But slowdown shows signs of abating in Asia-Pacific
MORE than half the world’s most expensive shopping streets have seen prime retail rents slump in 2009 – marking the biggest fall in retail rents in 24 years – a recent report from real estate adviser Cushman & Wakefield showed. Some 54 per cent of the 274 main streets across 60 countries monitored by Cushman & Wakefield saw prime rents fall in 2009.
New York’s Fifth Avenue remained the world’s most expensive street, though prime rents dropped 8.1 per cent to US$1,700 per square foot per year, Cushman & Wakefield said. Fifth Avenue has been the world’s most expensive street for the last eight years. It was followed by Hong Kong’s Causeway Bay, which showed a 15.1 per cent fall in rents to US$1,525 per square foot per year, while rents in Paris’ Avenue des Champs Elysees were static at US$1,009.
Cushman & Wakefield’s global head of retail, John Strachan, said the past year was one of the most difficult for the sector, with consumer spending and retail sales down in many markets.
‘The good news, however, is that the worst is almost certainly now behind us,’ Mr Strachan said in a statement, adding the annual survey’s findings represented the biggest global fall in retail rents in its 24-year history. ‘There will undoubtedly be some markets which will continue to be affected over the next year but we expect to see a greater number move back into positive territory,’ he said. Continue reading
