Retail Rents Remain Flat Across Key Indian
Cities
Aggregate APAC
rental index edges up; fast fashion and F&B to drive demand in India
by Mr. Pankaj Renjhen, JLL India
Retail rents for the most expensive locations in
shopping centres remained relatively stable in 1Q17, with the aggregate Asia
Pacific retail rental index edging up by 0.4% q-o-q. Of the 18 featured
markets, almost all markets – including most sub-markets of Indian cities –
recorded flat rents. Marginal appreciation of 0.5-1.5% q-o-q was
recorded in select sub-markets of Delhi-NCR and Mumbai.
Of the four Indian cities featured in the APAC study,
three – Mumbai, Delhi and Bengaluru – figure among the top-15 markets while Chennai
sits outside of the top-15. Rentals of prime south areas were considered
for both Mumbai and Delhi while prime city rents were taken into account for
both Bengaluru and Chennai.
The dichotomy seen in Indian retail rents continued in
1Q17, with high quality shopping centres continuing to outperform their average
counterparts. The former also continue to attract foreign retailers. For e.g.,
Scotch & Soda, a leading Dutch brand, made its debut in India in 1Q17 with
a store each in Delhi and Mumbai.
Other international retailers such as H&M, Gap and
Marks & Spencer continue to remain in expansion mode, enticed by the
country’s strong long-term prospects. Going forward, single-brand retailers
(mainly fast fashion) and F&B operators are expected to be the primary
drivers of demand in the country’s retail markets.
Another trend over recent years in India has been the
changing preference of several retailers towards the revenue-sharing model
instead of the older fixed-rent model. Revenue-sharing models typically
followed by malls place different retailer categories in different brackets,
for e.g., 12-25% for F&B tenants; 9-18% for vanilla spaces; 7-9% for anchor
tenants; 3.5-4.5% for hypermarkets and 3-3.5% for electronics’ retailers.
Asia Pacific Shopping Centre Rents, 1Q17
(Source: JLL)
Rents considered here are average net face rents for
prime level locations in the best prime shopping centres and on a net leasable
area basis. Net face rents are calculated excluding the tenant outgoing costs
and landlord incentives are not taken into account. The most expensive
locations in shopping centres can garner rents in excess of three or four times
that of the average mall level.
Limited available space due to strong demand and a
lack of new additions in the most expensive and central locations contribute
greatly to the rental gap. A higher level of sales activity and increased brand
exposure are core reasons retailers seek those locations.
About the author
Mr. Pankaj Renjhen, Managing Director - Retail Services, JLL India
For media contact
Arun Chitnis
Head - Corporate Communications & Media Relations
JLL India
Level 6, Amar Avinash Corporate Plaza
Bund Garden Road,
Pune 411001.
Tel: (020) 40196100 Fax: (020) 40196101
Mob: 91 9657129999
Website: www.joneslanglasalle.co.in
Blog: www.joneslanglasalleblog.com/realestatecompass
Arun Chitnis
Head - Corporate Communications & Media Relations
JLL India
Level 6, Amar Avinash Corporate Plaza
Bund Garden Road,
Pune 411001.
Tel: (020) 40196100 Fax: (020) 40196101
Mob: 91 9657129999
Website: www.joneslanglasalle.co.in
Blog: www.joneslanglasalleblog.com/realestatecompass
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