Schroder European Real Estate Investment Trust...Q3 2018. Design under way Lease surrender premium...
Transcript of Schroder European Real Estate Investment Trust...Q3 2018. Design under way Lease surrender premium...
Jeff O’Dwyer: SEREIT Manager Andrew MacDonald: Head of Real Estate Finance
12 June 2018
Schroder European Real Estate Investment Trust Half-year results presentation - 2018
Marketing material for professional investors and advisers only.
Contents page
1
01 Highlights
02 Portfolio and asset management
03 Markets
04 Financial highlights
05 Summary
Highlights
The European growth city strategy Achieved full investment, target dividend in growing European cities
3
Investment Finance Growth strategy European markets
• Full investment – c.€20m Dutch
data centre acquisition at 10% NIY
taking portfolio to c. €237m1
• 85% of portfolio located in
fastest growing cities across 10
investments in western Europe
• Occupancy over 97%, 6.7 yrs lease
length
• 6 new lettings / re-gears achieved
across c. 5,000 sqm and €3.9m
lease surrender premium
• Contracted sale of two retail
investments at a 10% premium to
Dec 2017 value
• Profit increased 157% driven
by valuation and net income
• EPRA earnings grown to
€6.5m – increased from €2.6m
for 2017 interim period
• Quarterly dividend 1.85 cents
p.s., fully covered by net income
• 4.9% NAV increase to
€187.1m (139.9 cents p.s)
• NAV total return of 6.1% over
six months to Mar 18
• 28% LTV at interest cost of
1.3% and duration of c. 6.4
years
• Markets: Broad based economic
recovery:
- GDP / sentiment improving
- Employment increasing
- Voids falling
- Rents increasing
- Price growth continues
- Modest development pipeline
• Megatrends: Urbanisation,
infrastructure, demographic
change
• Market presence: Deep local
market knowledge and access of
Schroder European teams
Dividend: Achieved IPO target of
5.5% on Euro IPO issue price2
Pipeline: Mixture of single asset and
portfolio opportunities to redeploy
Casino proceeds
Accretive growth: Grow portfolio
through earnings enhancing
acquisitions
Scale benefits: Improves
diversification, liquidity and cost
economies
Past performance is not a guide to future performance and may not be repeated. The value of investments and the income from them may go down as
well as up and investors may not get back the amounts originally invested. Source: Schroders, June 2018 1Portfolio market value is based on 31 March 2018. 2Yield based on IPO issue price in Euro
Portfolio and asset management
Portfolio evolution Invested €237m1 across 10 assets in France, Germany, Spain and Neth.
Source: Schroders, June 2018. For illustrative purposes only and should not be viewed as a recommendation to buy or sell. 1Portfolio market value is based on 31 March 2018 including Rennes & Biarritz at contracted option price
5
Jan 2016
€0 €237m1
2018
Retail Warehouse
Berlin, Germany
Office
Stuttgart, Germany
Retail
Frankfurt, Germany
Retail
Rennes, France
Office
Paris, France
Office
St. Cloud, Paris,
France
Retail
Biarritz, France
Office
Hamburg, Germany
Retail
Seville, Spain
Data centre / mixed use
Apeldoorn,
Netherlands
Portfolio overview Ten institutional grade assets located in target growth markets
6 Source: Schroders, June 2018. Data as of 31 March 2018. For illustrative purposes only and should not be viewed as a recommendation to buy or sell.
Percentages in charts based on value
City Country Sector Valuation No.
Tenants
Contracted
rents
WAULT to
expiry
Void
€m €m Yrs %
Paris (B-B) France Office 42.1 4 2.4 3.1
Paris (SC) France Office 35.2 11 3.5 5.0 3%
Biarritz France Retail 23.9 9 1.3 9.9 1%
Rennes France Retail 20.9 1 0.9 10.2
France Subtotal 122.1 25 8.0 5.8 1%
Berlin Germany Retail 26.0 1 1.6 7.8
Hamburg Germany Office 16.0 18 0.5 2.8 31%
Stuttgart Germany Office 15.6 4 0.8 7.6 0%
Frankfurt Germany Retail 11.5 6 0.7 6.3
Germany Subtotal 69.0 29 3.7 6.7 7%
Seville Spain Retail 26.0 47 2.0 7.6 4%
Apeldoorn Netherlands Mixed 20.2 1 2.4 8.8
Total Portfolio 237.3 102 16.1 6.7 3%
46%
46%
8%
Office Retail Mixed
Sector allocation
51% 29%
11%
9%
France Germany Spain Netherlands
Country allocation
18%
15%
11%
11% 10%
9%
9%
7% 7%
5%
Paris B-B) Paris (SC) Berlin Seville
Biarritz Apeldoorn Rennes Hamburg
Stuttgart Frankfurt
Property allocation
Management of breaks and lease expiries Asset business plans being executed
7
Source: Schroders, June 2018. Data as of 31 March 2018. Forecast risk warning: Please see the information slide at the end of this presentation.
