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Is It Time To Get Back On The Commercial Property Rollercoaster?

<p style&equals;"text-align&colon; justify&semi;">Many of us were left sick after commercial property prices took a nose dive&period;  Values have been lurching for years after the financial crisis of 2007&comma; but is it time to get back on board now that we are seeing steady returns&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p style&equals;"text-align&colon; justify&semi;">Commercial property used to be an investor favourite&period;  That was of course before its fantastic boom and subsequent crash&period;  Originally commercial property funds were set up as a way of bringing in an income&period;  The savings rates from the banks were shocking&comma; so we began to turn to commercial property as a way to make our money work harder&period; Some of us did incredibly well as capital values soared just before the crisis struck&comma; but we got our fingers burned as we found out that buying a section of car-park wasn’t the same as buying shares in big liquid companies&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p style&equals;"text-align&colon; justify&semi;">Until 2007&comma; some of us were enjoying consistent double-digit returns annually from our commercial property funds&period;  That prospect was so appealing that during 2006&comma; at its very height&comma; investors poured £3&period;6 billion into these funds&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p style&equals;"text-align&colon; justify&semi;">But then the crunch hit and performance collapsed&period;  British commercial property values dropped by more than 44&percnt; between 2007 and 2009&period;  This was the steepest decline ever recorded&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p style&equals;"text-align&colon; justify&semi;">But finally&comma; after a long dip&comma; the economic backdrop is improving and commercial property is back among the top selling investments&period;  The Investment Management Association stated that investors spent £1&period;5 billion on commercial property funds in 2013&period;  This was a 136&percnt; increase on the £423 million&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p style&equals;"text-align&colon; justify&semi;">The Head of investment research at the brokers&comma; The Share Centre recently said&comma; &OpenCurlyQuote;In the years running up to its collapse&comma; commercial property was all about capital growth but traditionally&comma; it has been an alternative yield source for investors&comma; a state which it has essentially returned to&period;  While I do not expect any big capital uplift there are a number of funds delivering a decent income to investors’&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p style&equals;"text-align&colon; justify&semi;">The last 12 months have shown a steady return on commercial property investment&period;  It’s not set the world on fire&comma; but past experience ought to teach us that that’s probably a good thing&period;  What goes up must come down&period;  We only saw a 2&percnt; average total return last year&comma; but gains over a five year period look much more attractive at 76&percnt;&period;  The director of research at Legal &amp&semi; General Property says that there are many factors boosting the market currently – attractive valuations&comma; credit conditions and dramatically improving occupier demand to name a few&period;  Rob Martin says &OpenCurlyQuote;Construction of new commercial buildings over the past few years has been very low and the balance of demand and supply is improving&comma; reflected in increasing rents’&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p style&equals;"text-align&colon; justify&semi;">London has now recovered most of the value it lost after the financial crisis&period;  Because of this some people are suggesting that to gain the greatest possibility for a large recovery you need to look outside of the capital&period;  Ian McBryde&comma; the F&amp&semi;C fund manager says&comma; &OpenCurlyQuote;Sentiment towards UK commercial property is becoming increasingly positive&period;  Yields have moved inwards and although prime property remains in favour&comma; there are signs that investors are starting to look more closely at opportunities in the regions and for &OpenCurlyQuote;good secondary’ stock’&period;  As an example&comma; you’re looking at about £500&comma;000 for 2000 square feet of commercial property in London&period;  And the value is not expected to increase by much since the market has basically recovered in this area&period;  Whereas commercial property for sale in Suffolk will cost you half that amount for the same square footage and the value looks likely to rise over the next few years&period;  So at this time that’s looking like the better investment&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p style&equals;"text-align&colon; justify&semi;">So where is best to invest&quest;  You can either look to get a mortgage on an individual property and then rent it out&comma; or use it yourself and look for the return on sale in the future&period;  Or you can pay into a property fund&period;  There are two kinds&period;  Those that directly invest in buildings and those that invest in shares of groups in the property sector&comma; like hotel chains and developers&period;  These are called Real Estate Investment Trusts &lpar;REITS&rpar; and they offer the potential for a higher return but at a greater risk&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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