SINGAPORE: Singapore's retail rents remained resilient in Q2 2012, supported by a high employment rate and tourist arrivals.
According to property consultancy DTZ, the average rents of prime retail space in Orchard/Scotts Road rose marginally by 0.1 per cent quarter-on-quarter to S$30.33 per sq ft per month. Meanwhile, average rents in suburban areas increased 0.2 per cent to S$28.35 per sq ft per month.
However, DTZ said
average retail rents in Singapore are expected to remain flat for the
rest of the year. This is due to uncertainties in the eurozone which
could curtail consumer spending as well as the tight labour market which
could hamper retailers' expansion plans.
Meanwhile, Singapore is
also seeing supply-side pressure from the development pipeline such as
The Atrium@Orchard, orchardgateway, Westgate, Jem, Star Vista, which
will be completed in 2012 and 2013.
Ms Chua Chor Hoon, Head of
DTZ Asia Pacific Research, said, "While landlords are becoming more
selective in offering space to control their tenant mix, retailers are
at the same time getting more careful in committing to rental space as
they desire prime frontage and good shopper traffic.
"This has
resulted in temporary vacancies in some shopping centres, especially
those in non-prime locations, as landlords were not able to find the
right mix of tenants."
-CNA/ac
Huat ah.
Everything is going up.
Originally posted by dragg:only retail meh?
Relax.
One hike at a time.
High rental is the no. 1 killer of any business in the world. 2nd is probably poor strategic planning and 3rd, the economy.