Weather Tonight: 4°c Partly Cloudy Night Morning: 8°c Cloudy

Business

Recovery set to spark a rise in office rents

Hugo Duncan
21 Sep 2009


Office rents in the City of London will start rising again next year as the recovery in the economy and financial sector stimulates demand for space.

Property agent Knight Frank today forecast prime rents in the City to rise by 4% next year to £44 per square foot, after a 21% decline this year put space at its cheapest level for 20 years.

It also predicted that between now and 2013, rents will rise by 37% to £58 per square foot in the City and by 42% to £92.50 in the West End.

Bradley Baker, head of central London tenant representation at Knight Frank, said: "The office market is beginning to emerge from the shadow of the banking crisis. Large central London tenants from a range of industries are viewing this as the ideal time to act to secure the best deal."

Will Beardmore-Gray, head of City leasing at Knight Frank, said: "The City has seen a marked increase in activity since its low point in quarter one. There is a definite upwards trend in activity emerging - it is certainly not a fresh boom but it is a steady return to normality.

"The current wave of demand in partly driven by Asia-Pacific financial firms like Bank of China, Daiwa Securities, Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi, Macquarie Group and Nomura.

"I see the City as benefiting from its status as a hub in the system of global trade."

Reader views (0)

 Add your view

No comments have so far been submitted.


Add your comment

 

Terms and conditions Make text area bigger You have  characters left.

We welcome your opinions. This is a public forum. Libellous and abusive comments are not allowed. Please read our House Rules.

For information about privacy and cookies please read our Privacy Policy.


 

 

  • Relief for Sir Mervyn as inflation takes a tumble Osb and mervyn Bank of England Governor Sir Mervyn King has gained a major victory in his battle to bring down the spiralling cost of living as inflation...
  • Yell dives as print blow outstrips digital leap Yell Beleaguered Yellow Pages directories publisher Yell has seen its shares plunge as much as a quarter after a worse-than-expected slump in...
  • BHP and Rio bet on copper with mine expansion Rio Tinto The future is looking copper-coloured for BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto after the mining giants announced plans to invest $4.5 billion (£2.9...
  • Why saving may start to make sense again - just Piggy bank savings Long-suffering savers at last had some good news today when inflation fell below 4%, meaning there are now seven standard savings accounts...
  • City says timing wrong in Moody's UK rating threat Euro City economists have raised doubts over the timing of the threat by rating agency Moody's to slash the UK's AAA sovereign credit score,...
  • Hotel giant goes for Olympic gold as profits wow the City Intercontinental Hotels Hotelier InterContinental Hotels is looking to emerging markets and especially China to drive future growth
  • Bloomsbury takes a new passage to India Fashion book Publisher Bloomsbury is to set up a new business in India to take advantage of rapidly growing demand from the country's English-speaking...
  • Thai disaster floods Lloyd's with a bill for £1.4 billion Lloyd's of London Thailand's worst flooding in 50 years last October will cost the Lloyd's of London insurance market $2.2 billion (£1.4 billion), it has...
  • Bank of Japan increases stimulus to boost growth Japan Bank of Japan has added 10 trillion yen (£83 billion) to its 20 trillion yen pool of funds set aside for asset purchases in a surprise move
  • Brammer sees profits jump Box of tricks: DIY tools can be expensive to buy Industrial services group Brammer has posted a 41% jump in full-year pretax profit on strong demand
  •  
    Market Roundup
    TUESDAY UPDATE

    Valentine's massacre as City dumps Hampson

    No one likes getting rejected on Valentine's Day

    More