Residential market rents continue to increase, but less rapidly

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In the German residential market, rents continue to increase, but less rapidly, according to property advisor Col­liers, who report that there is greater new-build activity in second-tier cities than in the Big 7 – an indication that new construction is tending to follow demand.

The growth in residential rents “falls well short of the rates we often see reported”, concludes Col­liers in a newly published market report. In fact, there are now marginal falls in rents in some German cities including Berlin - at least in the new-build segment. But there is still a shortfall in new-build activity. 

The first Resi­den­tial Invest­ment Market Re­port by Col­liers Inter­na­tional examines the residential markets in 42 German cities and concludes that since 2012, rents for initial lettings of new-build apartments across Germany have risen by 2.9% p.a. overall and 3.3% p.a. in the Big 7 cities Berlin, Düs­sel­dorf, Frank­furt, Hamburg, Cologne, Munich and Stutt­gart. Rents for the reletting of existing apartments have risen by 2.7% p.a. overall and 4.4% p.a. in the Big 7.

But Col­liers also reports a trend towards more subdued rental price growth or even marginal negative growth, at least in the new-build segment. Examples of this include Berlin, Düs­sel­dorf and Leipzig and also secondary cities such as Hei­del­berg, Kiel and Wolfs­burg. In the German capital Berlin, the rent for new-build apartments fell from €13.95 to €13.50/m²/month over the first half of 2019. However, rents for existing apartments have continued to rise from €10.05 to €10.30/m²/month over the same period.

Big 7 bursting at the seams

Col­liers forecasts a population growth of 6.3% in the Big 7 cities in the period up to 2030. The influx into the 25 largest cities will be at a similar rate of around 5.3%. Demand for residential space in these cities will also intensify as there is a low level of supply in those areas.

In terms of the Big 7 cities, Col­liers forecasts the strongest growth of between 8% and 10.8% will be in Frank­furt, Cologne, Munich and Düs­sel­dorf. The biggest upswing amongst the second-tier cities is expected in Potsdam, Hanau, Münster and Darm­stadt.

Greater new-build activity in the secondary cities than in the Big 7

Colliers reports that new-build completions are still at an all-time low. The increased demand coupled with insufficient supply has resulted in rental price growth for relettings over the last few years. However new-build activity tends to follow demand, which means that the level of new-build completions per household is greater in the secondary cities than in the Big 7.

The highest completion rate with 17.9 newly completed apartments per 1,000 households is in Ingol­stadt, followed by Potsdam (16.0), Regens­burg (14.9), Olden­burg (11.7) and Erlangen (11.6).

The completion rate in the Big 7 cities is in a range between 5.0 and 10.6 newly completed apartments per 1,000 households. The highest rate is in Frank­furt (10.6), ahead of Munich (9.1) and Hamburg (8.1). The other Big 7 cities are way behind and the lowest rate is in Stutt­gart with just 5.1. The lowest completion rates overall are in cities such as Krefeld (2.4), Braun­schweig (2.8) and Mön­chen­glad­bach (3.1).

Major German cities still attractive destinations for residential investors

€181 billion was invested in German residential property in 2018, of which €49 billion was spent on multi-family apartment buildings. €66 billion was paid for condominium apartments and €64 billion was spent on detached and two-family homes. According to Colliers, the single highest volume was in Berlin with €5.51 billion.

But German cities outside the Big 7 are also attractive propositions for inves­tors as they offer opportunities to achieve higher yields and there is greater development potential offered by so-called secondary locations located around the major cities. Colliers has observed noticeable increases in investment volumes in cities such as Regens­burg, Erlangen, Braun­schweig, Darm­stadt and Hanover. The greatest increases were in Hanau (+189% to €135 million) and Ber­gisch Glad­bach (+143% to €56 million), in other words satellite cities around Frank­furt and Cologne.

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