For illustrative purposes only and should not be viewed as a recommendation to buy or sell.
Lease expiry to earliest termination
Transactions over the period Data centre purchase / Sale of retail
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Apeldoorn, The Netherlands purchase
Purchase Price c. €20m / €835 psm / 10% NIY
Location Apeldoorn – central Netherlands c. 1 hour drive east of Amsterdam
Description
• Data centre / mixed use investment built in 1970 and refurbished in 06 / 15
• Strategic location in the Netherlands (central, strong ICT labour pool)
• Long term (c.9 years) indexed linked income to KPN
• Attractive net initial yield of approximately 10% and a capital value per sqm
substantially less than replacement cost
• Large site area of over 3.5 hectares. Immediate surrounds include a mixture of
medium density residential, light industrial, retail and offices
Strategy Re-gear lease Longer term alternate use
Source: Schroders, June 2018. Stocks shown are for illustrative purposes only and should not be viewed as a recommendation to buy or sell.
Rennes & Biarritz, French retail sale
Sale Price 10% premium to last independent valuation
Locations Casino hypermarkets in Rennes and Biarritz, France
Description
• Purchase in June 2016 of two grocery anchored retail investments at a net initial
yield of 5%
• Long term lease provided stable income with limited active asset management
• JV partner (Casino Group) exercised purchase option at a strike price reflecting a
10% premium to last independent valuation
Strategy Re-deploy proceeds into higher yielding investments that enhance diversification
Asset management initiatives
Saint Cloud Office Paris,
France
• Re-gearing of c.25% of the office area with the merging of Fila Assistance
and Garantie Assistance. Revised lease reflects a 4/6/9 year term at an
annual rent 13% above ERV • Commencement of renovation of lift lobbies, with completion due H2 2018
Boulogne-
Billancourt Office
Paris,
France • New lease for communications antenna on a 12 year term
City Sud Office Hamburg,
Germany
• Conclusion of a €3.9m lease surrender premium with City BKK,
representing 4.7 years of annual rent
Metromar Retail Seville,
Spain
• Removed under-performing restaurant and added a new burger specialist • Advancing scope of works that will improve centres signage, wayfaring,
lighting and general vibrancy • Finalised new lease with leisure specialist Urban Planet on an historically
non income producing space totalling 1,200 sqm
2017/18 asset management Successful delivery increased occupancy and rental income
9
Source: Schroders, June 2018. For illustrative purposes only and should not be viewed as a recommendation to buy or sell.
Asset Management SEREIT is due to deliver short, medium and long-term opportunities
10
St Cloud (Paris) – re-gearing / transport Metromar – improving vibrancy / tenancy mix
2018 2021 2022/23 2022
Improve centres signage,
wayfaring, lighting and
vibrancy at Metromar due
Q3 2018. Design under way
Lease surrender premium
regarding City BKK in
Hamburg (5,468 sqm)
completed
Refurbishment program for
lift lobbies at Boulogne
Billancourt due end Q2 2018
Completion of key lettings –
Urban Planet and ex.
Massimo Dutti at Metromar
Stuttgart to benefit from
improved infrastructure from
the completion of
‘Stuttgarter 21’
Alten expiry – target re-gear
prior (6,861 sqm) at
Boulogne Billancourt
2025+
2025 expiry of initial term at
Hornbach, Berlin - 4 hectare
site with alternate use
potential
Grand Paris Transport
improvements St Cloud, Paris
Hamburg – City BKK lease surrender Berlin – 4 hectares in growth corridor
Source: Schroders, June 2018. Forecast risk warning: Please see the information slide at the end of this presentation.
