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As new tax laws come into affect next month it will be interesting to see if the hype of a mass exodus of investment bakers will unfold. With highly-paid bankers being forced to pay the highest tax and social costs, with a one-off bonus levy and 50 per cent income tax rate, companies will strongly be weighting up what is more important - satisfied skilled employees or a world class location.

 

Some employers are trying to find alternative rewards to big bonuses such as tax-free pensions through the Employer Financed Retirement Benefit Scheme (EFRBS) although others such as West End-based company, Shore Capital, are already upping sticks and plan to move to Guernsey by the end of this month. If mass departures from the world financial centre do transpire we may sadly see a rise in the current falling availability rates in both the City and West End markets.

 

E8 is GrE8t!

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In our quest to discover the latest office gossip, the London Offices team has been out site visiting in Hackney, home of the über-trendy.

 

Here we discovered that just like other areas of east London, things are looking up for the Borough. The majority of large office buildings are located around historic Town Hall in Hackney's centre.

 

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The council has invested some serious dosh in what have turned out to be rather attractive buildings.ReadingLane.JPGAlthough the council seems to occupy the majority of buildings in the over 5,000 sq ft category, there's a booming trade in small, quirky spaces. Artists, designers and photographers have flocked to this area in recent years to make the most of Hackney's low rents and relative proximity to the more expensive Hoxton and Shoreditch. We found numerous buildings offering small units on short-term leases. London Fields Studios and Northside Studios are just two such examples.

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northside studios.BMPThose of you who subscribe to EGi will find more information on the delights of E8 online as London Offices has expanded its monitored-area to bring you the latest on our ever-growing capital.

CBRE top of the list at Q4 breakfast briefing

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There was a good turn out at the LOMA breakfast briefing yesterday morning and it was good to see both familiar and new faces attending.

 

CBRE was top of the table for 2009 taking a 23% market share.

For the full report, including information on take up, supply, asking rents and construction please click here: http://www.egi.co.uk/lomarketanalysis.htm 

For a brief summary and market overview there is a video hosted online: http://www.egi.co.uk/Articles/Article.aspx?liArticleID=712468&NavigationID=464 

Thank you to all that attended and we look forward to seeing you in April for the Q1 2010 briefing.

A solution to vacant property

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If you're sick of apartments the size of postage stamps and through-the-roof rent, you might want to consider becoming a property guardian. Once signed up to a scheme, you will be designated a new home from the vast array of vacant commercial and residential properties across London. Or perhaps you'd prefer a disused church or pub? Either way, you could be paying as little as £60 per week. If only the Gherkin were vacant...

To share you're thoughts on this go here.

Happy Christmas everyone

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happy christmas.jpgSo we are at the end of another hard year, the first snow flakes have fallen and most of us our winding down for a well earned few days off to enjoy the festivities that this time of year brings.


Here are some of the highlights of what 2009 has meant to the property market:


Decline in overseas lenders adds to government headache


Credit crunch bite worse than its bark as banks bite off more than they can chew


UK economy hit with £3.5 billion snowball


Voids soar in latest agency figures


A MAN-made disaster. Not if Lehman Brothers had been Lehman Sisters!


Save your best till last OR offload now to stay afloat?


London toppled by Tokyo


The only way is up, for the Heron Tower at least.


News to be thin on the ground at MIPIM

 
...Toppled by Tokyo, and the Big Apple is next


Students advised "be prepared" as turbulent times hit recruitment market


Desperate times call for desperate measures


On show - law firms cruise into property event on wave of banking woes


Rent correction prompts surge in viewings


U.S Bailout a sight for sore eyes


Fire breaks out near Holborn


Surge in home working


Cheap booze drys up at Diageo


The Shard - A view as far as the eye can see, well almost.


Blow for AIG as landmark property is renamed


Tax increases could turn a trickle into a flood


LandSec chief serves cup of caution for breakfast


More women to fill the boardroom

 
Sir Alan's all go for Bishopsgate


Property firms still collapsing


UK market hit by loans


Fountains and Gasholders to front Kings Cross regeneration


Heron Tower aliens to feng shui traditions

 
FA opt for stadium home


Wires crossed! Can a £15.9 billion project be untangled?

 
Full buckets for EGi research


Mammoth property deal wobbles - Coeur Defense

 
Kuwait's twister nears completion

 
Kuala Lumpur all huggable over Intermark development


For sale, at the right price!! Middle East close on British Land?


Nomura art a breath of fresh air for former Lehmanites


Has the cost of your munch been affected by the crunch?


The 'Shards Of Glass' makes an early arrival


Hit for 6. Or is it 4? Nomura completes City deal


33 story gloom. Will Lehman curse be lifted?


Going for gold: Shell Centre promotes Hasbro venture


Gas holder 8: Architectural Abomination or Design Delight?


More bad news: Unemployment hits new high


Hasty approach - Investors consider speculative sites as stock supply runs dry


London loses property investment crown


Tenants face limited options as grade A dry's up


More go Swiss but motives change


Howdy Partner, Monmouth Dean set to roll into Midtown


Peak a boo. West End office opens today


A Wapping redevelopment for News International


Milton Gate set for Spanish purchase


Debt ridden Dubai rocks world markets


Milton Gate set for Spanish purchase


Debt ridden Dubai rocks world markets


Milton Gate deal is off!!


