Birmingham office take-up hits 28-year high

OFFICE take-up in Birmingham reached a 28-year high in the second quarter following a surge in pre-letting.

The situation was helped by the decision from HSBC to locate its ringfenced retail bank in 212,000 sq ft offices at 2 Arena Central.

But Birmingham is not alone in seeing high demand; latest research from DTZ shows annual take-up of regional office space at its highest level on record.

It said that with occupiers increasingly active in the first half, the annual take-up volume outside London was 5.9 million sq ft – 35% above the long-run average. Birmingham’s office take-up is now at its quarterly highest since 1987.

A sharp increase in pre-letting activity in the regional markets resulted in take-up of 1.2 million sq ft of Grade A space in H1 2015, 35% more than the same period a year ago. Birmingham had the largest volume of Grade A take-up, followed by Leeds where there were notable deals from law firm Addleshaw Goddard and professional services firm PwC.
 
Andrew Berry, Associate Director in DTZ’s Birmingham Office agency team, said: “For the first time in this cycle we are seeing the Birmingham City Centre office market being driven by a mixture of inward investment and expansion amongst long-established occupiers. The active demand, which originates from a broad range of sectors, is targeting those buildings offering excellent value and there is clear evidence that the various capital projects that are nearing completion are influencing occupiers’ locational criteria.”
 
Alex Dunn, Senior UK Analyst at DTZ, said: “The surge in pre-letting activity has been enabled by an enlarged development pipeline following years of developer inactivity. Eight million sq ft of speculative space is due to be completed by 2019 – an enormous 138% increase in development compared to the last four years. Nonetheless, it is still 15% below the average pre-crisis rate of delivery, which suggests developers are still acting relatively cautiously.”
 
The research shows take-up across the UK is absorbing standing stock as well as yet-to-be-completed schemes and, with seven consecutive quarters of above average lettings activity, availability has continued to fall across all grades. Grade A availability has become critical in some regions.
 
Ben Clarke, Head of UK Research at DTZ, said: “The short-term supply squeeze means many incumbent occupiers needing space immediately are leasing additional space elsewhere, rather than vacating and taking one larger premises. This is because availability is fragmented and larger chunks of space are currently very limited. The balance of power has definitely shifted towards landlords. We are seeing this translated into rent increases and also in less favourable lease terms. These include reduced rent free incentives, which have fallen by 12% since the beginning of the year to an average of 18 months on a 10 year commitment.”  
 
Prime rents are forecast to rise by an average of 11% by 2019 as new, higher-quality projects come to market and competition intensifies over suitable available space. Rents in Birmingham and Manchester are expected to increase the most, by 14% each to £32.50 per sq ft and £36.50 respectively.
 
“We continue to see strong investor interest in the UK regions, with a total transaction volume of £930m so far this year. This has been underpinned by the improvement in underlying occupier markets and the yield differential with London. Prime regional office yields moved in a further 36 basis points to 5.3% in the first half of 2015,” added Clarke.

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