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Beijing's commercial property woes
By Hu Yuanyuan (China Daily)
Updated: 2009-07-20 13:15
"On the back of a current supply glut in the Grade A office sector, depressed market conditions likely will persist through the remainder of 2009," said Alice Wood, director of the commercial property division in the Beijing office of UK-based property consulting firm DTZ Holdings PLC. According to Jones Lang LaSalle (JLL), a global real estate consulting firm, six new commercial projects were completed in the second quarter in Beijing. The new projects added another 408,300 sq m of new space to the Beijing market, increasing the total stock to 8.8 million sq m. This influx of new supply pushed up the vacancy rate in the overall commercial market to 27.3 percent this quarter. The influx also helped push down rental rates. According to the JLL report, overall average rentals in Beijing's office market stood at 214 yuan ($3.51) per sq m per month in the second quarter, down 4.7 percent quarter-on-quarter. The rate of declines, however, slowed down, compared with the 8.3 percent drop in the first quarter. Beijing's Central Business District (CBD) area, where the vacancy rate climbed to more than 35 percent, saw its rentals drop by 13.3 percent year-on-year, the biggest drop in the whole market, according to the Greater China offices of commercial real estate services firm CB Richard Ellis Group Inc (CBRE). But due to significant demand from domestic firms, rental values in Beijing did not fall as much as those in Hong Kong and Shanghai. In Hong Kong and Shanghai, high vacancy rates and suppressed demand have led to rental decreases of 10.2 percent and 8.9 percent, respectively, according to the JLL report. In Beijing, domestic financial institutions, energy companies and media companies dominated demand for space this quarter.
CBRE reported that the demand for high-quality office buildings is rebounding slightly, and that demand from large international firms with plans to expand their business in China is also picking up in Beijing. "In the second quarter, we received many inquiries about renting office space from international firms," said Will Chen, deputy managing director of CBRE's Beijing offices. But Julien Zhang, managing director of JLL Beijing, said office rentals in Beijing would drop further in the next six months. "Although we are optimistic that demand is picking up in the market, a large amount of new supply in the next half year will drive the vacancy rate above 30 percent, thus pulling down rental rates," Zhang said. In the retail sector, with global wealth continuing to evaporate, corporations and consumers alike have had to tighten their belts, leading many international luxury retailers to put their expansion plans on hold. Beijing even saw a few retailers withdraw from the market. In the second quarter, several projects scheduled for completion postponed opening dates, a sign that leasing commitments across the retail market remained sluggish, according to the JLL report. But performance at mid-range shopping malls has remained relatively stable, showing that the fundamentals in China's retail market remain strong, according to the report. Many upcoming projects have actually repositioned themselves to attract vibrant mid-range retailers rather than luxury boutiques. "The current downturn, the first experienced by Beijing's prime retail market, although painful, will ultimately make landlords and shopping mall operators more mature," said Zhang from JLL. Average retail rentals have somewhat stabilized, down 4 percent to 528 yuan per sq m per month. Overall vacancy rates remained largely stable, too, up only 0.4 percentage points to 16 percent. Seven shopping malls are still slated to open in the second half of this year, delivering more than 570,000 sq m to the market. "Due to fierce competition and volatile economic growth, new supply and adjustments in existing shopping malls will continue to push up the vacancy rate," said Jason Chang, general manager of North China Sandalwood. (For more biz stories, please visit Industries)
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