Eviction notice .... Last ditch raid on the City

 
Unstable ground, £1.9 billion rate bombshell set to knock London businesses off their feet.

 
Say Goodbye to the Naughty Noughties - Welcome to the Lean (and probably Mean) Teens

The team at London Offices would like to wish you all a very merry Christmas and we hope you have a successful and Happy New Year.

With Christmas time fast approaching and the end of another decade finally in sight, it is time to cast our minds back to what has happened over the past ten years and what lies ahead for the next few.

Justin A. Urquhart Stewart, Director of Seven Investment Management Limited, provides an interesting analogy of our time through the so called "naughty noughties" where financial, consumer and property excess exploded with catastrophic consequences, and what is in store for the "lean, mean teens" where financial regulation seems to be the name of the game.

It certainly makes interesting reading: click here


 

Ho Ho Ho - Researchers out for Christmas lunch

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So last night was the research teams Christmas party.


A fine meal (despite the lack of pistachio ice cream) at the Villandy in Holborn started of the festivities while the snow fell from the skies.

The entire research team turned out for the occasion in festive spirits. After polishing off three courses of Christmas grub and several glasses of vino, the team headed for the Ship tavern to carry on the party atmosphere.


Have you had an unforgettable Christmas do? Where was it, and what made it Christmassy for you?

Deals due for Q4 2009 LOMA Report

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loma.jpgDeals are now due for the Q4 2009 London Office Market Analysis report.

In order for your agency to receive the credit deserved and the LO team to update your disposals and acquisitions in time please submit any disposals or acquisitions your agency has completed in Q4 2009 ASAP to andrew.heard@egi.co.uk.

The report will be finalised in the first week of January and the breakfast briefing will be taking place on Thursday 28th January with the report available online and in the EG on Saturday 30th January.

Eviction notice .... Last ditch raid on the City

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Yesterday's pre-budget report carried a very unwelcome pre-xmas message for City bankers, identifying the new staggering 70% tax on bonuses.

A one off 50% tax on bonuses will combine with income tax and national insurance to devour more than two third of every discretionary bonus awarded in the Square Mile between now and April.

The tax which falls on payouts above £25,000 is likely to affect upwards of 20,000 bankers. The 50% is to be paid by the bank and not the individual.

Tax experts are warning that a clampdown of this level could cause an exodus of non-domiciled executives to other financial centres like Singapore and Geneva, stripping the UK of its talent.


The treasury is also planning a crack down on any banks trying to get around the measure, by hiking base salaries  in the short term, imposing penalties on any culprits.

Stuart Fraser, policy chairman at the City of London Corporation, said: "An excessively punitive approach towards remuneration will benefit nobody. A broad brush taxation policy risks encouraging the 250 overseas banks based in the City to reconsider their commitment to the UK."

Angela Knight of the British Bankers' Association said: "Viewed from the outside, London may well now look like a significantly less attractive place to build a business."

To access a forum on this topic please click here.

Debt ridden Dubai rocks world markets

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Burj Dubai.jpgThe European stock markets took a hit yesterday after fears surrounding Dubai's debt problems spread. The FTSE 100 index suffered its worst one-day hit since March falling by 3.2% and banking shares took a battering as investors worried about their exposure to the debt-laden emirate, £48 billion in debt to be precise. 


Almost £14billion was wiped off the value of Britain's biggest banks yesterday as the financial crisis in Dubai sent shockwaves around the world. Investors were further spooked by reports Dubai's neighbour Abu Dhabi will not step in to help this time round. Speculation that European banks are exposed to roughly half of Dubai World's debts caused their shares to collapse.


But what will these debt fears mean for London property?


Property investors and brokers are talking up the prospect that the sale of financial investment firm Istithmar's international property, could raise hundreds of millions of pounds.


Dubai World's investment arm has investments in Adelphi on the Strand and the Grand Buildings in Trafalgar Square, in London.


Istithmar sold two developments in the West End last month to Great Portland Estates for much less than it paid for them two years ago.

 
It is thought that it will retain a share of the profits in the buildings in Regent Street and near Oxford Street.

 
King Sturge said prime international real estate was more likely to raise cash quickly than domestic assets and there would be a "feeding frenzy" for some of the buildings in the West End.

UK Property investors are drawing up lists of the property assets of the various Dubai property arms. P&O, which DP World owns, has a £1bn global property portfolio.

 
A minority stake it has in Elizabeth House next to Waterloo station is for sale as is the majority ownership of Morgan Stanley real estate funds.

The crisis could also stem the flow of Middle Eastern investment into the capital, something which has been protecting the market by propping up investment sale volumes. But it would be to soon to panic. Not all Western interests in the emirate will be affected and there is still the likelihood that Dubai will pull through this and return to growth.

We should wish it all the best, writes Allister Heath of City A.M., because if it fails, the lesson that many in the Middle East will draw from the crisis is that openness to foreigners, peace and trade don't work. The only winners then would be the extremists - and then we would all be in real trouble.

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