Re-development potential at
Boulogne Billancopurt
Continental European investment Senior team
11
Support from legal, accounting, operations, risk and client servicing teams based
in London, Jersey and Luxembourg
Nordics
Eva Granlund
Local Asset Management Teams
Duncan Owen Global Head of Real Estate
France Thomas Guyot
Switzerland
Roger Hennig
Germany Nils Heetmeyer
Mark Callender
Head of Real Estate Research
Andrew MacDonald
Head of Real Estate Finance
Philipp Ellebracht
Head of Real Estate Product, Europe
Offices Retail Industrial
Italy Svicom
Jeff O’Dwyer
Pan European Fund Manager
Source: Schroders, June 2018.
Markets
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No
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Co
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UK
Mad
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Seville
Barc
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Hels
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Ham
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Germ
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Pari
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Fra
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Bru
ssels
Belg
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Milan
Ro
me
Italy
Focus on growth – cities not countries Major cities and regions predicted faster economic growth
Source: Oxford Economics, Schroders. April 2018. For illustrative purposes only and should not be viewed as a recommendation to buy or sell.
The forecast should be regarded as illustrative of trends. Actual figures will differ from forecasts. Please refer to Important Information regarding forecasts
Average GDP Growth 2018-2022, % pa
13
SEREIT’s Investment Universe SEREIT’s portfolio vs. Investment Universe
Exposure to higher GDP growth, winning centres SEREIT portfolio located in highest growth regions of Western Europe
14
Source: Oxford Economics, Schroders. May 2018 -Total of 10 assets. Investment universe consisting of 845 NUTS3 regions in countries shown on map. Data based on Oxford Economics’ GDP growth
forecasts end-2017–end 2022 as at March 2018.
Outer ring shows SEREITs
direct exposure as a
% of value
51%
26%
19%
3%
85%
15%
Fastest Growing Regions
Second Quartile
Third Quartile
Slowest Growing Regions
Inner ring
shows average
for investment
universe
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1.0
1.5
2.0
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3.0
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1993
1995
1997
1999
2001
2003
2005
2007
2009
2011
2013
2015
2017
2019
2021
Germany
France
Italy
Spain
Benelux
Nordic
Net Additions
(lhs)
2.0
4.0
6.0
8.0
10.0
12.0
14.0
2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 2017 2019 2021
Germany France Italy
Netherlands Sweden
6065707580859095
100105110115120
Jan
-07
Jul-
07
Jan
-08
Jul-
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Jan
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-16
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-17
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-18
EU28 Eurozone
European market fundamentals remain supportive Key highlights
15
Source: European Commission, Oxford Economics, JLL, PMA, Schroders. May 2018.
Note forecasts should be regarded as illustrative of trends. Actual figures will differ from forecasts. See Important Information regarding forecasts.
Countries mentioned for illustrative purposes only and not a recommendation to buy or sell.
100 = long-term average
Economic sentiment in the EU & Eurozone
ILO-Unemployment rates (%)
Take-up, 12m rolling Totals, ‘000 sq m
Office completions, million sq m
Forecast
Net-Additions (% of Stock)
Office completions & net additions
Robust Eurozone backdrop
Ongoing recovery, strong
sentiment and economic
growth
Unemployment falling –
strong growth in office
employment, increasing
consumer spending
Supply level moderate with
low vacancy
Ongoing positive rental
growth forecasts
No threat from extreme
levels of debt
Yields low – but rational
Forecast
01,0002,0003,0004,0005,0006,0007,0008,0009,000
10,00011,00012,000 Sweden
Iberia
BeNeLux
Italy
UK and
IrelandFrance
Germany
Multiple investment opportunities Deploying capital and growing in line with strategy
16
Source: Schroders, June 2018. For illustrative purposes only and should not be viewed as a recommendation to buy or sell.
Opportunity Country Sector Pricing Yield Profile Comment
1
Logistics Warehouse
Status: In exclusivity. Signing
targetted June with completion
August
South west,
France Logistics €9m 6.8% Core
16,700 sqm facility let to a leading food
manufacturer expiring 2025. Located in
industrial area 50kms from Geneva and
110km from Lyon. Rack rented at €40/sqm
pa
2 Aubervilliers
Status: Final bids due end June
Paris district,
France
Light
Industrial €13m 5.5% Core+
Good urban light industrial location to the
north of Paris, c. 1km from Stade de France.
