Cape Town Has Highest Luxury Residential Rental Growth in World
According to the Knight Frank's Prime Global Rental Index, which tracks luxury residential rents across 17 cities globally, the average recorded annual residential rental growth has been 0.5% in the year to March 2017.
The number of cities where prime rents have increased on an annual basis rose from six in Q1 2016 to 12 in Q1 2017 (figure 3). Yet the general trend has been for steady, rather than spectacular growth.
Indeed, it is worth noting that while prime rents are following an upward trajectory, in recent years they have been overshadowed by prime price growth, putting pressure on investment yields. Between Q1 2007 and Q1 2015, both annual capital and rental growth averaged 3% per annum (figure 4). However, since Q1 2015 prime capital values averaged 4.1% annual growth. Prime rental growth has remained relatively flat over the same time period. Safe haven investment flows into luxury property markets and lacklustre growth in earnings have underpinned these market trends respectively.
Cape Town leads the rankings with rents rising by 5.9% in the year to Q1 2017. Growth has been underpinned by strong migration into Cape Town with potential buyers choosing to rent before committing to purchasing.
Prime rents in Nairobi fell by 6.2% in the 12 months to March. Budget cuts by international firms have hampered demand from expats for prime rental properties. Additionally, increased supply has helped to push prime rents lower.
Prime rents in London continue to bottom out with the annual rate of falls slowing to -4.9% to March 2017. Uncertainty in the sales market following a series of tax hikes has led to an increased supply of properties for rent. However, this trend is starting to ease as the sales market stabilises.
Some of the world's top financial centres have shown divergence in terms of the performance of prime rents. Annual rental values fell in New York (1.2%) and Singapore (2.3%) whereas Zurich and Hong Kong recorded a rise year-on-year of 5.1% and 0.6% respectively over the year to March 2017.
Global economic sentiment remains cautiously upbeat. The latest indicators show low unemployment in the US, positive economic growth in every European country (the first time since the global financial crisis) and the growth rate in Asia remains robust. This may spur additional business investment, increased relocation budgets and ultimately an increase in demand for rental accommodation around the world.