis Spain demand is poor or non-existent, it is not a valid excuse to say that there is no market at that moment in time and that as no transactions have taken place recently there is no evidence of levels of prices so we cannot value. Under these circumstances a valuer must pay more attention to the sentiment and offers of any purchasers in the market, as any evidence of transactions that exists may be historic and not reflect the state of the market at the date of valuation. The principal way of assessing Market Value is by understanding the local market and levels of prices pertaining. When we buy a house we are all essentially acting as valuers, comparing prices, qualities and locations. Properties with views over Parks are worth more than those without views. Properties on the upper floors of buildings are worth proportionally more than those on lower floors. Buildings and urbanisations with swimming pools and communal areas are The more assumptions, the more worth proportionally more per m2 than those lacking these facilities. Based upon our analysis of the market we make a decision as to whether the asking price is acceptable or whether to offer less. Whilst it is fairly easy to establish certain general benchmarks in terms of price per m2 (minimums and maximums), every property is essentially different from the competitors and this is where the subjectivity of the valuation profession comes into play. As any property developer knows, there is no fixed mathematical equation that can be used to decide how much extra per m2 can be charged for the apartment with views over the Park as opposed to an identical apartment in the same building without views. Similarly, on a larger scale, a development site that permits the construction of residential units with sea views will sell at a higher price per m2 than a similar sized site on the same urbanisation (often contiguous) which does not permit sea views. Apart from studying comparable sales transactions to the property under appraisal, it is also necessary to have an understanding of the state of the market at the valuation date, as all transaction data by its very nature is historic and the market may have moved since the date that the price for the transaction was agreed. We believe that in order to have a complete understanding of the market and so be able to produce accurate valuations, it is necessary to have access to up-to-date information from our Capital Markets and Agency departments, who also transmit to us most importantly the actual sentiment of Investors and developers looking to invest in the Spanish Market at that moment. There are of course mathematical methods used to back up our opinions, such as Discounted Cash Flows or Residual studies; however, there is no substitute for a thorough knowledge of the market and an analysis of all transactions of similar properties to that under valuation. Due to globalisation, with regard to commercial property valuations, it is also very important for commercial hypothetical the valuation will be property valuations to study sales transactions of similar properties in other European Countries. In reality even under IAS, total transparency and comparability of a company’s accounts will be difficult, as Listed Companies have the option of choosing the cost or fair value approach to accounting. If the fair value system of accounting is adopted, then this will add more volatility to the results of a company. However, the effects are often over stated when one takes into account that in most Anglo Saxon countries including the UK, the concept of Market or Fair Value has existed for accounting purposes without problems for the last 30 years. RICS and IVS standards have led to a simplification of definitions of value. Whereas previously we could provide several different types of value, from estimated values to forced sale values, now we only have Market Value. This Market Value can be qualified by way THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE FOR A THOROUGH KNOWLEDGE OF THE MARKET AND AN ANALYSIS OF ALL TRANSACTIONS OF SIMILAR PROPERTIES TO THAT UNDER VALUATION Trends 2007 55 THE WHYS OF VALUATIONS of assumptions. The idea is that the person who reads the valuation report understands fully whether the value can be relied upon or not. The more assumptions there are, the more hypothetical the valuation may be and the less likely it is that the value reported can be obtained in that moment. To understand the reasoning behind this, it would perhaps be illustrative to look at the normal requirements of an International Bank lending money on a site for a shopping centre development. Normally the Bank will require the valuation of the land at the date of valuation and an estimate of the potential value of the property once complete and fully leased. Under IVS, future values should not be reported, so the normal procedure is to provide a valuation as at the date of valuation assuming the Shopping centre is complete 56 MARKETS AND IDEAS PATRICIA GARCÍA DE PONGA, Finance Director CB Richard Ellis Spain according to the project and fully leased. Obviously the latter is not the Market value that can be obtained at the time of the valuation, but is the Market value subject to assumptions. The report should also be considered in relation to the use for which it is prepared, which is also clearly stated in every report and should be agreed with the client from commencement of the instruction. A report prepared purely for internal company purposes allows much more flexibility in the number of assumptions that can be made as compared to a report prepared for Secured Lending Purposes where, for example, a full due diligence of all relevant information is normally required. In any event the report needs to be read in its entirety to understand what checks have been made of the information supplied. Another commonly misunderstood concept is to whom CBRE has legal responsibility for the valuation. Due to Privity of contract, CBRE only has legal responsibility to the Company or the person to whom the report is addressed. We are commonly asked by MARK CLIFFORD, Managing Director CB Richard Ellis Spain clients for a valuation report for Secured Lending Purposes. When we ask for which Bank they require the report the normal reply is that the client wishes to show the report to several Banks but has not decided on which Bank to use. Firstly, if we were to accept the instruction, the report would be made based upon the instructions and scope of work agreed with this client and CBRE would accept responsibility only to the client and not to any Bank. Although the responsibility situation can be remedied by the issue of a reliance letter to the Bank by CBRE at extra cost, the most important consideration is that as the client has instructed CBRE the report is not totally independent and may not include all the information or checks required by the Bank – a conflict of interest exists – which may lead to the Bank rejecting the valuation report and the client having to pay for a second valuation from another valuation firm that has had no connection with the property Aside from the value of the company’s property assets there CBRE VALUES ONLY THE PROPERTY ASSETS OF THE LISTED PROPERTY COMPANIES AS AT A SPECIFIED MOMENT IN TIME, COMMONLY KNOWN AS THE GROSS ASSET VALUE (GAV) owner. It is therefore preferable for the client to discuss the loan requirements with the Bank first and for the Bank to instruct CBRE direct. Whilst CBRE is especially famous for the valuation of the assets of the principal Spanish Listed Property Companies, it should not be forgotten that CBRE is a multinational company with over 29,000 employees, valuing many thousands of listed property companies and funds worldwide each year. All properties worldwide are valued in accordance with IAS (International Accounting Standards) to Market Value. CBRE uses the same methodologies of valuation in all 356 offices worldwide. This transparency and consistency provides comfort to International Investors when making important investment decisions. CBRE values only the property assets of the Listed Property Companies as at a specified moment in time, commonly known as the Gross Asset Value (GAV). We do not calculate the Net Asset Value (NAV) of the company’s assets. It is then supply and demand for the company’s shares on the Stock Market that establishes the price of the shares and thus the value of the Company. When investing in Real Estate Company shares, Investors value above all future estimates of earnings, which may differ considerably from historic or actual earnings due to possible future movements in the Real Estate Market. For this reason, property company shares commonly trade at a discount to net asset value when the market is expected to fall in the near future or at a premium when the property market and prices are expected to increase. However, aside from the value of the company’s property assets there are other factors that need to be considered when valuing a company, such as the value of the Brand, the market coverage, the business plan and development pipeline and the team. Whilst it is true that for an Initial Public Offering of shares on the stock exchange the valuation of the property assets of a real estate company is very important, recently in Spain, due to speculation over possible mergers and acquisitions, the value of most Real Estate Companies’ shares has had little to do with the Market Value of their assets or even the with the Spanish Real Estate Market and its position in the property cycle. are other factors that need to be considered when valuing a company Trends 2007 57 Internationalisation is the main new element that the first decade of the 21ST century has contributed to real estate activities. 58 4 INTERNATIONAL MARKET Trends 2007 59 AND NOW WHAT? Whichever way you look at it, 2007 has been an extremely positive year along the slow path towards the “institutionalisation” of the Latin American investment market. JAVIER MARQUINA, Investments Director for Latin America and the Caribbean CB Richard Ellis Miami 60 INTERNATIONAL MARKET As usual, we have to focus on the more anecdotal or informal side of the day to day work we do as agents, as reliable statistics on total property investment levels in the region are conspicuously lacking. Within CBRE, we have not only had one of our best years in various countries in terms of deals overseen, but also a remarkable year in terms of enquiries processed, with many investors left unsatisfied and frustrated due to a notable lack of product in the region. Institutionalisation has its advantages and disadvantages. Perhaps one of these disadvantages is the very “lack of product”, resulting in increasing prices and a compression of initial yields, which are at their lowest point in a decline that began eight years ago. However, looking at the glass half full rather than half empty, this is a sign of an increase in liquidity and therefore a decrease in risk. The german funds, traditionally the barometer of This phrase is not mine, but one from one of our “frustrated” clients; “he who does not console does it because he does not want to”. The table below shows current yield ranges by use type in the region. Analysing the yields displayed above, we should ask ourselves, who killed the goose that laid the golden eggs? Investors INITIAL YIELDS (RANGES) focusing not on initial yields but rather on internal rates of return over reasonable periods, such as three to five years, as a better indicator of the potential offered by certain investments. With regard to the mortgage crisis and the drop in availability of finance, there is little to be said as far as Latin America is concerned. Our markets know all too used to a lack OFFICES RETAIL INDUSTRIAL BRAZIL 9.5%-10.5% 7%-10% 10.5%-11.5% CHILE 7%-8% (1) 9%-10% MEXICO 7.5%-8.5% 8%-9% 8%-9% NOTE (1): There is not sufficient evidence in Chile’s retail market to establish a reliable range. who flocked to the region did so in search of double digit yields, something practically impossible in more developed markets today. Nonetheless, it seems certain that in terms of capital and rental values, there is still potential for growth, and in many cases we should be of financing, and were in fact almost fully developed without it. In fact, there are examples of transactions completed in Latin America in the last quarter of the year, with finance, and in the height of the financial crisis. In fact it has been the Spanish banks, who have been the most active in the region. Today, it would be naïve to say that the credit situation will not have any effect on the Latin American market. There is no doubt that the THE LATIN AMERICAN MARKET IS CONTINUING ALONG ITS PATH OF TRANSFORMATION AND INSTITUTIONALISATION, AND INVESTORS CONTINUE TO EXPRESS AND DEMONSTRATE THEIR INTEREST. lack of liquidity in the market will affect decision making at portfolio level. At the end of the day, Latin America still represents a marginal share of any global property portfolio, and without liquidity it will be the first to be disposed of. However, this still has not happened and in our opinion for the following two reasons; firstly, the products coming onto the market displaying a sufficient level of transparency can de classified as prime, with good contracts, good tenants and good locations. Without these characteristics, it would not really be worth offering the product to the international market with any hope of closing a deal. Secondly, the financing structures that are proposed or institutional investment are still active in Mexico and Chile that are sought after by buyers are relatively conservative. Although values have risen considerably, perceptions of acceptable loan-to-value ratios are still hovering around the 70% mark, reaching up to a maximum of 80% in some instances. The combination of prime products and conservative financing make the banks feel more comfortable when the time comes to approve an acquisition. There is still another chapter to go in the story of institutionalisation in the region; the professionalisation of property services, i.e. us. CBRE is still the pioneer in the region, with an expansive network of offices and a regional unity capable of Trends 2007 61 JAVIER MARQUINA, Investments Director for Latin America and the Caribbean CB Richard Ellis Miami AND NOW WHAT? seeing the woods from the trees, and with aims to gain greater coverage, promote professionalism and offer a wider range of services to our clients. However, there is still a lot of work to be done, primarily in the after sales phase. Property management, administrative as well as technical, is without a doubt the service which today offers most security to our clients when the time comes to invest. Our acquisition advisory services have become the benchmark to reach by our competitors, whereas in property management the whole of the industry is still very underdeveloped, in this field it is developers such as HINES who are gaining market share at present. At CBRE we are very conscious of this and in fact our Chilean operation is one of the pioneers in the market and one of the most advanced in property management. Following the AS THE MARKET BECOMES MORE PROFESSIONAL, AS SERVICE PROVIDERS WE WILL LOOK IN THE COMING YEAR TO INCREASE THE RANGE OF SERVICES WE OFFER 62 INTERNATIONAL MARKET recent merger with Tramwell Crow, which has a business almost exclusively dedicated to property management in Chile, the new CBRE is the indisputable market leader. Now it is time to apply our know how to the rest of the region. We are convinced that 2008 will be the year in which it will happen. Below we analyse in detail some examples of the exceptional investment deals that have taken place in the region, before giving any kind of forecasts. MEXICO This year we were the leaders in an “experimental” operation led by the German fund Union Investment (previously DIFA). As one of the pioneers in the Mexican office market, Union Investment wanted to show that it could not only enter the market in Mexico, but also exit with relative ease. Therefore, Union Investment, which has a portfolio worth over $300 million, put a building up for sale that it had acquired just 12 months earlier. Situated in the Santa Fe area of Mexico City, the General Electric building has 22,456 square metres of office space let to multiple tenants including General Electric. Union Investment bought the building in the second quarter of 2006 as part of a package of four properties at a price reflecting an initial yield of 9.25%. Only 12 months later and through a marketing campaign led by CBRE the building was acquired at an 8.90% yield, resulting in a capital gain of approximately 20%. Significantly, the buyer was a Mexican investment fund created through the new Mexican law governing real estate investment funds, or “FIBRAS”. Another significant deal was made by DEKA, who having finally entered the Mexican market, they closed the year with two office buildings in its portfolio and a 30% share in one of the country’s most renowned industrial developers, VESTA. We would like to place particular emphasis on the latter operation, as it shows an alternative path to entering the Mexican industrial and logistics market, which is a highly competitive process. DEKA has made a corporate investment in VESTA, a company boasting a network of warehouses spread across the entire country, with over 570,000 square metres let and projects in the pipeline to develop a further 305,000 square metres. DEKA’s investment in the portfolio Should certain investors pull out, reflects an initial yield of 8.9%. 