Mixed use location including residential
3
Creteil
Status: Under review
Paris district,
France Office €15m 5.75% Core+
Multi let office building located in the south
east of Paris and considered to be an
improving region with infrastructure
enhancements
4 Utrecht
Status: In exclusivity
Utrecht,
Netherlands
Light
Industrial €10m 6.9% Core+
Two light industrial assets located in and
around Utrecht. Multi tenanted with a
WAULB of c 8 years. Modern construction
having been developed in the last 10 years.
5
Venray
Status: In exclusivity
Venray/Venlo,
Netherlands Logistics €10m 6.0% Core
Long leased freehold logistics investment
located in the Venray/Venlo region – the
premier Dutch distribution location
Total c. €60m
Financial review
Financial highlights for 6 months to 31 March 2018
18
Interim profit grown by 157% to €10.8m
– Driven by valuation uplift, growth in rental income and Hamburg surrender premium
NAV increased by 4.9% to €187.1m (139.9 cents per share)
– NAV total return of 6.1%
EPRA earnings grown to €6.5m (4.8 cents per share)
– Increase from 2.0 cents p.s. for 2017 interim period and 3.2 cents p.s. for 6 months ending 30 Sept 2017
– Includes 1.4 cents per share in respect of surrender premium at Hamburg
Quarterly dividend of 1.85 cents p.a., achieving IPO dividend target of 5.5% yield on Euro IPO issue price
– Total dividends in respect of interim period of 3.7 cents p.s., representing 68% increase on prior interim period
and 23% increase on 6 months to 30 September 2018
– Dividend fully covered from net income
Overall LTV of 28% at a weighted average interest rate of 1.3% and a weighted duration of c. 7 years
Approximately €45m of investment capacity (including debt) post Casino supermarket sale in July
Past performance is not a guide to future performance and may not be repeated. Source: Schroders, June 2018 and www.XE.com
Source: Schroders, June 2018.
Real estate performance driving NAV and earnings growth
NAV movement for 6 months to 31 March 2018 6.1% NAV total return
19
Source: Schroders and www.xe.com. Numbers based on proportionally consolidated basis and therefore represent SEREITs share of joint ventures.
€m cps Comments
NAV as at 1 October 2017 178.3 133.3
Transaction costs of investments (1.3) (1.0) Transaction costs for Apeldoorn investment
Unrealised gain in real estate valuation 6.2 4.7
Largest movements were:
• Casino supermarkets: +€4.1m, reflecting the agreed sale
price, due to complete at end of July;
• St. Cloud, Paris: +€1.3m from lease regearing and
strengthening market
Capital Expenditure (0.1) (0.1) Capex at Seville and St. Cloud
EPRA earnings 6.5 4.9
Includes €1.9m positive impact on net income from receipt of
part of the surrender premium at the Hamburg asset.
Underlying EPRA earnings increased as portfolio has grown.
Non-cash items (0.5) (0.4) Amortisation of finance costs, change in fair value of interest
rate cap, deferred tax etc
Dividends paid (2.0) (1.5)
Only the dividend in respect of the Jul – Sept 2017 period is
recognised in the NAV movement. The Oct – Dec 2017 dividend
of €2.5m was paid post period end in April 2018.
NAV as at 31 March 2018 187.1 139.9
0
3
6
9
12
15
31-Mar-17 30-Sep-17 31-Mar-18
Paris - Boulogne Berlin Hamburg Stuttgart Frankfurt Rennes / Biarritz Paris - St. Cloud Seville Apeldoorn
€12.0m
Income statement Acquisitions and asset management generating income growth
20 Source: Schroders. June 2018. Numbers based on proportionally consolidated basis and therefore represent SEREIT’s share of joint ventures.
For illustrative purposes only and should not be viewed as a recommendation to buy or sell.
Growth in annualised gross rental income
6 mths to
31 Mar 2018 (€m)
6 mths to
30 Sept 2017 (€m)
6 mths to
31 Mar 2017 (€m)
Net rental and related income 6.7 6.5 4.9
Surrender Premium 2.4 0.0 0.0
Total Fees and Expenses (1.7) (1.7) (1.9)
Net finance costs (0.4) (0.4) (0.3)
Tax (0.5) (0.1) (0.1)
Underlying EPRA earnings 6.5 4.3 2.6
€million
€14.3m €16.1m
Past performance is not a guide to future performance and may not be repeated.
