2015 Retail Investor Conference slides 2015
Transcription
2015 Retail Investor Conference slides 2015
2015 INVESTOR CONFERENCE Land Securities Retail Scott Parsons Managing Director, Retail Portfolio 2 Agenda Scott Parsons – overview Jat Sahota – customers and consumers Polly Troughton – portfolio review Scott Parsons – Bluewater Q&A Tour of Bluewater Bluewater, Kent 3 Key themes Delivering strategy - Dominance, Experience and Convenience Best in class portfolio positioned to outperform Understanding the changing needs of retailers and consumers Industry leader in leisure and catering Decisive - risk aware not risk averse St David’s, Cardiff 4 Tackling a challenging market Increasing polarisation between winners and losers Pace of change in customer and consumer requirements Rigorous asset management is critical 5 Seismic change Land Securities Retail* Proportion of capital value - March 2012 vs. March 2015 £m 3,200 2,800 2,400 2,000 1,600 1,200 800 400 0 33.6% 40.1% 21.7% 14.9% 18.2% 17.8% 2012 2015 Dominant shopping centres 2012 2015 Retail warehouse and foodstores 2012 2015 Central London retail 8.3% 8.3% 2012 2015 London suburb centres 8.1% 18.9% 2012 2015 Leisure and hotels 10.1% 0% 2012 2015 Secondary centres * Includes Central London retail 6 The right space in the right place... Scotland £0.7bn Northern £1.8bn Southern £5.1bn Southern region Suburban London Central London Total £2.6bn £1.1bn £1.4bn £7.6bn 7 Decisive capital allocation Secondary asset sales The Bridges, Sunderland Bluewater, Kent Fountain Park, Edinburgh Westgate, Oxford Investing in dominance • • • • Leisure Bluewater Development Asset enhancement 8 Land Securities Retail Jat Sahota Head of Commercial, Retail 9 Disposable income – the engine of retail growth (%) growth YoY 5 4 3 2 1 0 -1 -2 -3 -4 -5 2005 2006 GDP 2007 2008 2009 2010 Household spending 2011 2012 2013 2014 Employment growth 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 Real disposable income Source: PMA 10 Changes in consumer behaviour… The considered consumer Researchers and influencers The store is still king …continue to drive structural change in retail 11 The right space in the right place... Bluewater, Kent Trinity, Leeds Bishop Centre, Taplow White Rose, Leeds …can dominate the catchment 12 Beyond catchment – shopper missions Destination led Locally driven Purpose driven Leisure dominated trip Convenient grocery shopping Single item pick-up Pair/single doing Local neighbourhood Weekly grocery shop a big shop shopping The necessary evil Window shopping Killing time Friends browsing Convenient leisure The big ticket shop Family day out Friends big day out 55% UK average: value of mission type 5% 40% Source: CACI Shopper Missions 2014/2015 off peak 13 We know what consumers value Retail mix Food options Customer journey Entertainment 14 Technology – helping consumers where it matters Understanding consumer priorities Planning, parking, wayfinding Offers and rewards Keeping close to innovation 15 Rewarding consumers for loyalty 16 Keeping close to future innovation Other partners Example companies 17 Our consumers stay longer and spend more Dwell time Retail spend 85 mins £84 Catering spend Frequency £13 57 visits 63 mins £60 £10 45 visits Land Securities portfolio average UK average Source: Year-to-date Land Securities survey data, CACI Shopper Dimensions 18 Shopping centre sales densities (£ psf) Sales densities growing year-on-year 7.4% 4.7% Q3 2013 Q4 2013 Q1 2014 Land Securities fashion Q2 2014 Q3 2014 Land Securities catering Q4 2014 Q1 2015 Q2 2015 Sales densities growth 12 months ending June 2015 vs 12 months ending June 2014 Land Securities portfolio Source: Land Securities portfolio average 19 Summary Dominant shopping centres capturing high spending missions Understanding consumer priorities... for access, comfort, experience and relevant technology Schemes that retailers want to be in 20 Land Securities Retail Polly Troughton Head of Portfolio, Retail Parks and Leisure 21 Key areas 1 2 Retail parks Leisure and hotels Convenience assets fulfilling consumers’ convenience shopping trips Expertise driving rental growth 4 3 Suburban London Shopping centres Strong growth potential and mixed use development opportunities Dominance, Experience and Convenience 22 Focusing on convenience parks Foodstores Shopping Parks Convenience Parks 23 Retail parks – convenience, resilience and liquidity Key characteristics matrix Catchment Dominant Strong trading location Growing population Property fundamentals Flexible planning Affordable rent Flexible building design Ample car parking Refurbished elevations Supermarket right size and rent Liquidity Lot size <£80m WAULT >7 years 24 Strong trading