2008 will see a revision of the tax system in Mexico, which is expected to have a particularly strong impact on the property industry and could result in higher tax contributions to be endured by landlords when disposing of assets. The effects of these changes should be watched closely, as it could push investor interest away to other areas of the region. CHILE Union Investment made its second purchase of the year, acquiring the Xerox headquarters located in the Huechuraba business park close to Santiago Airport. The seller was Fondo Independencia. Xerox has a long lease contract for the whole building that Union bought for just over US$ 15 million. With this recent acquisition, the fund now has two properties in Santiago, both of them offices buildings. It is quite possible that Union’s entrance strategy in Santiago is a repeat of Mexico, and it will soon acquire a major portfolio of properties. Given the smaller size of the Santiago market, this would give Union a dominant position. GLL, a Germanic-British fund backed by the South African investment bank Investec, has also made a series of acquisitions in the same business park, but in this instance they were development projects. This level of activity is a sign of globalisation in real estate. Although all of the details have not been divulged, these operations reflect an estimated guaranteed return for the developer of between 9 and 10%. So much interest in a relatively small market has caused significant compression in yields, now ranging between 7 and 8% for institutional investors. This being said, Chile’s domestic finance market remains an exemplary model, offering interest rates between 5 and 6% for commercial mortgages, making it the only country in the region where it is possible to raise advantageous local finance. PUERTO RICO Puerto Rico, a hybrid market blending US stability and the spicy rhythm of Caribbean salsa, has played an important part in regional activity this year. As part of the sale and leaseback mandate for the Banco Santander portfolio, we won the mandate for the sale of two of the bank’s flagship buildings on the Isla del Encanto in the Caribbean. welcome opportunities could be created Closed in record time, the operation brought in a dozen offers from interested parties around the world and beat yield and capital value records in the Puerto Rican market. The purchase was finally agreed with a group of local investors at a yield below the 7.6% mark, a barrier that before the start of the marketing campaign was considered unbreakable. Paradoxically, the investment totalling just over US$62 million was financed by BBVA. We would highlight this transaction as an example of the added value we provide as agents in developing markets such as Latin America and the Caribbean, in which our professionalism and “added value” is often questioned. Our worldwide marketing campaign, carried out in 50 days, brought in huge interest, generating 12 qualified offers and exceeded all expectations of price and yield, in a transparent and competitive process. Trends 2007 63 OTHER FRONTIERS It has become more and more common for Spanish developers and investor’s to have foreign assets in their real estate portfolios, and this internationalisation has only just begun. MIKEL MARCO-GARDOQUI, National Cross Border Director CB Richard Ellis Spain 64 INTERNATIONAL MARKET Aside from financial turbulence and market cycles, internationalisation is the main new element that the first decade of the 21st century has contributed to real estate activities. Last year was the turning point. Between January and June 2007, 57% of the €119,000 million invested in European tertiary real estate involved cross-border investments, ten percentage points more than in the first six months of the previous year. It was the first six months that produced this kind of margin, but it won’t be the last. The weak dollar did not intimidate American investors, who invested €21,500 million in Europe between January and June 2007, 55% more than the €13,900 million invested during the same period of the previous year. British investors hold second ranking with €11,500 million, an increase of 77% from the €6,500 million invested during the first half of 2006. Most investment growth was concentrated in Romania and Most investment growth was concentrated MANY SPANISH PROPERTY DEVELOPERS HAVE OPTED FOR GEOGRAPHICAL DIVERSIFICATION AS A MEANS OF MINIMIZING RISK Bulgaria, due to its recent incorporation into the European Union (as happened in the Czech Republic and Poland in 2004). The Romanian and Bulgarian retail sectors are preferred by investors who have closed deals in other cities apart from Bucharest and Sofia. A QUALITATIVE SPANISH JUMP In the first half of 2007, Spanish investment in foreign tertiary real estate grew to €2,300 million, which is less than half of the €4,700 million invested in Spanish offices, retail centres, and industrial real estate during the same period. Many Spanish property developers have opted for geographical diversification as a means of minimizing risk in the face of a residential sector slowdown. Many have concentrated on residential transactions, while others have opted for diversification across different products. Destinations like Latin America and especially the United States have become more relevant for Spanish foreign investors, while Eastern European countries maintain their attractiveness, and by virtue of their proximity, Morocco and Portugal will become increasingly more interesting in the future. Moreover, investors will continue to occupy very select positions in consolidated markets like London and Paris, where the investment market could offer opportunities in Romania and Bulgaria through corporate transactions due to recent favourable fiscal legislation. The advantage of the increasingly strong Euro is significant to Europeans investing in Latin America and the United States, this triggers considerable returns (especially in Latin America) when operating in investment markets trading in dollars. This boom has been intensifying since the end of 2006, with a good deal of interest concentrated on office buildings in key Latin American cities. Traditionally, the Caribbean and Brazil have been important destinations for Spanish investors, and they have been the springboard to taking the leap in to more complex countries like Mexico, Chile, and Argentina. With proper guidance, all of these destinations hold good investment opportunities. Cancun (Mexico) and Brazil have joined the list of classic investment locations like the Dominican Republic, Panama, and Miami (which had been the Trends 2007 65 MIKEL MARCO-GARDOQUI, OTHER FRONTIERS National Cross Border Director CB Richard Ellis Spain DESTINATIONS LIKE LATIN AMERICA AND ESPECIALLY THE UNITED STATES HAVE BECOME MORE RELEVANT FOR SPANISH FOREIGN INVESTORS focus for years) among small, private European investors purchasing second homes. Recently, private Spanish investors interested in capitalising on investment yields provided by the strong Euro – whether in the residential or the tertiary sector – have begun to converge on various U.S. cities. However, it is essential to thoroughly research the affects of the mortgage crisis in this market before committing to any investment, regardless of its attractiveness. LOOKING EAST Typically, the first step in the internationalisation process for many Spanish property investors has been the Eastern European countries, and among them Poland has been the key market. Distinctly different from the Spanish market, it is comparatively young, with relatively good development in the retail and office sectors, and is already capable of attracting prominent international interest. The residential sector is undergoing heavy development, with considerable unsatisfied demand, promising medium-term forecasts, and the presence of important international operators. In the first nine months of 2007, the average price of a new flat in Warsaw increased by 12%, to about €2,329/m². Typically measuring 64.4 m², the total average price of a Warsaw flat equates to around €150,000, though location is a factor. For example, in the centrallylocated neighbourhood of Sroidmiescie, prices can reach €10,000/m². The number of residential properties in construction grew by 24% between July 2006 and June 2007, equating to around 38,500 new flats, or 5% of the city’s residential area. Despite significant demographic displacement toward periphery neighbourhoods (likely due to high prices in the urban centre), demand continues to exceed supply. NEW OPTIONS Recent alternatives for crossborder real estate investment (and those which demand more careful selection) include Russia and China. The Chinese Internationalisation of the main markets. Total percent of cross-border activity. 47 SPAIN UNITED KINGDOM 40 18 41 56 ITALY 44 35 SWEDEN 57 61 FRANCE GERMANY 2004 66 INTERNATIONAL MARKET 70 17 74 1ST S 2007 In the first nine months of 2007, the average investment market is a major international objective due to its vitality and capacity for economic growth. Nevertheless, there are significant obstacles to entry and certain difficulties for international investors in honing their analyses, making alliances with local partners and government support essential. However, there is already a prominent group of investment banks gradually gaining influence. In general, these new investors concentrate on key cities like Beijing, Shanghai, and Canton, and tend to favour the office market, as it is the most transparent. The Russian property market also presents great growth potential. The Moscow office park, for example, provides more than seven million m², and very strong demand has reduced vacancy rates to less than 3%. Furthermore, a conspicuous shortage of offices and prime assets has provoked price inflation. Something similar is happening in Moscow’s local retail market, which climbed 25% in the last 18 months, making it the second most expensive rental market worldwide at €8,000/ m² per year, just behind New York’s Fifth Avenue, which peaked at €11,400/m² per year. Based on accumulated experience in all these countries, at CB Richard Ellis we understand that the highest priority for Spanish investors in entering these markets is the assurance of precise, quality analysis of the investment opportunity in an environment that is not always transparent, as well as fast and firm decision-making skills. They are endeavors that require horizontal structures and ample doses of independence. Moreover, specialised legal, civic, and real estate counsel will be indispensable, and it is recommended to compliment any investment strategy with an adequate public relations and marketing policy. price of a new flat in Warsaw increased 12% Trends 2007 67 The market still offers interesting possibilities for investors. Recent events merely correspond to the natural evolution of the given markets, which are themselves cyclical. 68 5 NATIONAL MARKET Trends 2007 69 REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT IN SPAIN The real estate sector seems to have reached a high point in one of its cycles. Depending on demand, the next stage will be different for every sector, but overall investments will maintain their vitality. EDWARD FARRELLY, Research Director CB Richard Ellis Spain 70 NATIONAL MARKET Over the past few years, the real estate sector has grown accustomed to prosperity, in both the residential and the tertiary sector, in letting as well as in investments, which moreover, has provided high levels of growth to the economy on the whole and has largely been driven by internal demand. In the last few months, the situation seems to have changed. Since the end of summer 2007, there has been an outpouring of negative media coverage, as if the market had surpassed the zenith of its current cycle and ahead lay a period of inferior growth, which on the whole, we do not agree with. At CB Richard Ellis we want to welcome better media coverage of the real estate market. We believe that a more thorough and level-headed analysis of different trends will be beneficial to everyone. We maintain that (i) it is essential to differentiate between products The investment market for offices has been and sectors, and that (ii) changes have not come suddenly, in fact, we have been aware of the possible risks that may affect the market for some time. Hence, it is worth reiterating that, in our opinion, the market still offers interesting possibilities for investors, and that recent events merely correspond to the natural evolution of the given markets, which, are themselves cyclical. YIELDS AS AN EXAMPLE Yields provide a clear example of this argument. If we review the previous edition of Trends, we read on page 43 that, “it is difficult to see a significant downward trend in yields, but investors hope that future increases in rents will offset the situation, thanks to strong demand in the markets and the shortage of available prime locations.” . As a general rule, real estate yields are measured according to that which is devoid of risk or low-risk; i.e. treasury bonds. In other words, the investor must receive compensation for assuming the real estate risk. This figure may be around 3.5%, the sum-total of depreciation, liquidity and possible unpaid fees, therefore the minimum A MORE THOROUGH AND LEVELHEADED ANALYSIS OF THE DIFFERENT TRENDS WILL BE BENEFICIAL FOR EVERYONE yield sought by the investor will be that of bonds plus 3.5%. In December 2007, the yield on ten-year treasury bonds was around 4.3% after fluctuating between 4.1% and 4.6% in previous months. Therefore, the investors’ objective should be in the range of 7.8% At the same time however, prime office yields were at 4.5%. Reconciliation of the discrepancy between what the investor seeks and what the market supplies will only be achieved through (i) a hike in revenues, and/or (ii) a higher yield. For over a year, the reduction of this differential has been achieved with the favourable growth of revenues, which, in the case of offices in Madrid, reached an interannual high of 22% at the close of the third quarter of 2007. It is predicted that 2008 will be another positive year in terms of rental prices, though it is unlikely that figures will reach as high as the previous year. THE INVESTMENT PACE Forecasting the immediate future requires an analysis of 2007’s market trends. In the first nine months of 2007, the volume of real estate investments across office, retail, and industrial properties reached 6,000 million euros, which was even higher than the 7,000 million euros gained over stimulated significantly with the influx of assets from large corporations Trends 2007 71 REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT IN SPAIN EDWARD FARRELLY, Research Director CB Richard Ellis Spain the whole of 2006. It is worth noting that 2006 was a record year for real estate investment in Spain, with an increase of 50% compared to the previous year. At first glance, the figures indicate intense demand, though each sector runs at its own pace. For example, in the first nine months of 2007, investments in offices in Madrid exceeded the total investments closed in 2006, while shopping centres barely reached 50% of the investments compared to the previous year. It is important to note that, though less frequent, shopping centre transactions command a larger outlay than offices (thereby generating more volatility in the figures), and that office investments were boosted by corporate sales. The investment market for offices has been stimulated with the influx of assets from large corporations. In the last few months, certain financial entities and multinational businesses have put a significant number of YIELDS HAVE BEGUN TO RISE IN MOST COUNTRIES 72 NATIONAL MARKET properties on the market. This process is linked to a more comprehensive corporate strategy. The sale of real estate assets allows for (i) better positioning within the sector, and/or (ii) the relocation of various departments of the business to one location. At times, the company can opt to stay as the tenant for a predetermined period, under a sale and leaseback agreement, which usually affords several advantages: • Off balance-sheet financing • 100% deduction of lease contract costs. • Reduction of debt ratios, return on equity (ROE) and return on assets (ROA). • The release of capital from property assets for use in the core business, with greater returns. TURBULENCE AND ITS EFFECTS Apart from other considerations, there is no doubt that the deceleration the market has experienced since last summer is due primarily to so-called financial turbulence, and the coming months will confirm if indeed a structural change is taking place. Within the financial sector itself, financial entities fail to recognise their own exposure or that of their competitors. We are, in short, in a holding pattern. Uncertainty has caused financial entities to lose interest in assuming more risk, thereby toughening credit conditions. Banks dissect every transaction in order to summarily minimize risk, even requesting guarantees at corporate level. As a consequence, research requirements are broadened, resulting in delays of approval for some transactions. This new juncture increases the possibility of a slight recovery in yields. It is already evident in prime properties, and in the future will extend to secondary assets – those of inferior quality or poor location – since greater competition in pricing directly impacts on yields. It is certain that the foreseen moderation in price increases and the toughening of financial conditions have changed property investors’ perceptions throughout Europe. Yield recovery has already begun in most countries. In the third quarter of last year, industrial real estate investments in Europe maintained more than acceptable returns: 65,000 million euros, 24% greater than in the same period the year before and a new record for that quarter. Credit restrictions have increased the cost of debt, As in all moments of cyclical change, portfolio resulting in reduced investment opportunities for highlyleveraged investors. Equity investors, however, have benefited, and have an added advantage when it comes to negotiating. Furthermore, there are hopes for increased activity from German funds, which have generated very positive cash flows over the past year. Between October 2006 and September 2007, they recorded a net cash flow of nearly 8,500 million euros, while in the previous 12 months to that, their negative cash flow was almost 12,000 million euros. They will benefit further from the fact that German investors are withdrawing their money from bonds and capital markets. The German funds that recovered first were those who had foreign assets, though in the last few months the ones that have seen the most positive changes are the ones focused on the domestic market. TRANSNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE As in all moments of cyclical change, and as in every mature and complex market, portfolio diversification is a good policy in order to minimise risk. Many investors already practice it, as demonstrated by the peak in cross-border investments. If one takes on a broader perspective, investments in real estate assets are more likely to complement investments to stocks and bonds, a possibility not only restricted to large corporations. Undoubtedly, the range of opportunities for private investors will grow substantially the main alternative for private real estate investors. The need for European standardisation of Reits is particularly urgent in Spain, which finds itself marginalised to a certain extent. The current real estate investment funds (Fondos de Inversión Inmobiliaria, FII), which attract most private real estate investment, have had their profitability questioned, and a suitable solution remains to be found that will open them up to non-residential property investments. In the European field, limiting the possibilities of an individual Spanish investor to the current FII formula would prematurely hinder his profitability in comparison to more competitive products. in the future. Throughout Europe, indirect channels of investment will become a mainstay. This boom could intensify still more if international regulations are standardised, which is not currently happening with Real Estate Investment Trusts, (Reits), diversification is a good policy in order to minimise risk Trends 2007 73 INVESTMENTS AFTER THE STORM We find ourselves in the midst of a changing market that at present is difficult to predict. 