Bubble talk: is Dublin’s property rally different this time?

Undersupply, cash bids, real estate trusts...can we really be here again?

Central Park in south Dublin which was acquired by Green Reit and Kennedy Wilson earlier this year. Photograph: Alan Betson /THE IRISH TIMES
Central Park in south Dublin which was acquired by Green Reit and Kennedy Wilson earlier this year. Photograph: Alan Betson /THE IRISH TIMES

Charles O’Rourke reckons it’s different this time as he jumps into the real estate game. The 81-year-old retiree says he took “massive” losses on his bank stocks when Ireland’s financial system melted down in 2008.

Now he's joined billionaires George Soros and John Paulson in acquiring shares in one of the real estate investment trusts buying property in the Irish capital, Dublin.

For Irish property prices, “there’s only one way and that’s up,” O’Rourke said outside a meeting for investors in Dublin-based Green REIT, the first Irish company to take advantage of laws introduced in 2013 that enabled Irish companies to become REITs.

Such sentiments carry echoes of the bubble era, when a belief that prices could never fall helped fuel a boom that ended in the worst real estate crash in western Europe. As the race for Dublin property reaches a frenzy not seen since the market collapsed, Brendan McDonagh, chief executive of Nama, said this month it would be “no harm” if commercial real estate gains leveled off. Prices rose the most since 2006 in the first quarter.

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“The market is overbought,” said Rogier Quirijns, who helps oversee $49 billion of assets at Cohen and Steers including shares in Hibernia REIT. “This is not a bubble, just some overheating.”

In the wake of the crash, Irish commercial property values fell two-thirds between 2007 and 2012, while yields rose to 7.5 per cent from 3.75 per cent. The lower prices and Ireland's improving economy encouraged investors from Elena Baturina, one of Russia's richest woman, to Donald Trump to scour Ireland for deals, picking up offices, castles, golf courses and hotels.

Buyers spent about €939 million on Irish commercial real estate in the first quarter, almost as much as they paid during the four years through 2012 combined, according to CBRE Group.

Last week, Blackstone Group agreed to buy a portfolio with a par value of €1.8 billion from the National Asset Management Agency.

Michael McAteer, a partner in corporate recovery and reorganisation at Grant Thornton in Dublin, was last year hired by a bank to sell a portfolio of real estate and loans with a value of about €70 million.

“When we opened all of the envelopes, we counted €1.7 billion of cash bids on the table,” he said, declining to name the eventual buyer.

Commercial real estate prices rose 5 per cent in the first quarter, according to Investment Property Databank Ltd. The yield on the best Dublin offices fell to 5 percent in May from 6.5 per cent a year earlier.

While this is similar to Amsterdam, Oslo and Helsinki, those cities are “more stable with better rental growth prospects,” Quirijns said. Dublin yields should be closer to those of cities such as Rome and Barcelona, which are over 6 per cent, he said. Irish yields are now around their historical average, according to CBRE.

McDonagh last week told a Dublin conference he would be concerned if yields continue to fall. “Yields have compressed hugely,” said McDonagh, who is selling off €72 billion of toxic real estate assets the agency purged from the Irish banking system in 2009. “Dublin is not London.” About 14 per cent of Dublin office space remains vacant. While office rents have risen by a third since 2011, they’re still about 45 per cent below peak levels in 2006.

But many investors are betting that a recovering economy will boost rents, raising yields. "It'll be hard to make bad investments in Irish real estate at this point in the cycle," said Michael Shaoul, chairman of Marketfield Asset Management LLC, which owns shares in Green and Hibernia. "Timing tends to be everything".

O'Rourke, the Green REIT shareholder, agrees even after his losses on lenders including Bank of Ireland and Anglo Irish Bank in the crash. The Irish index of financial stocks, the Iseq, is still 98 per cent below its 2007 peak.

O’Rourke, wearing a tweed jacket over his checked shirt, described himself as a small shareholder and described the Green investment as a chance to “dip my toe” into property. “What about all the American companies flooding in here buying it, have they got it wrong?” he said. “No. It’s on the up. I wouldn’t be investing otherwise.”