locations... flexibility for retailer needs Consolidate and release space Discount retailers drive footfall and rental value First UK location of new retailers F&B in every park Vacancy rates low and falling. WAULT 9 years 25 Driving capital value and income Goodmayes Retail Park, Chadwell Heath Blackpool Retail Park, Blackpool Greyhound Retail Park, Chester The Peel Centre, Bracknell Kingsway West Retail Park, Dundee Bishop Centre, Taplow Lindis Retail Park, Lincoln Every asset has a plan 26 Developing the right space in the right place Worcester Woods, Worcester Selly Oak, Birmingham 27 Leisure driving strongest ERV growth Strength and depth of the market Increasing leisure spend Specialist leisure team Strong restaurant demand Xscape, Yorkshire Xscape, Milton Keynes 28 Restaurant expansion driving rental growth Restaurants ERV growth – March 2013 to March 2015 +27% +37% +19% +15% +31% Bentley Bridge, Wolverhampton Boldon Leisure Park, Boldon Cardigan Fields, Leeds Cambridge Leisure, Cambridge Cornerhouse, Nottingham 29 Focus on consumer experience... driving footfall Xscape, Yorkshire Xscape, Milton Keynes 30 London Retail... >£2.4bn in the UK’s engine room Great North Finchley, North Finchley 8.2 acres Ealing Filmworks, Ealing 2.2 acres O2 Centre, Finchley Road 9.2 acres W12 Shopping Centre, Shepherd’s Bush 5.8 acres Odeon Cinema, Camden 1.2 acres Southside Shopping Centre, Wandsworth 14.9 acres Lewisham Shopping Centre, Lewisham 7.9 acres Shopstop, Clapham 2.0 acres Central London shops Victoria, Piccadilly Lights, One New Change >50 acres in suburban London 31 Maximising Crossrail opportunity Ealing Filmworks, London 32 New leisure and residential quarter in the heart of Ealing Ealing average house prices £600,000 £550,000 £500,000 £450,000 £400,000 £350,000 £300,000 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015E 2016E 2017E 2018E 2019E Source: Nationwide Source: Savills 33 Creating places... making waves 34 Dominance, Experience and Convenience 35 Creating a new shopping and leisure destination Westgate, Oxford 36 Strong leasing momentum £440m TDC – £220m Land Securities’ share Innovative leasing strategy 33% pre-let Westgate, Oxford 37 Expanding F&B and strengthening retail mix St David’s, Cardiff 38 Loyalty and leisure. Incubate and innovate 39 Sales density growth adding value to turnover rent Optimising tenant mix Reconfiguration and relocation Consumer experience Gunwharf Quays, Portsmouth 40 Summary Focusing on convenience retail parks Unique leisure expertise driving rental values Exploiting the London market Shopping centres in the right place with the right space 41 Bluewater Scott Parsons Managing Director, Retail Portfolio 42 Bluewater... best of the best £897m Total annual sales 174 mins Dwell time 94% Conversion rate 6.6m Affluent catchment +4.8% Calendar YTD sales +1.7% Calendar YTD footfall 43 A magnet for new brands 44 Potential new leisure/adventure/ experience zone Planning permission for new hotel New 60,000 sq ft MSU in negs. Enhanced destination dining quarter MSUs – existing, underway and potential Existing retailers upgrading fitout Ability to add additional parking Future potential Upsize completed last year Upsize Terms agreed for upsized MSU Potential additional MSU New leisure & catering zone (former Glow) 6,250 new homes Revitalised leisure and public realm 45 Wealth of success stories 46 Glow... optimising the leisure opportunity Before After Bluewater, Kent 47 Summary Best in class portfolio... compelling destinations, strong growth locations, asset management and development upside Industry leader in leisure and catering Deep understanding of customer and consumer needs 48 Important notice This presentation may contain certain ‘forward-looking’ statements. By their nature, forward-looking statements involve risk and uncertainty because they relate to future events and circumstances. Actual outcomes and results may differ materially from any outcomes or results expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Any forward-looking statements made by or on behalf of Land Securities speak only as of the date they are made and no representation or warranty is given in relation to them, including as to their completeness or accuracy or the basis on which they were prepared. Land Securities does not undertake to update forward-looking statements to reflect any changes in Land Securities’ expectations with regard thereto or any changes in events, conditions or circumstances on which any such statement is based. Information contained in this presentation relating to the Company or its share price, or the yield on its shares, should not be relied upon as an indicator of future performance. 49 Notes 50 Notes 51 Notes 52