2007 began with an abundance of activity and confidence, where market fundamentals generated some of the lowest yields in history. JAVIER KINDELAN, National Institutional Investments Director CB Richard Ellis Spain 74 NATIONAL MARKET The prolonged scarcity of quality products and the high levels of liquidity amongst investors predicted a rally of transactions throughout 2007. The summer arrived, and with it a turn-around. Since then, we have observed the scope and the globalization of the economy in general and the real estate market in particular. Initially, it spread through America with subprime mortgage rates, and simultaneous misgivings in the financial sector. The knock on effects were quickly passed on to Europe, and it did not take long to induce a slowdown in real estate investments in Spain. This domino effect was accompanied by very low residential sales rates and the subsequent slowdown of the construction sector, resulting in numerous international investors curbing their opinion that the national market and its sustainability warrant the spotlight, as they wait to see The different variables continue to confirm the upward where the market goes. At this juncture, any prediction of where the market is headed over the next few months is extremely uncertain. Hence, the only sensible solution is to carry out a thorough analysis of the current situation. Macroeconomic data indicates that Spain is maintaining higher Gross Domestic Product growth than the European average. There are signs of a slowdown in comparison to twelve months ago, however figures will continue to be positive. If we apply the analysis to growth, or company transactions, or domestic consumption, the different variables indicate that the sustainability of the tertiary real estate market is based on solid fundamentals. If this data is broken down by sectors, it shows the continued reduction in the proportion of available office space in key cities, as well as a healthy take up rate in all of them. Rents have experienced increases of up to 25% in prime areas, and given future supply, we do not foresee any sudden fluctuations in supply and demand that could affect rental prices. Spanish real estate firms and investors dominate the office investment market because their confidence in the sector and their general principle of preserving private equity has enabled them to consider acquisitions more aggressively than their international counterparts. NO BIG CHANGES Naturally, one would think that logistics and distribution areas in the industrial sector, as well as commercial real estate, would be particularly affected by a hypothetical economic slow-down or a possible reduction in the country’s domestic consumption. However, none of these sectors seem to be suffering major changes, and within the next few months, we will be able to interpret the results of 2007 more accurately. Be that as it may, these sectors are experiencing strong growth. In logistics, the continual shortage of urban land, the lack of available finished product, and the growth of merchandise transportation enables this constantly maturing sector to offer interesting opportunities, mainly in areas with significant rental increases and the most consolidated growth. The Spanish logistics sector, which functions primarily in the Iberian market, offers institutional and THERE ARE SIGNS OF A SLOWDOWN IN COMPARISON TO TWELVE MONTHS AGO, HOWEVER FIGURES WILL CONTINUE TO BE POSITIVE trend that the retail sector has seen over the last few years Trends 2007 75 INVESTMENTS AFTER THE STORM JAVIER KINDELAN, National Institutional Investments Director CB Richard Ellis Spain GIVEN FUTURE OFFICE SUPPLY, WE DO NOT FORESEE ANY SUDDEN FLUCTUATIONS IN SUPPLY AND DEMAND IN THE NEAR FUTURE private investors (primarily international), the opportunity to invest in good quality products, with medium or longterm rental contracts and higher yields than other sectors. For its part, the commercial sector of small, medium, and large areas has not stopped growing and continues to offer solid opportunities to a growing number of investors who are convinced that the sector has good potential. Retail parks maintain their value even when faced with changes in consumer habits. The same is true for large shopping centres that combine leisure, restaurant, and retail spaces, or other uses as anchors. The different variables continue to confirm the upward trends that the retail sector has seen in the last few years. The key players (or investors) continue to be international, though since mid-2007 they appear to be less interested in projects 76 NATIONAL MARKET under construction or those presenting higher risks, and have focused their attention on more consolidated products. YIELD RECOVERY Yields and their evolution were arguably the main concern for investors at the close of 2007 and they continue to be the only measure for the majority of investors when buying and selling. It appears that last year was the end of a series of record lows and yet yields maintained their level despite the increase in interest rates, this consequently reduced investors’ margins. Everything indicates that yields are readjusting in the majority of European markets, mainly due to the uncertainty of the financial sector, which logically affects the real estate sector. If the levels of financing have reduced sharply since the summer, it is reasonable to think that certain banks will toughen their financing conditions, that the amount leveraged per transaction will decrease, and that the Spread as a finance cost in the majority of cases will increase for riskier projects, thus leading to an upturn in yields. In the end, recoveries will vary depending on the sector and the implicit risk of each investment opportunity, which will mean a minor readjustment in some betterlocated opportunities, i.e. those that are in more consolidated areas and those whose rents are anti-cyclical and a greater variation can be expected for those projects where there may be considerable supply in the area or less rental security. It is possible that in the near future, if indexed interest rates fall and thereby increase investors’ margins, that the growing pressure on a readjustment of yields may fall away. However, if they continue to rise, it is possible they will experience greater readjustments. Without wanting to sound too optimistic, it is important to remember that yields may rise owing principally to the high price and availability of financing, rather than substantial changes in market fundamentals. Retail parks maintain Though few deals have been closed since the summer (further complicating a market diagnosis), they have been significant and lucrative, such as the Santander Group’s (Grupo Santander) asset sale, which attests to the liquidity of investors. In fact, private investors are more and more in the forefront. They now show greater capacity to compete with institutional investors, especially for products where there is not so much need for financing. They therefore have the potential to attain considerable prominence in this sector. The current market certainly contains a large number of investment opportunities. This could be interpreted as an attempt on the part of investors who have realised that the market has peaked, to make the most of the added value in their assets, or as a strategy by listed real estate companies to boost results when facing a slow-down in residential sales, or it may be that alternative investments are beginning to attract a specific investor who is concerned with having an overexposed property portfolio. Whatever happens, if the start of 2008 brings better financial prospects, and if market fundamentals adjust based on the aforementioned principles, liquidity in the market will tend to concentrate on quality products and yields will increase for riskier products. their value Trends 2007 77 OFFICES CONTINUE TO BE IN FASHION Offices reached a good cruising speed in 2007 and everything indicates that this pace will be maintained in to 2008. ÍÑIGO ENRICH, National Office Agency Director CB Richard Ellis Spain 78 NATIONAL MARKET A lot has been said about the strength of the office market in 2007. Prices and take-up rates have hit record highs, vacancy rates in the main business areas have dropped significantly, and most importantly, positive net take-up seems to have settled at a healthy level for this market. The office market is, without a doubt, in fashion. Consolidation of space, efficiency, sustainability and originality are all becoming more important, and the majority of businesses want to get onboard in order to save on operating costs and bolster their image. In view of this trend, many new office projects have entered and will continue to enter the market. One of the key features of this new office space, and one that will continue to be of more and more importance, is sustainability, which is vital for those companies that want to improve efficiency, and protect the environment. Quality is another essential characteristic. Developers and investors whose tertiary portfolios include some of the most emblematic projects on the international scene deserve special mention. For example Over the next few years, CONSOLIDATION OF SPACE, EFFICIENCY, SUSTAINABILITY AND ORIGINALITY ARE ALL BECOMING MORE IMPORTANT Rise in office construction rate over the past 24-30 months in Europe 0 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% MOSCOW BUDAPEST Madrid’s Portico building, developed by Hines and Monthisa, has been awarded 2007’s Mipim Prize for best business centre. Designed by the architectural firm ‘Skidmore, Owings & Merrill’ (SOM) and Rafael de La-Hoz Castanys, it is currently Grupo Marsans headquarters. Though currently without accolades, landmark buildings will establish a clear before and after line in office construction in Spain. New office projects are being constructed in Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, Malaga and Zaragoza, as well as in Bilbao, Palma (Mallorca), Alicante, Murcia, and many other cities that are pushing to modernise their business parks. Architects of many nationalities, as well as foreign and national developers and investors are all contributing to Spain’s metamorphosis. The skylines of Madrid, Barcelona, and Valencia are all modernising thanks to projects like the Four Four Tower Business Area, Fira Tower, Aqua, amongst others. These architectural masterpieces will accommodate important national and international headquarters as well as public organisations, and will be selected on the basis of their uniqueness, their efficiency, and their technological innovations. Everything indicates that over the next few years the evolution in the innovation of building construction will continue. Also, we will see many companies change their criteria when selecting an office. Environmentallyfriendly projects will be prioritised, as well as those that provide operating cost savings, whether due to effective use of space or low levels of energy consumption. innovation will continue to improve PRAGUE AMSTERDAM MADRID WARSAW FRANKFURT LISBON BRUSSELS BARCELONA MUNICH VIENNA HAMBURG BERLIN LONDON CITY MILAN COPENHAGEN ILE DE FRANCE CENTRAL LONDON LONDON WEST END PARIS CBD VACANCY RATE 3RD QUARTER. 2007 NEW SUPPLY IN 2 YEARS (% PARK) Trends 2007 79 NEW STRATEGIES OF THE SPANISH CHAINS LUIS ARSUAGA, Hotel Investments Director CB Richard Ellis Spain 80 NATIONAL MARKET The hotel chains seem to have decided to expand and focus on management contracts rather than acquiring new properties, two changes which could significantly transform the sector. CURRENT OUTLOOK For many years Spain has been a world leader in tourism. As a country rich in culture, and more importantly, with a favourable climate and many kilometres of coastline and beaches, for years Spain has attracted tourists from every corner of the world. It is in part for this reason we have a very professional national hotel sector and some of the world’s most important hotel chains. One of the most relevant characteristics of the Spanish hotel market is the low level of market share concentration amongst the largest chains. It is a market with numerous players, where the largest market share Hotel chains market share - Spain (that of Sol Meliá), is 4.83%. 41% of Spain’s hotel rooms are managed by independent groups and 42% by small chains. In second place to Sol Meliá in terms of market share is Riu (1.84%), followed by NH Hotels (1.78%), Barceló (1.54%) and Iberostar (1.46%). MUCH MORE CHANGE TO COME In such a segmented market, logic would suggest that significant changes in the coming years are a distinct possibility. The success of the chains comes down in part to the conquest of new markets by expanding both nationally and internationally. It is important for a client loyal to his brand of hotel to be able to find it wherever he goes in the world; this is a consequence of market globalisation. The international chains SOL MELIÁ 4,83 % RIU 1,84 % NH 1,78 % BARCELÓ 1,54 % IBEROSTAR 1,46 % GROUP H10 1,23 % FIESTA 1,06 % HUSA 1,04 % PRINCESS 0,99 % AC 0,92 % OTHER CHAINS 42,29 % INDEPENDENTS 41,02 % – Intercontinental, Marriot, Hilton and Starwood, amongst others, were the first to embark on an aggressive international expansion strategy, mainly by signing management contracts in order to get brand exposure. Nowadays the chains no longer want to own their own buildings, they want to stick to what they really do best, managing hotels. Hotel supply has increased considerably in Spain in recent years, and the competition keeps on getting stronger. For this reason, many hotels that worked well before the year 2000 and made bumper profits are beginning to suffer, and it is expected that they will have to opt to sell out or become managed by larger hotel chains with stronger sales. There will be a lot of changes in the 83% market share currently occupied by independent groups and small chains, until a more logical and less segmented distribution of market share is reached. Another of the more significant consequences of the fierce competition in the Spanish market (not only due to the number of hotels, but also for having to compete with the residential market, capable of paying higher prices for buildings in the best positions) is the search for more profitable locations by Spanish chains. NEW MARKETS This tendency is not new; for years the Spanish hotel chains have been setting up in new markets. First it was the Caribbean, where a large number of Spanish chains, in particular the Majorcan ones, saw a business opportunity. Barceló, Iberostar, Riu, Sol Meliá and others, set out to conquer Trends 2007 81 NEW STRATEGIES OF THE SPANISH CHAINS LUIS ARSUAGA, Hotel Investments Director CB Richard Ellis Spain CUBA SOL MELIA TOTAL NUMBER OF BEDS IN THE AREA 60,000 24 BARCELÓ HOTELS 3 IBEROSTAR HOTELS 2 RIU HOTELS 2 GRUPO GLOBALIA 4 BAHAMAS (U.S) RIU HOTELS DOMINICAN REPUBLIC 1 SOL MELIA 4 GRUPO PIÑERO 8 BARCELÓ HOTELS 10 IBEROSTAR HOTELS 5 GRUPO GLOBALIA 5 PUERTO RICO SOL MELIA SOL MELIA 5 GRUPO PIÑERO 3 BARCELÓ HOTELS GRUPO GLOBALIA GRUPO PIÑERO 1 RIU HOTELS 3 ARUBA (HOLLAND) RIU HOTELS 1 12 IBEROSTAR HOTELS RIU HOTELS 1 JAMAICA MEXICAN CARIBBEAN 8 13 10 COSTA RICA SOL MELIA 3 BARCELÓ HOTELS 4 45% OF THE TOURISTIC MARKET SHARE IN THE AREA IS IN THE HANDS OF BALEARIC HOTEL CHAINS. THE REST BELONGS TO UNITED STATES, CANADA AND EUROPE. this market where land prices, construction costs and operating costs (of personnel, etc.) were considerably lower. Mexico, the Dominican Republic and Cuba were countries with associated risk and judicial insecurity, but the bet paid off for the Spanish chains and straight away they noticed that the timeframe to recover their initial investment was reduced to three to four years whereas this could take 18-20 years for projects undertaken in Spain. At present it is the Spanish chains that dominate this market; they manage 45% of tourism in the Caribbean area (60,000 rooms). To begin with, they concentrated on the Spanish speaking islands (Cuba, the Dominican 82 NATIONAL MARKET Republic, Mexico), but now they are also focusing on other English speaking islands, such as Jamaica, Aruba and the Bahamas), where Spanish chains now have a real presence. Since the psychological barrier of opening and operating in foreign countries was overcome, the Spanish hotel groups have continued to diversify and search for less developed markets within the tourism industry. COMPETING DESTINATIONS At the same time as the national market was suffering from an over-supply of hotels, some of which were falling into obsolescence, new competing destinations began attracting the tourism markets that were traditionally the most profitable for Spain; the European market and in particular the German and English markets. Croatia, Tunisia, Turkey, Morocco, Greece and Egypt began developing their tourism sectors and building luxury hotels. At the same time new airline routes to these destinations were opened, allowing the holidaymakers who would previously have been guaranteed to flock to the Canaries or Majorca to choose between different destinations, some of which were cheaper and with a much newer hotel supply than Spain had to offer. The national chains that detected the Spanish market was beginning to show signs of saturation decided to set up and open hotels in these new destinations. This tendency to enter foreign markets has not been confined to seasonal hotels. The urban market, which is generally more profitable than the tourism market (as business clientele are a constant source of income for hotels), has been a market in which the Spanish chains have been positioning themselves in recent months. This has been particularly visible in the European urban market (not omitting cities such as New York), often through hotels built by Spanish developers undertaking projects and building hotels in the larger cities of countries such as the For years the Spanish hotel chains Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Bulgaria and even Italy, Portugal and the United Kingdom. One of the most significant deals to have taken place in recent months was one involving Barceló, who leased 20 hotels (2,872 rooms) in historic buildings in the United Kingdom’s main cities. Other Spanish groups with active international expansion strategies are: HOTEL CHAINS Sol Meliá: this chain has for some time now had a relatively aggressive international expansion policy. The company wants to grow in Spain, but only through management contracts (it has created an asset management department that has an annual divestment objective – preferably for assets in Spain – of approximately 100 million euros), and is concentrating most of its efforts outside of Spanish borders: in particular Latin America and Europe but also in Africa (Egypt and Tunisia) and Asia (Indonesia, Malaysia and Vietnam). At the end of 2007 Sol Meliá acquired the German chain Innside, which had a total of 8 hotels that were already operating and another 4 in the project phase (all of which are located in Germany, except one of the projects which is in Vienna). Via this deal Sol Meliá now has 27 hotels in Germany. Iberostar: is another of the bolder and more dynamic chains that concentrates its international efforts in the Americas, Europe and Africa. In the Americas it has just announced it will carry out three new projects in the Mexican state of Nayarit, consolidating the Majorcan chain’s supply in