Nothing lasts forever, least of all increasing
valuations on commercial properties.
Not exact matches
The latest
valuations — according to Moodys / REAL
Commercial Property Price Index — show prices for U.S. retail, industrial, apartment and office buildings have fallen
on average by half from their mid-2007 high and are back at 2001 levels.
And so, accordingly, it tends to attract pretty dissimilar investor constituencies, who may only focus
on: i) a handful of the largest caps, regardless of
valuation & exposure, ii) stocks which (may) offer cheap / alternative access to overseas growth (a surprisingly large number of Irish companies are UK / Europe / globally focused), iii) stocks offering domestic exposure (notably, economic pure - plays are actually pretty rare), iv) a listed
commercial & residential
property sector that's only emerged in the past couple of years, and finally (& perhaps most notoriously) v) a (junior) resource stock sector that's been decimated in the last few years.
Tom White Qualified: 2005 Made partner: 2015 Key cases: Advising
on a # 250m + negligence claim against a firm of surveyors in relation to the
valuation of a large portfolio of
commercial properties spread across the country; acting for the Pension Protection Fund
on the first two cases to reach the court in relation to challenges to the PPF levy.
Stronger job growth over the past year is beginning to have an impact
on office building
valuations, as Moody's / RCA
Commercial Property Price Indices (CPPI) registered an 8.6 percent increase in prices for office assets in Central Building...
Our
valuation assignments include both single unit and portfolio
valuations of
commercial and residential
properties in the Benelux carried out
on behalf of international financial institutions, developers, investment funds, corporations and private investors.
Stronger job growth over the past year is beginning to have an impact
on office building
valuations, as Moody's / RCA
Commercial Property Price Indices (CPPI) registered an 8.6 percent increase in prices for...