European commercial real estate investment slumped to an 11-year low in the first quarter of 2023, led by the office sector, as uncertainty over pricing and the higher costs of mortgage finance weighed on sentiment, according to the latest Europe Capital Trends report from MSCI Real Assets.

The volume of completed transactions fell 62% from a year earlier to 鈧36.5bn in the first three months of the year, with most of the major real estate sectors and national markets down, the report showed.

Offices, Europe鈥檚 largest real estate sector, had the fewest number of properties sold on record in the quarter and the 鈧10.8bn worth of transactions was the lowest in 13 years. 

Tom Leahy, head of EMEA real assets research at MSCI, said: 鈥淭he disparity in pricing expectations for buyers and sellers has widened since the second half of last year as appraisal values continue to adjust to the rapid rise in interest rates and on concerns over the muted economic outlook.

鈥淭he office sector has also been particularly hard hit as changing occupier needs, such as the switch to hybrid working and a focus on energy efficiency, means a bias towards better quality assets has emerged.鈥

The industrial sector had the quarter鈥檚 sharpest annual drop in investment sales among the major property types, with 鈧5.4bn of transactions. MSCI Real Assets said the 76% decline was a significant reversal of fortune for a sector which had attracted strong investment flows and price gains after the COVID-19 pandemic highlighted its importance to supply chains and e-commerce.

The UK remained Europe鈥檚 largest commercial real estate market with 鈧11.3bn in investment activity, a 59% decline from a year earlier. France, Germany, Spain and the Netherlands ranked next in the top five markets, in order of size. While almost every European country had falling transaction volumes, France and Spain notably fared less badly due to local property sector trends, with annual declines of 40% and 13%, respectively.

Paris overtook London to become Europe鈥檚 top investment destination thanks to the three largest single property sales of the quarter. These included luxury retailer Kering鈥檚 鈧860m purchase of 35-37 Avenue Montaigne and the 鈧836m forward purchase of a new headquarters in the 13th arrondissement by Groupe AFD, the French government鈥檚 overseas development agency. Overall transaction volumes in Paris were unchanged from a year earlier at 鈧5.3bn.

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