Mexico, where it currently has eight complexes with a total of 3,008 rooms. In July it also opened the Iberostar Rose Hall Beach”, its first hotel in Jamaica. The group also has five hotels in the Dominican Republic, five in Cuba and three in Brazil. In Europe and Africa it has thirteen hotels in the Greek islands, six in Bulgaria, eleven in Tunisia, one in Morocco, two in Croatia, one in Turkey and one in Montenegro. have been setting up in new markets Developer and investor groups Fadesa-Martinsa: Fadesa is one of the developers that has strengthened its international expansion the most. It has just announced that it will undertake a macro project in the Mexican state of Baja California called “Loreto Paraíso”. Along with a residential development and four golf courses, it will build over 7,000 rooms in luxury, boutique, and five star hotels as well as in time-shares and condo-hotels. IN SUCH A SEGMENTED MARKET, LOGIC WOULD SUGGEST THAT SIGNIFICANT CHANGES IN THE COMING YEARS ARE A DISTINCT POSSIBILITY Trends 2007 83 NEW STRATEGIES OF THE SPANISH CHAINS LUIS ARSUAGA, Hotel Investments Director CB Richard Ellis Spain This will be the developer’s fourth project in Mexico, the previous three were in Guadalajara, the state of Nayarit and in San Miguel de Allende. Morocco is another of Fadesa’s target countries, where it has been operative since 2000. Some of its most significant developments are Saïdia (16,000 hotel beds), Smara (eight hotels of four and five stars), Tangier, Marrakech, Rabat and Casablanca. Hansa Urbana: has just acquired 35.5 million square metres of land with seven kilometres of beach front in Los Cabos (south Baja California, on the pacific coast of Mexico) where it plans to build the “Cabo de Cortés” complex, with 3,000 hotel and residential units in the first phase. The scheme will also include four golf courses, a marina with 400 moorings, an airport, as well INTERNATIONAL CHAINS HAVE SHOWN SPAIN TO BE AN ESSENTIAL MARKET WITHIN THEIR EXPANSION STRATEGIES as retail, sport, and leisure elements. In addition to this project, Hansa also developed “Novo Cancún” on the Caribbean coast of Mexico. Meridia Capital: is a fund based in Barcelona which is made up of 70% Spanish capital and is focused on investing in high-end hotels. The first two establishments it acquired are located in Santiago de Chile; the Ritz-Carlton Santiago (five stars, 205 rooms) and the Crowne Plaza Santiago (five stars, 293 rooms). These are a few examples of Spanish hotel chains and investor-developer groups that have decided to diversify and try their luck in other markets. However, there are many other groups following the same path; NH Hotels, Riu Hotels & Resorts, Globalia Hoteles, Hotetur, Hotusa, Vincci Hoteles, Vime Hoteles, Hines, Metainversión, Iberdrola Inmobiliaria, Grupo Dico, Inmobiliaria Chamartín, Nyesa-Accerto, Wilcox, Anida, Valdepromo, Grupo LAR, Diursa, etc. INTERNATIONAL CHAINS IN SPAIN Whilst the Spanish chains have been exploring foreign markets as part of their strategy to have a presence in all world markets, the international chains could not be absent in a country with as much tourism potential as ours. The Spanish market has never been an easy one to enter, as the competition between the national hotel groups is 84 NATIONAL MARKET Barceló has leased 20 hotels (2.872 rooms) in fierce. Nonetheless, in recent years the international chains have pushed hard to establish themselves and, thanks to their brands and strong sales, have managed to open hotels, primarily through management contracts. Until not long ago, it was only Accor (particularly through its Ibis brand) and Intercontinental (Holiday Inn, Holiday Inn Express, Intercontinental) that had any presence worth mentioning in the Spanish market. Now however, other global chains, such as Starwood, Hilton, Travelodge, Marriott and Rezidor Group have shown that Spain is an essential market within their expansion strategies and have started to open hotels in cities as well as holiday destinations. All of these chains wish to grow in the Spanish market either through management contracts or franchising. This aspiration happens to coincide with the mentality of Spanish developers and investors, averse to taking on the risk of a business in which they are not experts, such as running hotels. As property owners become more accustomed to the business, the more open they become to the hotel sector and more willing to enter the market, signing management contracts with hotel groups and taking on risk in exchange for a greater return than that available in other property sectors. It is expected that in the next few years there will be a stronger presence of international brands in the Spanish hotel industry under these sets of circumstances. A NEW SCENARIO By way of conclusion, it should be noted that the hotel market is becoming more and more globalised; all chains are trying to have a presence in as many destinations as possible. From now on, all Spanish chains will continue to strive for strong international expansion, whilst the international chains will forcefully continue to break into the domestic market. The Spanish hotel market will experience consolidation, in which the more powerful chains will gain market share. Many independent hoteliers will opt to sell or allow their assets to be franchised or managed by big brands. historic buildings in main cities in the United Kingdom’s Trends 2007 85 INDUSTRIAL FRAMEWORK AND MODERNIZATION CARLOS MAURITS KÜPPERS, Industrial Department Director CB Richard Ellis Barcelona Over the last ten years it has almost gone unnoticed that Barcelona’s industrial sector has been quietly modernising itself. The changes that have happened over the last decade have been dizzying and exciting. Perhaps, it has gone unnoticed because traditionally, the key players of the real estate market have been paying attention to other sectors, mainly office and residential. Although in the background, industrial real estate has not stopped evolving, due to several factors that warrant review, of which I will address issues of geographical restrictions, the shortage of urban land, the advantages and disadvantages of buying versus leasing, the arrival of new agents in the market, the development of roadway infrastructures and public transportation, the growth of cities and the rise of emerging markets, or the relocation of businesses. Geography is the most important determining factor in the industrial real estate THOUGH GEOGRAPHICALLY PRIVILEGED, EXPANSION WITHIN BARCELONA IS CONSTRAINED 86 NATIONAL MARKET Geographical mobility has become an market. From a national perspective, there are cities with an immense capacity for horizontal expansion, like Madrid, and there are others that exist in mature markets, but whose capacity for expansion is geographically restricted, as is the case, most notably, in Barcelona and Valencia. Though geographically privileged, expansion within Barcelona is constrained. Both the sea and the mountains prevent the natural growth of the city to the east and west. Such intense lateral pressure has resulted in the growth of the city to the north and south, stretching its perimeters beyond the conventional. MOVING FURTHER Previously, in the last eight to ten years, most businesses preferred to situate themselves in the vicinity of Barcelona, while expansions and relocations did not typically exceed a 35 km radius, 45 at the most. Few businesses considered the possibility of moving further, or integrating into nearby provinces. Since then, the situation has changed considerably. Geographical mobility has become an accepted mainstay in business strategy. It is now considered part of the natural evolution, and the main solution to the lack of available urban land. Acceptance of these geographical changes has encouraged the development of new industrial zones. In Barcelona, the province of Tarragona has been the main beneficiary of this expansion. The road networks, the extension of the port, and the price of land have been key factors in its accelerated development. accepted mainstay in business strategy However, precise analysis is essential because although the relocation of industrial areas away from metropolitan Barcelona is primarily triggered by the city’s geographical character and the new business mentality, it is also significantly influenced by other factors, among them, price, which is crucial. It is vital to remember this factor when examining the reasons for business decisions. It isn’t the only motive, but it is one of the most important. HIGH PRICES One need only review the recent history of Barcelona’s industrial real estate market, and the upward spiral of its prices, to see that cost is a factor of maximum importance. In only the last five years, industrial real estate assets have experienced an adjusted average increase in value of around 35 percent. There are not too many sectors with such dramatic increases in such a short period of time. The affect is palpable: urban land in the city has become one of the most expensive in Europe. As a result of the high costs, many companies have encountered serious difficulties initiating, expanding, or relocating their operations in the metropolitan Barcelona area. Under such conditions, speculation has become a serious problem, one without a simple solution. We must consider the big picture. Does it make sense for industrial real estate in Barcelona to be more expensive than that of other European cities like Paris, Madrid, or Berlin? The governing authorities hold the key to alleviating the situation. A rational solution is needed, a coherent urban plan, sensitive to social needs, that impedes any speculative interest from the start. Trends 2007 87 CARLOS MAURITS KÜPPERS, INDUSTRIAL FRAMEWORK AND MODERNIZATION It is essential that the public administration recognises the delicacy of the situation and devises suitable alternatives. Responsible urban planning that prioritises general interest is needed. Too often, the standard urban model is overly fragmented, partial, and capricious. Given the elevated costs, it doesn’t seem logical, for example, to penalise plots with a maximum occupancy of less than 60 percent, nor that practically none of the plans promote flexibility. The town-planning parameters are not in accordance with the actual needs of the market, quite the contrary, in many cases. There is no possible doubt that land shortage is a chronic malady in our profession. As long as there remains a scarcity of available land, it will be difficult to control the rise in prices, and – as a result – speculation, which will inexorably lead to an unsatisfied demand and, in the long run, displaced businesses. If the sector is to flourish and rid itself of the speculative phenomenon, the raw material is vital. INFRASTRUCTURES AND THE FUTURE Other key factors in the evolution of the sector include roadway infrastructures. Here, we face a matter of dire Industrial Department Director CB Richard Ellis Barcelona importance. There have been significant improvements in the past few years that have undoubtedly favoured the geographic expansion of industrial estates, although the global level of infrastructure development continues to be insufficient to absorb real needs. There is a disproportionate relationship between roadway infrastructures, prestige, and the industrial consolidation of Barcelona. There are obvious deficiencies, and the investments made in the last few years have been insufficient. Other Spanish cities have managed more effectively to capitalise on their resources, and have given top priority to the improvement of their roadway infrastructures. Madrid is a clear example of a city that has grown exceptionally in this regard. It is important to stress that the infrastructure problem is intricately linked to the shortage of public transportation. It is inconceivable to verify what portion of industrial estates lack public transportation, especially when taking into account their critical mass. This impediment compounds the aforementioned shortage of roadway infrastructures. It would be advisable for the government to bear this in mind if we are to minimise the collateral effects of the predicament. TO BUY OR LEASE The decision to buy or lease is another relevant aspect in the 88 NATIONAL MARKET current state of affairs. We must bear in mind that leasing with an option to buy is offered only very rarely in the industrial real estate market; accounting for barely one percent of total property transactions. Additionally, the choice to buy rather than lease has remained dominant in the last few years. Firstly, the procurement of property seems to be an intrinsic element of the Latin character. The consensus believes that buying is better than renting, perhaps because, psychologically, we have been taught that the acquisition of property augments security, the possibility of capital gains, and prestige, while renting denotes a deficient degree of social acceptance, a supposition that does not extend to other cultures. That general trend shows some variations when applied to the industrial real estate market. Conventions persist, but in business decisions, other parameters intervene. The decision to buy continues to be the preferred choice among small- to medium-sized companies, especially those family-owned businesses that regard real estate as an economic guarantee for the future and an increasingly profitable investment in the medium/long term. In this segment of the business population, professional and personal motives play equal parts in the decision to buy and sell, though in actual fact, the It is important to stress that the infrastructure problem IN ONLY THE LAST FIVE YEARS, INDUSTRIAL REAL ESTATE ASSETS HAVE EXPERIENCED AN ADJUSTED AVERAGE INCREASE IN VALUE OF AROUND 35 PERCENT esteem of private ownership is usually a deciding factor when choosing to buy rather than rent. Inversely, businesses that elect to lease prefer to focus on the core business and flexibility rather than on personal wealth. Often, they are businesses that choose to prioritise investment in their own activities (be it machinery, research and development, or staff training) in order to maximize returns. One of the competitive advantages of leasing is flexibility. Multinational corporations and logistics companies constitute a large part of the renting segment. Another significant reason sales are preferable to rentals has been the extraordinarily robust economy of the past few years. Low interest rates have had a kindling affect on purchases. Bank financing has been extremely flexible and very receptive in facilitating these transactions. Fiduciary differences between owning and leasing had been minimal until just a few months ago. For this reason, companies with a choice of owning or leasing have opted increasingly for ownership. Nevertheless, the economic boom has ended, due to the credit crisis in the United States and its subsequent effects on Europe. Accordingly, the actual financial conditions and the receptiveness of banks are presently diametrically opposed to the circumstances of the last few months. The situation has had an immediate effect on our profession with an alarming slow-down in real estate activity. The residential sector has suffered the most with an abrupt halt in sales rates. In the industrial sector, the consequences to date have been less serious. In fact, companies with financial muscle are the ones that are most involved in buying and selling transactions. It is evident that deciding factors differ notably from five or six years ago. Previously, the general market trend favoured rapid response, as seen by the speed in which transactions were completed and the common belief that any delay in decision-making risked the loss of preferred properties. We have witnessed a certain degree of collective frenzy centred on buying and selling, as seen by the high percentage of sales finalised before the start of construction. The current situation is diametrically dissimilar. Attempting to bypass any unnecessary risk, decisions tend to be prolonged, while all the variables are conscientiously is intrinsically linked to the shortage of public transportation analysed. The main consequence of these delays has been the role reversal of buyer and seller, that is to say, the buyer or lessee now maintains a position of advantage over the developer or owner, resulting in greater equilibrium in sales and leases. The short-term forecast predicts that leasing will become the dominant tendency. TYPES OF CONSTRUCTION Another interesting aspect of the industrial real estate sector is the recent evolution in building characteristics. Not too long ago, the standard construction model was limited to a warehouse including a ground floor with a mezzanine level, which was typically 15 to 20 percent of the lower level surface area. From this concept, the market has evolved towards much more Trends 2007 89 CARLOS MAURITS KÜPPERS, INDUSTRIAL FRAMEWORK AND MODERNIZATION aggressive construction models that, in some cases, seem to defy industrial logic. Most new constructions include a ground floor, a first floor identical in surface area to the ground floor, a second floor, and basement or semi-basement. This evolution in construction is attributed to the price increase of urban land, again, the raw material. This fact encourages developers purchasing these properties to consider themselves obligated, in the best of cases, to take full advantage of urban-planning allowances, and in the worst of cases, impelled to stretch said allowances in order to obtain favourable profit margins. The main consequence of this absurdity is the change from a situation where developers build above and beyond actual needs, to a situation where clients, being buyers or lessors, must adapt to supply, although these properties are far from optimal or operative. Another interesting factor is the change in function of the conventional industrial building. Originally, strictly speaking, warehouses were industrial properties. That is to say, they were used to house production facilities, or accommodate various elements in the chain of production. Recently, these properties have become, to a large extent, corporate headquarters, where businesses have integrated storage warehouses and offices (traditionally located in urban 90 NATIONAL MARKET Industrial Department Director CB Richard Ellis Barcelona centres). This situation has precipitated a rise in aesthetic awareness, whereby more and more, warehouses are fitted to accommodate corporate headquarters, and designed accordingly, both internally and externally. Industrial parks on the whole are undergoing this same evolution. In the past, industrial areas were an integral part of any metropolis, at times even located beside residential areas. Demographic growth in key cities has engulfed these industrial areas into coexistence. The situation has increased ostensibly, causing those industrial areas located within city limits to re-zone and migrate to the new, modernised industrial estates. The industrial estates developed in the 1960s and 1970s clearly demonstrate the evolution of our sector. Some good examples of this include improvements in the width of the