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Real estate investors expect more distressed asset sales

Real estate investors

According to the research, 82% of the 108 senior-level real estate investors surveyed expect to see a rise in distressed assets coming to market, up 15% on last year

Real estate investors expect this year’s tougher economic headwinds to result in more distressed asset sales due to more expensive debt, prompting capital to shift to safer havens with more predictable cashflows, according to a study published by consultancy firm Auxadi.

According to the research, 82% of the 108 senior-level real estate investors surveyed expect to see a rise in distressed assets coming to market, up 15% on last year, with interest rate hikes and mounting cost pressures set to take their toll.

Almost as many investors (81%) predict a reallocation of capital to commercial sectors with safer cashflows such as medical facilities, self-storage and industrial, with 79% of those surveyed flagging the rising cost of debt, up 22% from 2021, the biggest year-on-year hike.

Deal flow was the second largest riser after the cost of debt, up 21% on the previous year to 75%.

The study also reveals where real estate investors expect to see the biggest opportunities. Over two-thirds (69%) of real estate investors expect the residential sector to post the strongest gains over the next two years, ahead of central business district-located offices (56%) and food-anchored retail parks (49%).

The residential sector has seen the biggest post-pandemic bounce in sentiment in the past 12 months – up from fourth place last year scoring just 30% – with investors recognising that the sector’s long-term structural supply-demand imbalance has gathered fresh momentum.

After a record-setting year in 2021 where the logistics sector made up nearly a quarter of all commercial real estate investment globally, according to JLL research, it has registered the biggest drop in performance expectations, down 26% from 54% to 28%.

The report, ‘Real estate: balancing new risks and opportunities in a changing investment landscape’, is the second annual property outlook commissioned by Auxadi, and was based on interviews with investors based in the UK, Continental Europe and North America with average assets under management of €14.5bn ($14.71bn).

The study found that real estate investors expect food-anchored retail parks to see the biggest improvement in fundraising sentiment, up 16% from last year to 87%, benefiting from the post-pandemic shift in consumer shopping habits, ahead of the alternatives sector (83%), supermarkets (81%) and residential (81%).

One of the biggest casualties of Covid-19, the high street retail sector, is expected to attract more fundraising over the next two years, up 21% from 2012 to 80%, according to respondents.

Rima Yousfan, head of funds at Auxadi said: Given the worsening economic climate exacerbated by the war in Ukraine, rising inflation and volatile markets, real estate investors are showing a more bearish outlook with distressed asset sales, a flight to capital safety and slower deal flow as key trends for the year ahead.

Disclaimer: The opinions expressed by our writers are their own and do not represent the views of Invest for Property. The information provided on Invest for Property is intended for informational purposes only. Invest for Property is not liable for any financial losses incurred. Conduct your own research by contacting financial experts before making any investment decisions.

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