3
min read

Retail parks: Sustainable investment or hype?

by Manuel Jahn , 05.01.2015

Retail parks are currently a hot topic of conversation: This retail format is increasingly the first choice among retailers and consumers, and investors are now following suit. GfK retail expert Manuel Jahn explores why retail parks constitute a sustainable investment with genuine substance.

Potential? Growth!

We estimate Germany's retail park market consisting of 250 retail parks at around €12 billion on the basis of the object-specific sales area productivity and feasible rent-to-sales ratios. With currently a 20 percent share of the transaction volume of retail real estate, retail parks have now assumed the status of a stand-alone asset class.

In the first half 2014 alone, €900 mil. has been spent on this asset class according to an evaluation of the transaction statistics of the large real estate brokers. These half-year figures show that around 7.5 percent of the entire market volume has been traded - a figure that should rise to 10-15 percent by the end of the year. Assuming this market dynamic holds steady, retail parks would change ownership every 7-10 years on average.

Retail parks can already be regarded as a sustainable investment thanks to the increasing professionalization in this asset class, which is marked by higher-quality new buildings, a larger number of successful refurbishments, better targeted tenant concepts and a growing management quota. These numbers outshine the previously favored shopping center investments and awaken the interest of investors, particularly institutional investors.

Turnover potential differs widely

Retail parks are a meaningful retail real estate class not just for investors, but also for retailers, who must also separate the wheat from the chaff when it comes to selecting viable locations. The size and turnover associated with these locations can differ enormously: For retail parks between 10,000 m² and 76,000 m² of sales area, the turnover spread is from €15 million to just under €300 million per year.

The branch mix of retail parks is dominated by grocery offerings. GfK’s analysis of 250 retail parks in Germany revealed that the turnover share for groceries ranges from €2 million to €90 million, depending on the retail park concept. Fashion offerings generate turnover from €0.5 to €30 million p.a.

Profile of the average center

Our object analyses revealed that the average German retail park has around 19,600 m² of sales area apportioned into 20 rental spaces that generate around €3,200 of gross turnover/m2 per year. On the basis of retail format- and tenant-specific rent-to-sales ratios, we calculated an average rental income potential of €12 per month per m2. As such, the average sales area productivity is, as expected, still far removed from the average performance of a German shopping center, which according to the GfK shopping center database is around €4,000/m2; but retail park performance is not far from the average performance of German retail, which is currently around €3,500 gross turnover/m² of sales space.

The sales area productivity spread is disproportionately higher among retail parks compared to other managed retail real estate. We calculated sales area productivities that ranged from €1,110 at the weak end of the spectrum to €6,900 (gross) per m2 at the strong end of the spectrum.

These differences are a result not just of the retail park quality, but also of the product-line mix. Retail parks dominated by established hypermarkets or large supermarkets can achieve high to very high sales area productivities.

So, where are the best retail parks located?

Surprisingly, the best retail parks are not always located in central metropolitan areas. For example, one of the top retail parks we examined is located in a greenfield area. Established and successful retail parks that have been around a while were often erected in out-of-the-way commercial areas that are not well integrated into the city infrastructure and also often not visible from the main street axes. The fact that these have nonetheless established themselves in consumers' minds during their decades of existence shows that there is no simple success formula, not even the real estate agents' mantra: location, location, location. (And even “location” is not a simple concept, but rather a complex web of macro and micro market conditions as well as real estate object-specific features.)

What we think comes closest to such a success formula for retail real estate is this:

            Success = location x concept x offering x management.

Point is: Retail real estate is not a homogenous commodity. Even nearly structurally identical retail warehouses differ substantially.

But if one looks even deeper than these intricate details, a very simple and common success story emerges: The greater the ability to guarantee turnover for a given retail park, the more likely it is to hold on to tenants over the long term as well as draw attractive new tenants and thus extend the life cycle of the site.

This means that the ultimate success of a retail park fundamentally depends on the drivers of demand, i.e. the end consumers.

Additional information

The complete white paper from Manual Jahn on retail parks can be accessed at www.gfk-geomarketing.com/download-retail_centers.

Manuel Jahn is Head of GfK Real Estate Consulting and can be contacted at manuel.jahn@gfk.com.