roads, parking facilities, interior height, the availability of ancillary services, and innovations in construction materials. INTERNATIONALISATION AND RELOCATION Perhaps the most noticeable phenomenon in the industrial sector over the last few years has been the introduction of multinational corporations and the inverse, their relocation. Many foreign multinationals started to operate in Spain at the start of the economic boom. This trend generated a high number of jobs, economic prosperity, and a state of general well-being. Nevertheless, the situation has varied gradually over the last few years. The rise of emerging markets has forced the Spanish industrial sector to evolve from primarily manufacturing companies to those undertaking a negligible degree of manufacturing. Accordingly, multinational manufacturers that demand a large labour force have precipitated what’s been designated ‘industrial relocation,’ with all the collateral affects the name implies. This phenomenon exists, it is part of a natural evolution, and is more prevalent every day, despite some sectors’ persistence in dismissing the evidence. It is essential to study and analyse the causes and consequences of this phenomenon. Undoubtedly, it is the biggest problem the Spanish industrial real estate market has faced. It is worth bearing in mind that many of these foreign companies The industrial market has enjoyed a great deal of success and established themselves successfully thanks to favourable treatment from the government, which received in exchange, a list of commitments that were never fulfilled. Our market has ceased to be competitive with those of other countries, although it remains strategically positioned for some businesses and sectors. The situation has forced Spanish development companies to explore foreign markets, mainly those countries recently incorporated into the European Union, predominantly in Eastern Europe. After an initial reluctance to go abroad, fundamentally due to a fear of the unknown and the apparent uncertainty of the markets, the risk has paid off substantially for those companies who decided to undertake the challenge of foreign investment. The profit margins have been exceptional, and the land acquisition price has been a major factor. The Spanish market cannot compete on equal footing with these emerging markets in so far as the availability of land and the pricing conditions are notably inferior. With regards to the experts in the field, it is interesting to compare the profile of the developer who has historically been immersed in the sector and the developer who has recently entered the sector. The occupational concentration of the former is decidedly centred on the industrial sector. We can emphasise the impact of both locally and nationally focused developers. The expertise they have contributed to the market, as well as to new specialists in the field, is of incalculable value. Thanks to their efforts, their faith in the profession, and their perseverance, they are highly revered in our market. Among them are developers who have entered the sector attracted by the remarkable profit margins. Many, having decided to diversify their activities, bring with them a wealth of knowledge in the residential sector. OTHER MARKETS Finally, one needs to review the main nationally important industrial markets. Worthy of mention are Madrid and Barcelona, which are the two dominant industrial Spanish markets; primarily Barcelona, whose metropolitan area includes more than 235 industrial estates, making its industrial framework one of the most extensive in Europe. Together with Madrid, they represent two extremely mature markets, as is reflected in the proportion of availability, the market prices, and the demand. Consequently, several cities have delegated themselves viable alternative markets, Valencia and Zaragoza for example. exponential growth over the last few years In short, the industrial market has enjoyed much success and exponential growth over the last few years. Real estate is a cyclical sector, currently facing a pivotal change from the last few years. In the short term, it is predicted that the instability created by the credit crisis and sub prime lending rates will continue to affect the industrial sector, though to a lesser degree than the residential sector. The predictions of the International Monetary Fund are not overly optimistic for the Spanish economy in the short/medium term. The indicators seem to pinpoint a definite economic slowdown, replete with challenges and uncertainties that must be addressed with the utmost composure and optimism, two characteristics which are highly important in the real estate market in general, and even more so in the industrial sector. THE DECISION TO BUY CONTINUES TO BE THE PREFERRED CHOICE AMONG SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZED COMPANIES Trends 2007 91 THE GOLDEN RULES OF SELLING HOMES The new residential phase that has just begun will bring many changes. In order to revitalise the market, it is imperative that these changes occur sooner rather than later. YOLANDA LOZANO, National Residential Director CB Richard Ellis Spain 92 NATIONAL MARKET It is difficult to quantify what’s happened in the sector over recent years. In hindsight, we can all agree that it is not possible to sell everything at any given price. This anomaly generates others. Almost all markets put real emphasis on research, development, and quality. Although that hasn’t always been the case in the management of residential projects. In recent years, crucial elements such as analysis, planning, supervision and execution of construction, design, marketing, aesthetics, and quality have been neglected. In any market, each product has a certain position amongst all of the other products, and this position determines its price. In the residential market, this benchmark has been omitted, and many cities have maximised prices to the upper limits that buyers were capable of paying, without proportionately considering quality. In lieu of quality, the price of land is now paramount, escalating to levels that make it impossible to maintain its In recent years, crucial elements such as previous inertia in the market. Unjustified cost increases on the raw materials (the land) are deferred to the final price of the product in efforts to maintain margins and with little regard for the finished quality of the home. Profound reflection is fundamental now that the market appears to be slowing down. From now on, the aforementioned qualitative elements (analysis, planning, etc.) will be of greater importance, and any inefficiency in these areas will be penalised by buyers. ANALYSIS AND QUALITY Complying with basic commercialisation rules will be essential for various agents. These will include, firstly, comprehensive analysis of all data relating to existing supply and scheduled development, including demand preferences, before undertaking any project. This research will be more time-consuming, but must be more thorough than in the past. Project feasibility studies need MANY CITIES HAVE MAXIMISED PRICES TO THE UPPER LIMITS THAT BUYERS WERE CAPABLE OF PAYING to improve as well, rather than relying on estimations of future price increases. This formula has generated deceptive situations, wherein a good part of the estimated future profit is absorbed by the cost of purchasing the land, resulting in higher prices. Quality, in the broadest sense of the word, should be the benchmark of any sustainable real estate project. Quality applied from the architectural scheme to the selection of the best construction materials and final features; quality focusing on exterior aesthetics of buildings and interior aesthetics of homes, quality in the supervision of construction to ensure the completion of deadlines and to guarantee a standard of work where, once delivered, defects and imperfections are the exception, not the rule. analysis, planning, supervision and execution PLANNING AND MARKETING One need only look at development in other countries, like Poland for example, to see that the aesthetics of new construction surpass ours. We should take note. It is not only low-density that motivates planning in peripheral zones, but also the exquisite Trends 2007 93 THE GOLDEN RULES OF SELLING HOMES YOLANDA LOZANO, National Residential Director CB Richard Ellis Spain KEYS TO THE FUTURE OF THE HOME CURRENT SITUATION OF RESIDENTIAL SLOWDOWN 1 Stabilisation of prices and adjustment of production. 2 Adapt supply to decreasing demand. 3 Average increase of six months in the time needed to sell homes. 4 Sizeable reduction in demand for investment in general. 5 More effort in purchasing due to increased interest rates and current restrictive financial conditions. 6 Discrepancy between price and homeowners’ ability to pay. POSITIVE ELEMENTS OF THE NEW MARKET SITUATION 1 2 Demand for immigrant housing persists, indirectly feeding the repositioning demand. Repositioning demand replaces the demand for investment, which could reactivate in times of adjustment. 3 Fiscal stability and European standardisation will lessen effects. 4 Existing supply will readjust to actual demand. 5 6 Socio-cultural factors outweigh demographics in the creation of new homes. Development companies are updating their supply and are receptive to recommendations. architecture, the quality of construction materials, and the advances in communal areas. Furthermore, in the majority of cases, unsatisfactory commercial strategy plans were carried out. Until now, deadline compliance was the most important element in launching a project. Being the first among competitors to begin selling and averting hefty finance charges was prioritised, without pursuing the product with the same level of intensity. At CB Richard Ellis, we tend to formulate parallels with the automotive sector, as it is a fitting comparison. Seemingly, they are two different fields with two distinct products, though there are similarities. Of course, the major difference between the two is the final TEN MEASURES THAT SHOULD BE UNDERTAKEN 1 Freeze land prices. 2 Favour the rental market. 3 Promote collaboration between the public and private sectors. 4 Develop new formulas that allow market flexibility, like renting with the option to buy. 5 Apply personalised segmentation and client retention formulas. 6 Improve the quality/price ratio. 7 Enhance: fittings and fixtures in homes, community resources, and client services. 8 Promote quality. 9 Support financially flexible measures and marketing strategies. 10 94 NATIONAL MARKET Adapt to the new demand profile. Comercial strategy planification price of each product. It is surprising, therefore, that the proportional investment in resources dedicated to establishing commercial and marketing strategies for automobiles is much greater than it is for homes. CONVINCING BUYERS Maybe this list of priorities is too obvious. Regardless, what is certain is that on many occasions we have acted with insufficient diligence, trusting that “everything would sell,” with neither enough consideration for the future of the market, nor the long term. Circumstances have changed. All of these factors will need to be taken into account in order to improve the quality/price ratio, which truly convinces buyers, because buyers have learned their lesson. We must regain public trust. It is the only way to assure stability and sustainability in the residential market. In Anglo-Saxon countries, it is unthinkable to undertake real estate projects without expert assessment in order to minimise misgivings, financial liability, and risk. Before embarking on any project, these experts contribute the necessary information concerning prices, thereby facilitating the decision to buy; they also provide management and supervision in the execution of projects, establish, based on their experience, the best definition of an optimum product, and is gaining prominence the most effective commercial strategy for each development, supported by relevant, innovative marketing. In short, they create the most modern homes with the most forwardthinking solutions. Now is a time to reflect and begin a new more stable and sustainable phase, where quality is the point of reference in each step in the cycle of residential development, from conception and analysis to the delivery of the finished product, with the complete satisfaction of the buyers. At CB Richard Ellis we are prepared to advise, support, and collaborate as a team with those willing to persist throughout the process of residential real estate project management, with the confidence of a job well done. In order to satisfy, in each and every one of the aforementioned steps, the golden rules. A difficult and challenging objective. IN THE MAJORITY OF CASES, UNSATISFACTORY COMMERCIAL STRATEGY PLANS WERE CARRIED OUT Trends 2007 95 ZARAGOZA IN ITS DEFINING YEAR In 2008, the city of Zaragoza faces its big international debut after an accelerated institutional and private modernisation campaign. The succession of events to begin in the next few months will unite Zaragoza with key national and European cities. It will rise to the top of the domestic real estate charts and will ultimately captivate international interest with its many diverse projects. Public investment in the project, which has exceeded 1,600 million euros, is the largest in the city’s history. For example, it has created the AVE station, the NICOLÁS LLARI DE SANGENIS, Director CB Richard Ellis Zaragoza 96 NATIONAL MARKET PLaZa development, as well as the completion and development of the third and fourth ring roads, respectively. Such tremendous effort would not have come to fruition were it not accompanied by strong private enterprise, which has enabled the development of important office, retail, and logistics projects – one of the main ventures in the Aragonese economy. INTERNATIONAL EXPO The 2008 International Exposition in Zaragoza is an excellent opportunity to present the city on the international stage. Nearly 100 countries will be presenting and an estimated seven million visitors will experience the modern city that is Zaragoza, a city that is capable of attracting investor interest and foreign developers, who themselves will discover that the city offers clear business opportunities, above all in the tertiary sector. This event, which is a culmination of efforts on the part of autonomous and national authorities, with additional support from sponsors as well The greatest emphasis, as collective backing from the local population, has already succeeded in making Zaragoza a more vibrant city. From the very beginning it was conceived as an opportunity for urban improvement, not only for the long-awaited integration of the Ebro River (and the recuperation of its banks) and for the completion of the third ring road, but also for anticipating the potential uses of the Expo grounds once events have come to an end, whereupon the international pavilion will be converted into a business park, which will create 165,000 m² of office space. The expo, which begins on 14th July and lasts for three months, is eagerly anticipated by all spheres of society: business, political, cultural and social, and is certain to be an extraordinary event for Zaragoza, for Aragon, and for Spain. STRONG TERTIARY DEVELOPMENT The residential growth over the last six years, which has outlined new development areas, gave way to the tertiary sector in 2007, which is progressively in terms of investment THE TERTIARY SECTOR IS PROGRESSIVELY GAINING INFLUENCE IN THE CITY AND THE METROPOLITAN AREA gaining influence in the city and across the metropolitan area. Prominent new retail projects like Plaza Imperial, Puerto Venecia, and Aragonia have brought a total of 350,000 m² to the city, doubling the existing area to date, and simultaneously providing much needed modernization. Current interest on the part of national and international firms is not only concentrated on these developments but also extends to include local high street retailers. With regard to offices, the city has seen the completion of its first projects, among them, the World Trade Centre, with 30,000 m² distributed among three office towers. Upcoming projects include the aforementioned Expo Empresarial, Zaragoza Alta Velocidad, as well as the development of new corporate headquarters and exclusive-use buildings in PlaZa. Over time, this fresh supply will geographically reposition Zaragoza’s financial district from the city centre to the new business area situated in the urban west. Clients and investors are already demanding features that are not always available in current office spaces; they require the latest open-plan exclusive-use buildings, with modern fittings and facilities, and underground parking. The greatest emphasis, in investment terms as well as in the number of developments, has been in the logistics sector. In this area, the strength of the autonomous community has succeeded in creating four logistics parks in Aragon, one of which, Zaragoza’s PlaZa, is domestically and internationally significant. At 12 million m², it is tactically located within the roadway network, tucked between the new railroad freight depot and the airport, which allows distribution companies strategic access to Spain and southern Europe. Furthermore, there is a growing supply of retail and hotel amenities in the vicinity. BEYOND THE EXPO In addition to the subsequent economic impact that the Expo will have on Zaragoza and despite being the main event in 2008, the expo will leave a fully functional high-speed train from Madrid and Barcelona that will allow the full integration of these metropolitan areas in terms of both business and functionality. Moreover, the Expo will create an unprecedented increase in public and private investment in the region, which will create the foundations for Zaragoza to become a modern and dynamic city that knows how to capitalize on the growing economic, labour, and demographic trends which it is immersed in, in order to become a model 21st century city. Trends 2007 97 If the energy efficiency of a building was posed by its design, benefits of reduced energy as weel as savings in management would mean that no additional expense is incurred over the long term. 98 6 PIECES Trends 2007 99 QUALITY IN REAL ESTATE ANALYSIS JUAN V. ROMO, Head of Department - CRM CB Richard Ellis Spain 100 PIECES We say that something has quality when we compare it to one similar in kind. The concept may be subjective and at the same time agreed upon by many. Saying ‘this has quality’ implies superior value or worth. The inverse would signify little or no quality. According to ISO 9000 regulations, quality is assured once its inherent requisites have been satisfactorily fulfilled. Real estate analysis depends upon the valuation of many elements, both tangible and intangible: properties, projects under development, market cycles, trends. Analysis of properties and projects can be accomplished with technical training and professional expertise. The intangible aspects, like trends, the need or capacity of demand, the convergence of prices or the closing of deals, require skill, observation, and professional know-how. To modern man, real