Posted on December 1st, 2009 by steve
Institutional investors are deserting the commercial property sector to pump hundreds of millions in to student housing investments.
Fund managers see student letting as more stable than commercial letting as the double risk of offering incentives to tenants and the chance a tenant may go out of business do not apply to students.
HMO landlords under pressure
Private student landlords are coming under pressure from two sides now – councils stepping up regulatory requirements and licensing costs on HMOs (houses in multiple occupation) and big corporate landlords with the financial clout to house hundreds of students in university towns and cities.
The move by institutional investors is confirmed by the UK’s largest student room provider UNITE, a public listed company that has £325 million to invest in the sector – with £133 million already raised by institutions with another £23 million pledged.
The company also said like-for-like rental growth increased to 9.7% between July 1 and November 18 2009.
Students pay corporates millions in rent
UNITE has a portfolio of student accommodation valued at £877 million at the end of September, and this is expected to grow to more than £1 billion. The company houses 39,000 students in 126 properties in 33 towns and cities across the UK.
Another large student housing investor, University Partnerships Programme (UPP) has signed off a £115 million student housing deal with the University of Nottingham.
UPP has committed to refurbishing 850 rooms, providing students with affordable, high quality accommodation.
This major deal follows UPP’s recent £133m transaction with the University of Exeter.
Through these two transactions, UPP has put £250 million of new private investment, including institutional funds, into the higher education sector in less than six weeks.
UPP expects to provide accommodation for 35,000 students by 2012. Currently, UPP has 18,000 rooms for students paying £85 million a year in rent.
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