Milan’s real estate prices surge as billionaires buy in

Bloomberg

Real estate investors from Azerbaijan’s sovereign wealth fund to Blackstone Group Inc and UBS Group AG are cashing in on a surge in demand for prime Milan offices that’s pushing prices to new highs.
A lack of development in Italy’s financial capital is driving up rents just as a scarcity of prime real estate in some western European cities encourages global investors to enter new markets.
The billionaire Rovati family, Amundi SA and Invesco Real Estate are all closing in on deals to buy up trophy office buildings in the city, people with knowledge of the transactions said, asking not to be identified because the discussions are private.
Italy’s real estate market endured a long period of subdued activity after the global financial crisis because banks were slow to clear up soured property loans, reducing the availability of credit. At the same time, investors were focussed on European cities where economic growth was stronger and political risk lower. That pushed prices in major markets like Paris, Berlin and Frankfurt to record highs, making Milan look cheap by comparison.
Talks continue on all of these deals, and there is no certainty the sales will be completed.
A DeA Capital spokesman said the competitive process for the property on Piazza Cavour is ongoing. Representatives of UBS Asset Management’s real estate unit, the State Oil Fund of the
Republic of Azerbaijan, Invesco, Amundi, and Blackstone all declined to comment.
A spokesperson for the Rovati family didn’t respond to requests for comment.
“Despite the macro situation, Milan is not Italy, and actually there is very little true grade A vacancy anywhere within the central business district,” said Max Nimmo, an analyst at Kempen & Co. “This is putting upward pressure on rents, and despite the already quite low yield, investors are willing to buy that growth.”
Annual rents in Milan reached 585 euros a square metre in the first quarter, up 1.7 percent from a year earlier, while vacancy rates declined by about half a percentage point, according to data compiled by broker Jones Lang LaSalle Inc.
That followed a record year for leasing in the city in 2018 when about 381,000 square metres (4.1 million square feet) was rented, according to CBRE Group Inc, another broker.
“Demand is capped by the limited availability of good
quality products, so we expect yields to remain low or slightly decrease in the coming months, particularly for quality grade A assets,” said Gabriele Bonfiglioli, head of investment management at Milan-based landlord COIMA RES SpA.

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