estate does more than temper a need for shelter, it has become an economic symbol, contributing to the creation of wealth and private equity. In order to satisfy the demand for knowledge on the subject, information has become both accessible and abundant. Additionally, the number of professionals in the field is growing exponentially, as few people nowadays reach There is no need to falsify or bypass information. old age without carrying out a real estate transaction in their lifetime. With an abundance of information and a multitude of experts in the field, one might ask, why is it necessary to analyse a process that is already at the forefront of common knowledge and an integral practice of modern culture? There are both simple and complex issues in real estate. Much of the existing data is inaccurate or untrustworthy. Often, the statistics lack contributions from restricted areas, where information is a professional privilege. Despite these impediments, when a real estate opportunity arises, the project must be studied correctly. The analyst and his team must pool their experience, gleaned directly from field work in various real estate sectors. Because the market is cyclical, researching its behaviour requires a combination of skills, including but not limited to, technical training and experience with the issues. Findings, even if accurate, are susceptible to human error. Consequently, how can we be certain, to give credit to proposed conclusions, to follow recommendations? Will we instead maintain a position of prudent scepticism? The first step requires the gathering of opinion, commentary, listening to presentations, and the reading of published reports. Ask about the presenter, his professional profile, his career path, his achievements. Study the way he delivers his message, his confidence, his conviction, his arguments. There are two key concepts in analysis: quality and reliability. It is my belief that reliability is an indispensable antecedent to quality. There is ample evidence of this. For the purposes of this discourse, we will distinguish between oral and written exposition. In the case of presentations and verbal exchanges – if the speaker is effective – it can be difficult to detect the level of quality. Typically, These days, excess data is a liability THERE ARE TWO KEY CONCEPTS TO ANALYSIS: QUALITY AND RELIABILITY Trends 2007 101 QUALITY IN REAL ESTATE ANALYSIS JUAN V. ROMO, Head of Department - CRM CB Richard Ellis Spain the material on display will have been enhanced by a team of specialists and augmented by graphics. The atmosphere is often relaxed and informal and the audience is generally ill-informed on the subject being presented. As a presenter, avoiding nonsense and trivialities helps to establish a rapport with the public and there will be no time to question the veracity of what has been heard. I have always been sceptical of presenters whose sole aim is to steer the audience toward a predetermined conclusion. I ask myself, is there any concealed data? Is it a fixed scheme, inflexible and uncompromising? Opening the floor to questions, enables the communicator to add detail and clarification, and to ascertain varying points of view. In persuading an audience, it 102 PIECES is vital that the presenter not only have experience with the public, but, in addition, he must convey an air of integrity and prestige in order for his ideas to be taken seriously. Often, the pretence of integrity and prestige can be feigned after many years in the profession. With regards to written material, it is easier to classify the level of quality and distinguish the good from the average or unsatisfactory. A brief glance will determine if a report is easy to understand, if it contains the appropriate data, and if it reaches an interesting and imaginative conclusion. Unarguably, contemporary culture is governed by the ease and speed at which information is transmitted, but let us not forget Jean François Revel’s essay on useless knowledge: There is no need to falsify or bypass information. These days, excess data is a liability; an expression of pomposity, and the growing proliferation of plagiarism are utterly counterproductive to good market research. Here are a few guidelines to ensure the quality of your analysis: a) Clarity: develop your argument in an orderly, logical fashion. Use common vocabulary. b) Simplicity: discard affectation, do not overuse technical terminology, avoid foreign parlance, acronyms, platitudes and common idioms. The goal is to be concise. c) Originality: Your point of view should be personal and authentic. Plagiarism is an analyst’s biggest mistake. Be sure to cite sources whenever using borrowed data. Plagiarism is an analyst’s biggest mistake. d) Contrast of opinions: acknowledging other opinions can strengthen your argument. Determine the pros and cons. e) Brevity: If a report is too lengthy, verbose or digressive, it is less likely to be read. Remember, a client’s time is golden. In presentations, do not neglect your audience. Allow for questions and general discussion. f) Rationalisation of interpretations: Do not use eccentric reasoning. The thesis must be believable. Experience is not sufficient. Opinions should be argued convincingly. g) Truthfulness: Without inviting catastrophe, it is imprudent to hide uncomplimentary data. Everything has an explanation and solutions can be suggested. h) Wide focus: Be open to the maximum amount of possibilities; disregarding options may compromise the thoroughness of the analysis. i) Humility: Recognition of one’s achievements does not justify arrogance. j) Respect: The audience and the client also have opinions. Likewise, other analysts may present reasonable, though opposing, viewpoints. Adherence to these guidelines is recommended from the start of a piece of work. We must bear in mind what is expected of us and why we are hired. It is important to maintain an independent perspective and come to your own conclusions. Persuasion follows naturally through correct reasoning supported by accurate data. Real estate market research teams have expanded in companies within the sector, acting as advisors and providing valuable tools to their clients. We must pay close attention to these resources. They should not be neglected in times of recession, nor considered mere mechanisms of support for the departments that generate income. If, at the beginning, the technicians in charge of the research are viewed as minor or inconsequential, what measure of confidence will we grant their reports? Of course, their statements will be politically correct, in accordance with company policy, that is to say, endorsed by the highest levels of staff. It is essential to recognize one point: market research is serious and difficult work, probably more complex than the successful closure of a real estate transaction. The development of suitable research requires a specific skill set, and certain allowances must be in place, trained staff, room for professional development, and incentive rewards for effort. After many years in the profession, I know few people capable of precise, exacting analysis. Granted, there are many managers and agents, knowledgeable in their field and well-accustomed to deadlines, but who lack the complex vision of the analyst. Quality, simplicity, truthfulness, and conviction are ideal attributes in any profession. Above all, I consider honesty to be the most commendable. Perhaps, that is also what the client values most. MARKET RESEARCH IS SERIOUS AND DIFFICULT WORK, PROBABLY MORE DIFFICULT THAN CLOSING A SUCCESSFUL REAL ESTATE TRANSACTION Be sure to cite sources whenever using borrowed data Trends 2007 103 I LOVE GREEN Bio-climatic, eco-efficient and sustainable buildings; the green movement is revolutionising the way we understand the workplace. SANDRA LOPESINO, Project Manager - Leed A.P CB Richard Ellis Spain 104 PIECES Nowadays we hear a lot of talk about the green, efficient and sustainable option in the property market, but how is the concept of sustainability defined, and how is it being applied in real estate? Commissioned in 1987 by the United Nations, the Brundtland Report categorically defines sustainability as “development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.” The Brundtland Report is also known as Our Common Future, a report by the World Commission on Environment and Development (the Brundtland Commission). Now it has become clear that within the real estate market these needs should be applied to land, building materials and energy consumption. Another concept also gaining importance is that of Corporate Social Responsibility, or CSR. This can be defined as transparent business practice based on ethical values and respect for employees, communities and the environment. This has become a new business model in the market since companies and tenants are changing the way in which they operate Corporate Social Responsibility is based on ethical in order to comply with their own CSR policies. (This issue is mentioned on page 58 of the report by CB Richard Ellis and CoreNet Global entitled Corporate Real Estate 2010: Sustainability and Corporate Social Responsibility.) One only has to count and quantify the resources used by a building over the course of its useful life to justify the need to develop a new real estate model capable of satisfying the present demands of tenants. Taking into account that people spend 90% of their lives in buildings built by others, it should be easy to see the importance in building in such a way that the internal environment is improved for tenants as well as guaranteeing the highest energy efficiency for the building. Just how much energy do buildings consume? According to the Consejo de Construcción Verde de España [www.spaingbc. org] (the Spanish Council for Green Construction), 70% of all electricity consumption and 12% of all water consumption is owed to the built environment. Furthermore, modern buildings count for 30% of all greenhouse gas emissions and 65% of waste TENANTS CONSTRUCTION FIRMS “WE WANT TO OCCUPY SUSTAINABLE BUILDINGS BECAUSE WE BASE OUR DECISIONS ON THE COST OF THE BUILDING’S LIFE CYCLE” “WE WILL BUILD SUSTAINABLE BUILDINGS USING TECHNIQUES AND SPECIFICATIONS WHICH WILL BE PROFITABLE IN THE LONG TERM” INVESTORS “TENANT DEMAND WILL ENABLE US TO FINANCE SUSTAINABLE BUILDINGS” DEVELOPERS “WE NEED TO DEVELOP SUSTAINABLE BUILDINGS IN ORDER TO SATISFY THE NEEDS OF INVESTORS AND TENANTS” IF ENERGY EFFICIENCY IS TAKEN INTO ACCOUNT IN THE CONCEPTUAL DESIGN PHASE OF A PROJECT, THERE SHOULD BE NO ADDITIONAL COST tipped annually. The figures are surprising considering that common belief points to industry and transport as the largest emitters of carbon dioxide (CO2). These statistics reinforce the argument for incorporating greener building practices into the real estate market in order to address the situation. It is often thought that energy efficient buildings and the sustainable construction model imply additional costs. This preconception leads many developers and investors to reject such developments and therefore holds back the evolution of the market for sustainable buildings. However, the idea that sustainable practices equal higher costs is not necessarily true, because if values and respect towards employees, communities and the environment Trends 2007 105 I LOVE GREEN SANDRA LOPESINO, Project Manager - Leed A.P C B Richard Ellis Spain PROCEDURES TO IMPROVE THE ENERGY PERFORMANCE OF BUILDINGS ARE ALSO BEING APPLIED AT AUTONOMOUS REGIONAL AND MUNICIPAL LEVELS energy efficiency is a key aim of a project from the early stage of its conceptual design, the benefits of reduced energy and water consumption and lower carbon emissions, as well as savings in management and operating costs, mean that no additional expense is incurred over the long term. Environmental impact of buildings 12% W ATER USE 30% G REENHO USE G ASES 60% W ASTE 70% ELEC TRIC ITY C O NSUMPTIO N • THEY DEPLETE OUR NATURAL RESOURCES • WE SPEND MORE THAN 90% OF OUR LIVES INSIDE THEM • THEY CONTRIBUTE TO GLOBAL WARNING 106 PIECES TIGHTER REGULATION Environmental demands are proving to be ever more prominent, as Spanish and European Union regulations are driving commitment to the environment and establishing ever tighter rules. For example, the European Parliament Directive 2002/91/EC on energy performance of buildings called for improvements in the new Código Técnico de la Edificación nacional (Technical Code of National Construction), since reflected in the Royal Decree 314/2006 as well as in the adoption of a system for energy efficiency certificates for buildings. In fact, the creation of a system for energy efficiency certificates was already set out in the EC Directive, adopted into the Spanish legal system via the Royal Decree 47/2007 on the 19th January, according to which a basic system of energy efficiency certification for newly constructed buildings will be passed. For existing buildings, a similar regulatory system is planned through a future Royal Decree, expected to come into force before 2009. On the 31st October 2007 the period for voluntary compliance for new buildings expired. As of that date, all new projects have to comply with the terms set out in the Royal Decree of 19th January when applying for building licenses. All buildings will receive an energy efficiency label according to the Energy Efficiency Class awarded, which can vary from Class A for the most energy efficient buildings, to Class G for the least efficient. In order to define the Spanish scale of classification, a specific study was carried out which took into account, amongst other factors, the type of building planned and the local climatology where the project in question would be carried out. There are two possible options for determining the level of energy efficiency of a building; • A generalized performancebased process using a computer programme called Calener. • A simplified qualitative process which indirectly applies the calculation Energy certification of buildings, initial/definitive More A A B C D E F Less Building Location/Climatic zone Use of building Annual energy consumption ( KWh/year KWh/m2) kgCO2/year Annual CO2 emissions ( kgCO2/m2) Energy consumption and carbon dioxide emissions are obtained by the Calener program, under normal conditions of operation and occupancy. Actual energy consumption and carbon dioxide emissions of a building depend on how it operates and the efficiency of the building, as well as climate conditions, among other factors. The consultancy’s new offices in Madrid are methodology for energy efficiency classification Procedures to improve the energy performance of buildings and reduce the property industry’s impact on the environment are also being applied at autonomous regional and municipal levels. Examples include; the Reglamento de Instalaciones Térmicas en los Edificios (the Regulation of Thermal Instalations in Buildings), the Royal Decree 1,027/2007, based on the EU Directive 2002/97/EC and CTE (Technical Building Code) Directive, the regulation on Ordenanza Solar Térmica de Barcelona (Barcelona Solar Energy Ordinance) (1999) and the Plan de Mejora Energética de Barcelona (PMEB 2002) (Barcelona Plan for Energy Efficiency Improvement). It should be noted that the Asociación Española de Normalización y Certificación (AENOR) (Spanish Association of Standardisation and Certification) is also developing regulatory documents on these issues. ENERGY AND ENVIRONMENT CB Richard Ellis has incorporated these initiatives into its corporate strategy in response to the increasing demand arising from clients and employees for green buildings. In March 2007 the company announced its intention to become a neutral carbon emitter by 2010, or carbon neutral, and to implement a global energy efficiency plan amongst its clients, for whom it manages a total of 1.75 billion square metres of property. To this end, CB Richard Ellis has created a Sustainability Services department in the United States, with Sally Wilson acting as global director, and an Energy and Environment department run from London, which will cover Europe, the Middle East and Africa. We understand that our clients are looking for energy savings and better environmental performance. “We believe it is time to commit ourselves to improving our clients’ operational performance whilst at the same time helping to protect the environment”, says Brett White, president and CEO of CB Richard Ellis. These efforts have already come to fruition in certain projects. in the process of obtaining a LEED certificate Trends 2007 107 I LOVE GREEN SANDRA LOPESINO, Project Manager - Leed A.P CB Richard Ellis Spain The new CB Richard Ellis offices in Washington have received the LEED (The Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) Gold Certificate. The consultancy’s new offices in Madrid, on the 24th floor of the Torre Picasso, are in the process of obtaining the same award and will be the first to do so in Spain. These are but a few examples of globally standardised and unified schemes which can perfect the assessment process of sustainable buildings. SUSTAINABLE CONSTRUCTION Environmental demands on the market keep on increasing and are driving the development of new methods and standards of construction, according to which architects, developers and clients can define sustainable projects based on measurable criteria, including amongst others; • BREEAM (Building Research Enterprise Environmental Assessment Method), of the BRE, in the United Kingdom. • LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design), of the US Green Building Council. • Green Building Tools, of the IISBE (International Initiative LEED WAS CREATED TO SERVE AS A STANDARD FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF SUSTAINABLE BUILDINGS 108 PIECES for the Sustainable Built Environment). • Green Globes Method, of the BRE in the United Kingdom and the RICS Foundation in Canada. The Building Research Enterprise developed the Building Research Enterprise Environmental Assessment Method, BREEAM, in the United Kingdom. This is a system that analyses the performance of buildings in areas as diverse as management, energy use, internal environment quality, pollution, transport, land use, materials and water consumption. It is often used in the United Kingdom for office buildings, homes, schools, retail units and industrial buildings. In Spain the LEED system (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) has been more commonly applied, devised by the US Green Building Council and supported by its Spanish counterpart, the Consejo de Construcción Sostenible de España (the Spanish Council for Green Construction). LEED was created to serve as a standard for the construction of sustainable buildings and high energy and environmental efficiency. It is based on 69 obtainable and quantifiable credits relating to, amongst other factors, sustainable locations, water efficiency, energy efficiency, material resource use, internal environment quality and design innovation. According to the credits the building aims for and achieves, it is awarded a silver, gold or platinum certificate. LEED is a tool that allows property owners to enjoy long