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UK Hotel Investment Sales Slipped to £2 Billion Last Year

Bounce Back in Final Quarter Suggests Market Is Picking Up, Knight Frank Reports
The Hoxton Shoreditch formed part of a major sale in the final quarter. (CoStar)
The Hoxton Shoreditch formed part of a major sale in the final quarter. (CoStar)
CoStar News
January 8, 2024 | 9:34 AM

There were £2 billion of UK hotel transactions recorded in 2023, according to Knight Frank.

KF said the final quarter was the strongest quarter of the year for investment into the sector with £615 million of deals, representing 31% of the total annual investment activity.

Knight Frank said it anticipates this "encouraging increase" in investor activity at the end of 2023 will continue to build momentum through 2024, with investor demand, a narrowing of seller versus buyer expectations together abd possible interest rate stabilisation, or even cuts, all likely to help.

Despite a promising recovery in the opening months of 2023, the rising cost of debt, higher operational costs and a pricing mismatchprice expectations all contributed to a decline in investment activity overall.

Total annual investment volume declined for the third consecutive year, down by 37% on the previous year and 57% lower than the 10-year average. Excluding the COVID-impacted year of 2020, investment levels were at their lowest since 2012.

KF says the UK hotel market remains one of the most liquid hotel markets and continues to appeal to overseas investors seeking to increase their exposure to the sector. Foreign investment in 2023 totalled over £760 million, 39% of the total deal volume. Activity from continental European investors recorded a rise of 40% in 2023 to over £350 million, while capital sourced from the Middle Eastern and Asia also lifted.

The first quarter of the year accounted for 29% of total annual investment, or £570 million of transactions. KF said there was a significant reduction in investment during the second and third quarters, and the pool of buyers was restricted to "mostly experienced hotel owners, high-net-worth individuals and family offices seeking long-term investment opportunities, and those private equity players already with a standing in the market". These investors accounted for over 70% of the total annual investment volume.

In fourth quarter 2023, the sale of the two Hoxton hotels to Archer Hotel Capital for £215 million, was a significant contributor to the quarter’s investment. Demand for high-quality London hotel assets with strong brand recognition, combined with the capital’s ongoing recovery in hotel trading performance, has seen its hotel values per room increase by 22% year-on-year.

Hotel development transactions, while fewer than historical volumes, have seen investors capitalise on the structural shift taking place in the office market, to repurpose the buildings or redevelop the sites for hotel use. Two examples include Dalata’s purchase of 28 St Andrew’s Square in Edinburgh, to build a new 153-room Clayton Hotel, and Whitbread’s acquisition of New London House. With planning policies supporting the repurposing of offices, KF says investors are set to seek out opportunities in both London and key regional city centre destinations.

Knight Frank anticipates more assets coming to market, fuelled by an increase in "funder-led pressures, limited refinancing options, fund maturity, under-invested assets with low EPC ratings and more distressed asset sales". The potential for greater portfolio activity also exists as market conditions stabilise, with a possible early general election and improved clarity over when interest rates might start to fall.

Henry Jackson, partner and head of hotel agency at Knight Frank, said in a statement: “We have seen an encouraging uptick in investor activity at the end of 2023, with demand for London hotel assets particularly positive. Geopolitical tensions have potential to limit overseas capital flows, and the upcoming UK and US elections are likely to weigh in on investment decisions.

“Yet, 2024 is expected to be a pivotal year, we anticipate that with the higher yields associated with operational real estate and the living sector driving an increasing allocation of capital, hotel investment will recover at a more buoyant pace as the year progresses. Hotel property continues to offer value and diversification of risk, and with hotel yields stabilising and trading expected to maintain its momentum despite low economic growth forecast, we envisage a greater volume of diversified capital to be deployed into the sector in 2024.”

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