term benefits over the life cycle of the building, as well as better energy and economic performance and the consequent environmental well being for tenants and the building. It is available for numerous types of project, including new construction, interior redesigns, and residential and planning developments. Furthermore, it allows a definition of “sustainable building” to be established by creating a common standard of measurement for the various areas of construction. In this way LEED promotes the integration of new energy efficiency technologies for all elements of a building and recognises the environmental leadership of the companies that choose to apply the system. SUSTAINABLE PERSPECTIVE Just five years ago the concept of sustainability in the real estate market was considered difficult to achieve and its credibility questionable. Today it is no longer considered in this way. An inevitable change in attitudes has taken place, and there are now many more scales and criteria used to assess sustainability in real estate rather than the simple quality/cost relationship, such Buildings provide an enormous potencial What are sustainable buildings? PLANNING THE LAND PLOT ER WAT M E NT E NAG EN E FF E RGY ICI E NCY MA M US AT E ER O IA F LS TY LI IOR NT UA E R M E Q T N I N I RO V EN as social responsibility, energy consumption, the use of natural resources and the well being of tenants. In the next five years the number of these criteria will certainly increase. The buildings in which we live and work in our day-today lives provide an enormous potential platform to reduce energy consumption and carbon dioxide emissions. Optimising the performance of existing buildings and maximizing that of future ones is an integral part of any strategic response to global warming. As one of the world’s largest managers of commercial property, CB Richard Ellis intends to globally promote and drive these initiatives. PRO PER PLANNING AND C O NSTRUC TIO N C AN IMPRO VE A BUILDING `S EFFIC IENC Y. C O MPLIANC E W ITH SPEC IFIC STANDARDS W ILL REDUC E THE BUILDING ’S NEG ATIVE IMPAC T O N ITS O C C UPANTS AND THE ENVIRO NMENT, AND SAVE MO NEY. SUSTAINABLE BUILDING S DO NO T APPEAR SPO NTANEO USLY. SUSTAINABLE BUILDING S REQ UIRE A PRO C ESS O F C O LLABO RATIO N BETW EEN PRO PRIETO R, TENANTS, DEVELO PERS AND BUILDERS IN O RDER TO PRO DUC E LASTING RESULTS. C C VE PLANNING O PENS THE G ATE TO THIS PRO C ESS. platform to reduce energy consumption Trends 2007 109 2008. HOW WILL YOU STRUCTURE YOUR FINANCE? Uncertainty in the face of a possible crisis has engulfed the sector, although market fundamentals would seem to indicate otherwise. However it is looked at, the structure of finance will be the key issue in the real estate market over the coming months. FINANCE STRATEGIES FOR AN UNCERTAIN ENVIRONMENT “How the market has changed!” has become the common, even inevitable and continuously repeated phrase since the end of last year, particularly in those forums and informal meetings frequented by bankers and property people. ALBERTO ÁLVARO, National Corporate Finance Director CB Richard Ellis Spain 110 PIECES In the space of just a few months the market climate seems to have changed abruptly. Before the summer it seemed we were on our way to breaking new records. Activity in the real estate sector, measured by volume of investment, take up, new project being started and yield compression, seemed to be reaching unprecedented levels. But the summer came to an end, and in came the autumn, more marked then ever. The post summer depression took on different names; subprime, credit crisis, liquidity crisis, but whichever the term applied, caution and a lack of trust have replaced the enthusiasm and drive of all agents in the sector. Despite the market fundamentals still showing undoubtedly healthy signs, an end of cycle mood has gripped many people. Despite the fact that consumer spending remains strong, employment levels are up, private sector profits are still at historic highs, tourism is as ever a key driver in the economy and much more besides: caution is set to stay. It is beyond the author’s control to predict whether 2008 will see a great crisis in the property In the space of just a few months the market on the back of the Spanish economy, or by “crying wolf”, to say whether the wolf will come and eat all of us or just a few of the smaller/younger ones. All I can do, with your permission, is provide a brief reflection and a piece of advice… just in case. Experts in these matters say that it is in these times of crisis that the greatest fortunes are made. Those who can see the storm coming and prepare themselves for the less favourable times ahead can capitalize on these opportunities when the moment finally comes, and emerge stronger than before. CASH IS KING The sceptics say that it is always too late to anticipate the troubles ahead, except when it is too soon. In any case, as “cash is king” seems to be the revived mantra for 2008, why don’t we take a brief look at the way in which our finance is structured? Everybody is aware that the property business relies heavily THE SCEPTICS SAY THAT IT IS ALWAYS TOO LATE TO ANTICIPATE THE TROUBLES AHEAD, EXCEPT WHEN IT IS TOO SOON on capital. When the banks become less willing to provide finance, securitised or not, it is time to diversify one’s sources of funding. It would seem that those who are capable of successfully doing this will undoubtedly come out the winners from this period of uncertainty. Under these market conditions, “financial partners”, a sobriquet in recent years for referring to financial institutions will come back into use, whilst the “real” financial partners, i.e. those who share financial risks and returns of a particular project, will play a more significant role in the market. Be it under the same terms as in the past with a redemption pre-arrangement, through preferential shareholdings or even in structures similar to subordinate debt, those property companies who know how to successfully structure the necessary finance for their projects will undoubtedly turn up trumps at a time when others may lose hand after hand. For financial investors active in the real estate sector, the growing distance between the property market and its traditional financiers is generating significant investment opportunities, both direct and indirect. Either through traditional investment vehicles or those structured on an ad-hoc, project specific basis, investors will see a wealth of opportunities to profit from rental income and capital growth in the property market. Creating partnerships requires one’s homework to be done well market climate seems to have abruptly changed in advance; prestige, reputation and brand image cannot be earned overnight, and although hard to achieve they are only the first step. A solid, well-founded business plan harmonised with current market conditions is needed in order to create the right marriage. Transparent government policies providing sufficient guarantees for the parties involved and a clear exit strategy are the key factors that separate the fine line between confidence and apathy when it comes to getting potential investors on board for project partnerships. Perhaps from January 2008 onwards, starting with a clean slate, banks will inject a certain dose of optimism into the market, allowing the good times to continue for another year, with Loan to Value ratios above 80% and spreads below 50 basis points…or perhaps not. Nonetheless, these theories should not cause too much concern to those who have a plan B, or rather those who have a plan B and are capable of carrying it out. Trends 2007 111 TEN PRINCIPLES OF THE NEW STATE LAND USE LAW On July 1ST, 2007, a new State Land Use Law came into effect, 8/2007, from 28TH May, which has generated much expectation and a certain degree of uneasiness in the market. CERTAIN LAND VALUATIONS ELIMINATE URBANPLANNING PROSPECTS ANA RODRÍGUEZ-AVIAL, Consulting and Planning Head of Department CB Richard Ellis Spain 112 PIECES The fragmentation of the Spanish urban planning system, which is in permanent power struggles with various regulatory bodies, creates a setting in which the law’s purpose is questioned, especially after having been appealed before the Constitutional Tribunals of several Autonomous Communities. We must not forget that the Autonomous Communities are in charge of designing and developing their own policies with regard to urban-planning affairs. The government only has authority in some planning matters, like the guarantee of equality in the enforcement of constitutional rights and duties related to land, the establishment of economic and environmental foundations for its legal system or to value and be responsible for the Public Administration’s capital resources. The law suffers from a lack of clarity provoked by efforts to avoid unconstitutionality and has therefore generated a degree of mistrust due to its lack of clarity. The interpretations of many of its articles are confusing. Consequently, we must be aware of its practical The law has generated a degree of mistrust application, to the adaptation of Autonomous Community laws to the law, and to the government’s responsibility of drafting a code of conduct to clarify itself. Included below are some of the new measures affecting land development: 1. It does not distinguish types of land The law only distinguishes two types of land: rural and urban. 1.1. Rural land is: 1.1.1. Land with no prevision to be turned to urban land (i.e. nonurbanisable). 1.1.2. Land consigned for urbanisation until the urbanisation works have officially been sanctioned by the Town Hall (i.e. sectorised urbanisable land, nonsectorised urbanisable land, and unconsolidated urban land, in any phase of the development process up until it becomes urban land). 1.2. Urban land is: 1.2.1. Land legally and effectively integrated, with a network of conventional municipal public services and facilities. This distinction does not affect classifications made by the Autonomous Communities regarding their own land or urban-planning laws: Urban land - consolidated or not. Non-Urbanisable land - protected or not. Urbanisable land - sectorised or non-sectorised. However, it must also be taken in to consideration that these new regulations do affect valuations. 2. Defines urban-planning transformation processes The law defines urban-planning transformation processes in the following way: 2.1. Urbanisation processes 2.1.1. Initial urbanisation. This signifies the transformation of rural land to urban land. 2.1.2. The refurbishment or renovation of existing urbanisations on land classified as urban land. 2.2. Procedures for Public Programmes These last points, which are new, will be analysed below. 3. Establishes a minimum sustainability criteria for municipalities within the sector due to its lack of clarity If a given development process – whether on its own or linked with procedures approved over the last two years – involves a population, municipal urban land area, or territorial area increase of greater than 20 percent, it will require enactment by means of a General Plan review (and no longer by specific modification (modificación punctual)). This will put an end to those common initiatives wherein large developments far from urban centres increase the population of a given municipality. From now on, these developments will not be approved through specific modification (modificación punctual) of the General Plan; rather, they will require a review of the entire General Plan, thereby initiating a longer and more complicated process. This new feature is in keeping with Andalusian regulations that limit urban growth to a percentage of urban land and a percentage of the current population, as outlined in the latest General Plans. 4. Inclusion of the urbanisation agent For the first time in State legislation, the law concludes with the owner’s exclusive right to choose the private urbanisation initiative, introducing the role of the urbanisation agent. This right is already included in practically all Autonomous legislation. Remarkably however, the Community of Madrid has acted against this by suppressing the role of the urbanisation agent in its territorial area with the Law of Urgent Measures (Ley de medidas urgentes), from July 2007. This suppression is justified by a lack of efficacy and an incongruity with citizens’ basic property rights. 5. Allocates a minimum of 30% of residential buildable area for affordable housing (vivienda protegida). Trends 2007 113 TEN PRINCIPLES OF THE NEW STATE LAND USE LAW ANA RODRÍGUEZ-AVIAL, Consulting and Planning Head of Department CB Richard Ellis Spain Autonomous laws already allocate a certain amount of buildable area for affordable housing. In reality, the new law will only affect those Autonomous Communities that have reserved a lesser percentage, like Murcia; whereas, communities like Madrid, Castilla-La Mancha and the Basque Country, who have reserved a greater percentage, will be unaffected. Another important repercussion of the law is the allocation of this area for urbanisation procedures, without distinguishing between urban land and unconsolidated urban land. The new measure will affect certain communities, such as Asturias and Madrid, who have designated this area exclusively for urban land. Furthermore, the law presents a somewhat ambiguous exception: FOR THE FIRST TIME IN STATE LEGISLATION, THE LAW CONCLUDES WITH THE OWNER’S EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO CHOOSE THE PRIVATE URBANISATION INITIATIVE 114 PIECES “the Autonomous legislation may also assign or permit an exceptionally inferior allocation for designated municipalities or development processes, provided there are initial urbanisation processes that guarantee, through their method of planning development, the total amount of the quota within its territorial area and that the distribution of locations respects the principle of social cohesion”. This exception is difficult to interpret. It is unclear whether the quota can be exceptionally and completely reduced for certain municipalities (i.e.: tourist communities), or whether the development processes refer to land categories (for instance, non-consolidated urban land, thereby compensated by other categories), or if they refer to concrete processes when the General Plan of the given municipality compensates them, respecting the social cohesion principle. We will need to pay attention to the way in which each community interprets this exception. Furthermore, the legal requirement for social housing is allocated at 30% of the residential buildable area, not the total buildable area, like in some Autonomous Communities. It is also worth mentioning the transitory application system of the new social housing percentage, which has spawned multiple interpretations. The reason being is that it is unclear, with regards to legal approval, at which point the urban-planning process must be, so that the new percentage does not apply. 6. Public land programs Public land programs are an important new element. The law states that in instances whereby urban land increases in buildable area, density, or is assigned a new use (short of comprehensive remodeling or refurbishment), fulfillment of said increase will require the implementation of concession standards for public programs. The law predicts that these concessions may be substituted by other means of fulfilment established by Autonomous Community legislation, meaning that in practice, it is likely they may be substituted for a monetary equivalent. 7. Increases land concessions to 5-15% of the general buildable area, and a maximum of 20% in exceptional cases. Up until recently, all Autonomous laws required a concession of 10%. This concession applies to land The Autonomous Communities are in charge classified by Autonomous legislation as Urban land, consolidated urban land, and unconsolidated urban land. The newest element is the concession for consolidated urban land, which has been designated “Public Programs.” (Actuaciónes de dotación’) The percentage of concessions demanded will be proportionate to the increase in the buildable area it produces. 8. Limits urban-planning agreements The law states that, through an agreement with the Town Hall, no obligations or provisions can command higher levies than those established by law. Any such clause would be invalid. This prohibits the percentages of concessions, the social housing ratios, etc. from exceeding the determined legal limits. As a result, the law hinders planning agreements as the Autonomous Community of Madrid did when enacting its Law of Urgent Measures in July 2007. 9. Increases the number of reports required for development During the urban-planning process of new developments, developers must provide the administration with an environmental sustainability report that includes a map of natural risks within the field, and the city council must present an economic sustainability report outlining the impact on public funds of said development processes. 10. Regulates legal criteria for valuing land, eliminating the criteria for consideration of urban-planning prospects. It is this last aspect of the law that has generated the most controversy, although we must clarify that the new regulations regarding valuations only apply in the following instances: 10.1. Appraisal of expropriation, sale or obligatory replacement. 10.2. Verification of the shared distribution of profit and liability transactions in the absence of an agreement between all parties concerned. 10.3. Estimation of the capital liability of the Public Administration. In other words, it should not therefore affect free-market valuations that will continue to be considered according to market value criteria. Furthermore, the disposition of the law in not valuing urbanplanning prospects may have had a knock on effect on land financing, and subsequently on the general market, which ends up having an affect on free market valuations. This article has demonstrated the degree of complication that the current urban-planning legislation poses. Each area of land development presents unique peculiarities depending upon its territorial range and the phase of the urban-planning process in which it finds itself. The vast regulations (with different procedures, terms, and institutions in each Autonomous Community), the many possible interpretations, the ongoing transformation of State and Autonomous legislation (generated by political turnover), and the different potential interpretations and discretion of each municipality, all contribute to a measure of justified unease when undertaking projects. Going forward, this will require real estate professionals to be well-advised from an urbanplanning point of view. of designing and developing their own policies Trends 2007 115 TAKING STOCK OF THE AMERICA’S CUP The world’s greatest sailing regatta, held in Valencia in 2007, has been more than positive for the city and excellent for the real estate sector. VÍCTOR GREGORI, Agency Director CB Richard Ellis Valencia 116 PIECES The 32nd America’s Cup was a first-class sporting event that provided significant economic and social windfalls for the capital of the Levante region and further strengthened the international image of the Community of Valencia. In the medium term, a global event of this magnitude, similar to a World Expo Fair or the Olympic Games, will have beneficial effects, such as the promotion and the consolidation of the city’s image; economic and social investment, media coverage and tourism, and the initiation of strategic infrastructure and public service projects (like The Balcón del Mar, the expansion of the port and airport, the AVE high-speed train, Central Park, etc.) From the moment Valencia was chosen to host the 32nd America’s Cup, the city gained prominence on the world map as a first-class destination, both from tourists who wanted to get to know the region that would host this unique event, and from companies who, realising Valencia was a modern city with a good infrastructure network, decided to begin operating out of Valencia. 95.6% of tourists who attended the Many key retailers have prioritised Valencia in their international expansion plans, having been attracted by the tourism generated from the City of Arts and Sciences as well as the regatta itself. Proposals to move to Valencia come highly endorsed by the city’s excellent tourist sector results, which continued to trend upwards in 2006 and 2007. Valencia’s booming progress makes the city stand out as the nation’s sixth most popular tourist destination. Estimated tourist spending in the city was established at over €1,000 million per annum over the past two years, compared to €800 million in 2005. It is also worth noting that a survey performed by the Tourist Board, indicates that 95.6% of tourists who attended the America’s Cup would like to revisit Valencia. The number of visitors has grown substantially, due in the main to the enormous increase in foreign tourism, which accounts for a third of all holidaymakers. Response to this demand has resulted in an upsurge in hotel supply and an improvement in quality. The largest growth has been among the five-star establishments, which now make up 17% of the market. It is also important to point out that the city has received significant support from public and private initiatives, which have helped convert Valencia into a European city of reference due to its excellent infrastructure, its pleasant climate, and its assorted tourist attractions. This becomes ever more evident when one analyses visitors motives for coming to Valencia, 50% of them state leisure as their prime incentive for visiting. HOUSING AND RETAIL The announcement on November 26, 2003 that Valencia would host the 32nd America’s Cup Regatta coincided with a surge in the community’s residential sector. This, coupled with the regeneration of the main event area, succeeded in LOCAL RETAIL HAS LOST GROUND TO THE BIG NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL FIRMS raising residential sales rates and prices. Among others, new developments in the Grao, Nazaret and Patacona neighbourhoods, have stimulated increases. Moreover, these new projects that are under construction have managed to regenerate areas of the city that were previously derelict. It is also important to note that when the regatta’s crews arrived in Valencia with their families, (often over 100 families per team), they revitalised the America’s Cup would like to revisit Valencia city’s rental market. (This has perhaps been the regatta’s greatest contribution to Valencia.) The areas nearest to the port (Avenida del Puerto, Francia and Baleares, Paseo de la Alameda, etc.) housed large numbers of competitors, and in doing so virtually reduced the vacancy rate in the area to zero, which would have been highly unlikely to have happened a few years ago. Although the event has been positive for urban-planning activities, it must be highlighted Trends 2007 117 TAKING STOCK OF THE AMERICA’S CUP that there are various municipal projects that were expected to revitalise the main event area, that are yet to be completed. Examples include, among others, the expansion of the Avenida Blasco Ibánez (extension of one of the main sea-access roads) and the Calatrava Project (four skyscrapers earmarked for offices and housing in the City of Arts and Sciences). Undoubtedly, one of the sectors that has benefited most from the regatta is local retail, especially High Street shopping districts. The big luxury stores, attracted by the influx of tourism and the America’s Cup itself, decided that Valencia, (along with Madrid and Barcelona), would be their target destination for new operations in Spain. If we look at the types of retail layouts with regard to location, they favour large domestic and international companies, rather than local retailers that have clearly suffered the consequences of this trend. 118 PIECES VÍCTOR GREGORI, Agency Director CB Richard Ellis Valencia The majority of these flagship stores have opted for the commercial front line, locating themselves along the avenues of Colon, Don Juan de Austria and Jorge Juan, while some of the more exclusive brands have selected the Poeta Querol-Maruqés de Dos Aguas area. Sixty-four percent of transactions on these streets were dedicated to companies that sell personal items, which is the predominant commercial activity. As a result of the America’s Cup port being built, the surrounding area has been regenerated to a high standard. The construction of the teams’ headquarters and the introduction of various leisure and restaurant establishments have lent a decidedly international feel to the area. As the 33rd America’s Cup will be celebrated here, it is more than likely that the area will continue to accommodate new national and international events, which will further revitalise the area, rejuvenating the district and enhancing its image as the leisure focal point of the city. The future use of the teams’ current headquarters will be determined by the public administration at the end of the next competition. They are likely be converted into tertiary properties, either retail or offices. LOGISTICS AND OFFICES Another relevant aspect worth mentioning is the improvement of infrastructures and road networks, which has helped to draw in new national and multinational businesses from the logistics sector, and expanded the areas occupied by those who already maintain a presence in the region. The availability of land and the creation of new industrial estates are the foundations for consolidating this sector’s expansion within the Community of Valencia. Moreover, Valencia has become one of the largest logistical centres in Southern Europe, capitalizing on its strategic location in the east of the peninsula, and its excellent port and airport facilities. During the regatta, the logistics sector of Valencia was very active. Many operators relocated to new, better quality logistics platforms, creating an increase in take-up rates. As in the office sector, numerous developers opted to plan logistics parks to let, increasing rents to as much as 4.8 €/m² The residential rental market has TERTIARY DEVELOPMENT IS ON THE RISE AND IT IS FORECAST THAT BY 2009 THE NUMBER OF OFFICES WILL HAVE INCREASED BY 50% per month in prime areas. This rental trend will continue to trend upwards, which will allow developers to continue to construct new logistics parks. With regards to the office market, the supply of new landmark buildings is a milestone for the city. Valencia has evolved from having a fairly obsolete stock of offices to having state of the art properties equipped with the latest innovations. Without a doubt, the America’s Cup has been an incentive for developers when planning projects like these high-rise properties, particularly in a market like Valencia’s, where the residential developer is ordinarily more dominant. Currently, tertiary development is on the rise and it is predicted that by 2009 the number of offices will increase some 50%, from 525,000 m² to over 750,000 m². As a result of the city’s regeneration, particularly in the office market, the take-up rate has risen more than 40% in 2006, from 50,000 m² to over 70,000 m². The type of area requested by clients also continues to change. If in 2006 spaces measuring 500 to 1,000+ m² accounted for 18% of total demand, in 2007 this had already increased to 25%. As a result of all of the factors indicated above, rents have risen considerably, prime rent is at €18/m² per month, which is an increase of 20% on 2006’s prime rent. Due to this strong growth, developers and investment funds with a presence in other markets like Madrid, Barcelona or other European capitals are now more inclined to view Valencia as a viable alternative where they can develop their tertiary office projects. In conclusion, the 32nd America’s Cup has been a tremendous success for Valencia, it has marketed its image worldwide and has regenerated various important sectors, such as tourism and real estate. And it doesn’t stop there. Beginning in 2008, we will enjoy eight seasons of Formula One motor racing in Valencia, followed by the 33rd America’s Cup. And that’s just the start of it. benefited substantially from the America’s Cup Trends 2007 119 PROJECT REAL ESTATE FINANCE The recent volatility in the financial markets and the subsequent drop in credit availability to finance real estate transactions, coupled with the situation in the residential market, has made the finance directors of development and investment companies rethink the way they finance their projects, both in terms of obtaining levels of leverage comparable to those to which they were accustomed before the credit crunch, and in minimising the risk of each transaction as much as possible. JUAN CARLOS BUJEDA, Debt & Equity Finance Associate CB Richard Ellis Spain 120 PIECES Project Finance presents an opportunity for financial entities to invest in specific projects in the short term, while enabling real estate developers and investors to limit their exposure to the equity provided, and simultaneously advancing the possibility of obtaining high leverage levels and schemes that allow them to undertake complex projects. Project Finance’s objective is to finance projects whose yields provide the sole guarantee of the loan repayment. It is an agreement between the moneylender and the borrower, to jointly confront the risks of a given project, devising creative solutions for its coverage and management. The traditional bank-company relationship is substituted for the new bankproject relationship. It is fundamental that every Project Finance plan When presenting a financial scheme to an entity, it is imperative to put oneself in their position and to have therefore systematically analysed the project’s underlying potential risks. These risks involve the market, the construction, liquidity, solvency, and the business. Understanding the methods employed by the financial entity in the management and coverage of each is the key to Project Finance; we will therefore outline them in detail. MARKET RISK ANALYSIS The first variable to be analysed by any entity is market risk. Every investment project depends on tenant demand to let a property’s vacancies. Among others, variables to be considered are the rate of growth in office rentals (or retail), the levels of availability, the risk of over-supply, and the capacity for takeover. This analysis corresponds with macroeconomic research of the asset’s respective market, therefore it is also essential to study the labour market, the current accounts, the growth of the Gross Domestic Product, and all the factors that contribute to the productive framework of the region. CONSTRUCTION RISK ANALYSIS There is the risk that a project may run over-budget or exceed the deadline. Timely completion is vital in order to assure the availability of space by the dates accorded in the rental contract. (Moreover, rapid construction minimises possible exposure to other types of risk.) A cost guarantee from a reputable construction company or a Construction Management contract helps significantly when negotiating with financial entities. PROJECT FINANCE’S OBJECTIVE IS TO FINANCE PROJECTS WHOSE YIELDS PROVIDE THE SOLE GUARANTEE OF THE LOAN REPAYMENT LIQUIDITY RISK ANALYSIS It is fundamental that every Project Finance plan includes a well-defined strategy for the divestment of debt. If it involves financing a project in development with an aim toward selling the asset or maintaining it as an investment, cancellation of the loan depends on the overall ratio of debt, the valuation of the property, and the availability of financing in the market, in order to replace the divested debt. Fixed asset projects also require a solvency risk analysis. includes a well-defined strategy for the divestment of debt SOLVENCY RISK ANALYSIS Solvency risk analysis concerns the capacity of a borrower to repay the loan’s interest, as well as its principal, within a period agreed-upon by the entity and the investor. In this instance, it is vital to study the integrity of the rental contracts, the ratio of recoverable expenses, etc. A given scheme’s projected cash flow is the most fundamental tool in any feasibility study. Trends 2007 121 JUAN CARLOS BUJEDA, PROJECT REAL ESTATE FINANCE BUSINESS RISK ANALYSIS In real estate projects with a high management component, like hotels or shopping centres, the business facet is extremely important in predicting a project’s future success. It depends upon the management of staff, a marketing plan and other factors that cannot be quantified a priori, like those of the real estate sector (i.e.: the status of office space supply and demand). The mitigation of business risk requires that the real estate project rely on directive skill to achieve certain objectives, thus the investor’s track record is a crucial factor. Once the aforementioned risks have been studied, the project must be structured in a manner wherein the profits obtained by each investor coincide with the respective risks assumed by each. This is achieved by means of contractual formulas wherein risks are distributed between the various parties, depending on the respective degree of control assumed over said risk. That way, the business risk of a hotel, for example, covers the market risk by means of Debt & Equity Finance Associate CB Richard Ellis Spain an independent management contract, guaranteeing the utmost professionalism in the management of hotel functions. Below, is a breakdown of available tools for mitigating, covering, or eliminating the different risks of a real estate project: COVERING MARKET RISK The focus when mitigating market or rental risk is to condition the disposal of debt to the level of commercialisation, reserving a portion of the total debt (a leasing holdback) the day the loan closes, in order to incentivise the investor to accelerate the project’s commercialisation. COVERING CONSTRUCTION RISK Construction is a consolidated and mature process. The risk of exceeding the budget is mitigated by a construction contract with an established builder; this can be an indispensable requisite to financing. The bank views it as a guarantee that the project will be completed within a set budget. COVERING LIQUIDITY RISK The liquidity risk of debt is mitigated by means of partial and periodic amortisation of the principal. However, certain projects, due to their unique structure, require negative 122 PIECES amortisation, wherein the principle appreciates as the bank makes higher quantities available, as in construction loans, or loans designated to finance changes of use, (for example, converting offices into residential space). In any case, the entity will require that the sum of the debt over the value of the asset (also called Loan to Value or LTV) does not exceed a maximum limit, which fluctuates between 60% and 80%. In a construction project, this is achieved by requiring that the whole of an investor’s capital is invested on the day transactions close, so as to reduce exposure of the entity and maintain the desired LTV. Other formulas also exist, like the pari passu contribution of funds between entity and sponsor, wherein capital is contributed jointly, period by period, in accordance with the ratios set out in the financial contract. COVERING SOLVENCY Solvency, or the ability of a developer to repay debt, is guaranteed by means of a thorough analysis of the asset in question. The strength of the rental agreements, the quality of the tenants, and the underlying economic factors of the market for the letting and sale of units, are essential when considering a loan. The business facet is extremely important by means of rental contracts, or a combination of both, with the fixed and variable components linked to the operational returns of the asset. In conclusion, Project Finance is a process of identification and mitigation of risk. It requires designing and adapting schemes for the financing of projects, the detailed analyses of which will reveal the optimal plan to propose and establish the most effective method of allocating risk among those willing to assume it, thereby creating a more efficient and economical capital venture. SOLVENCY, OR THE ABILITY OF A DEVELOPER TO REPAY DEBT, IS GUARANTEED BY MEANS OF A THOROUGH ANALYSIS OF THE ASSET IN QUESTION If the expiry of an important part of the building’s rental contracts is anticipated during the life of the loan, thereby leaving the building exposed to market fluctuations, it would typically create a rent reserve. Establishing maximum LTV levels and minimum DSCR levels (see below) which will mitigate this risk, but not eliminate it, and it is in essence an assumed risk for each element of the project. When determining the possibility of funding a project, the financial entity will supply a cash flow assessment of the property, with much more conservative projections than an equity investor might produce, making Project Finance a highly subjective activity that again highlights the apparent risks on the part of the bank. The risk of repaying interest in the acquisition of a prime asset with strong growth potential, but with the standard consequence of low initial profitability, is mitigated by another reserve, in this case the interest reserve, which is also deducted from the total initial debt and released for loan repayment once said increases in the asset’s rents materialise. in predicting a project´s future success The objective, in any case, is to secure a minimum ratio between the cash flow and the payment of interest and principle (Debt Service Coverage Ratio or DSCR). COVERING BUSINESS RISK Typically, senior lenders are not inclined to assume business risk, and will stipulate in many cases that management operations are conceded to a reputable independent operator or a total separation of the two Trends 2007 123 CB RICHARD ELLIS S.A. 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The opinions and data included herein refer to the month of December 2007 and are subject to change without prior notice. Any transaction that is made in the market should not be based solely or necessarily on the data contained in this publication. Nor may they be published whether in whole or in part nor be cited as a source without prior written authorisation from CB Richard Ellis. Design and production: BPMO Edigrup www.cbre.es