Fully covered dividend New investments driving dividend increase
21
Source: Schroders, June 2018. 1Yield based on the Euro equivalent of the issue price as at admission. This is a target only and there can be no guarantee that this target will be met.
– Dividend of 1.85 Euro cents per share declared in respect of quarter Jan – Mar 2018
– IPO target achieved - Represents annualised Euro dividend yield of 5.5% on Euro equivalent IPO issue price1
– Converted at Eur:GBP FX rate as at 31 Mar 2018, dividend equates to annualised 6.5% yield on GBP IPO issue price
of 100 pps
– Dividend approximately 100% covered from recurring income from portfolio
– Excludes the impact of receipt of €2.4 million in respect of part of Hamburg surrender premium
– Including the Hamburg surrender premium receipt the dividend is 172% covered from net income
– Progressive dividend policy, sustainable from recurring income
– Dividends in respect of the 6 month interim period total 3.7 Euro cents per share
– Compares to dividends of 3.0 Euro cents p.s. for 6 months to 30 Sept 2017 and 2.2 Euro cents p.a. for 6 months to
31 March 2017
– In exclusivity and negotiation on new investments to replace lost Casino income post 31 July sale
– Casino supermarket disposal will decrease net income by approximately €1.7m p.a. from August onwards
– Dividends declared in Euro and payable in Euro, GBP or Rand (for South African investors)
Loans summary as at 31 March 2018
Debt strategy
Debt financing Current borrowing rates accretive to income returns
22
1. LTV based on GAV of overall company. Source: Schroders, June 2018. Countries mentioned for illustrative purposes only and not a recommendation to buy or sell.
– Portfolio gearing capped at 35% LTV; loans targeted against assets where most accretive and may be up to 50% LTV
– 100% of interest rate exposure either fixed or capped; borrowing rates expected to remain low in Europe
– New loan drawn against St.Cloud office in December 2017 at an interest rate of 1.30% to finance Apeldoorn acquisition
– Eight of the ten assets have gearing against them; one Paris office and the Apeldoorn office are currently ungeared
– Casino supermarket sale will result in buyer taking over SEREIT’s share of the associated loan; reduces SEREIT LTV to 23%
– Different loan maturities to spread refinance risk
– Likely to draw further debt against future acquisitions, taking gearing towards 35% LTV
Loan Loan Amount LTV Maturity Interest Rate
Hamburg/Stuttgart €14.0m 48% June 2023 0.85%
Frankfurt / Berlin €16.5m 46% June 2026 1.31%
Casino Supermarkets €18.2m 45% July 2023 1.35%
Seville €11.7m 45% May 2024 1.76%
St. Cloud €13.0m 38% Dec 2024 1.30%
Total €73.4m 28%1 6.4 Years 1.31%
42%
42%
16%
France Germany Spain
37%
44%
19%
2023 2024 2026
Loans by country Loans by maturity
Summary and outlook
– High quality c. €235m portfolio located in growth cities and regions across France, Germany, Netherlands and Spain
– Strong income profile with over 97% occupancy and long term leases
– Investment and asset management activities and strong market have delivered growth in profits
– Annualised Euro dividend yield grown to 5.5% p.a. based on IPO issue price, driven by growth in net income
– Low cost, long duration debt financing at 28% LTV – accretive to income return
– Robust Eurozone economic backdrop; low unemployment and positive economic confidence
– Investor and occupier activity in target markets remains strong; high rental growth
– Megatrends (e.g. urbanisation, infrastructure investment) support long-term focus on growth cities
– Identified pipeline of assets covering single assets and portfolios for reinvestment of sale proceeds, c.€45m
– Targeting new investments to support growth ambitions and benefits such as diversification and liquidity
The Company investing in European growth cities Delivering investment performance; Well positioned for future growth
24
Source: Schroders, December 2017.
Schroder European Real Estate Investment Trust
Discrete yearly performance
25
Q1 2017–
Q1 20184
Q1 2016–
Q1 20174
Q1 2015–
Q1 20164
Q1 2014–
Q1 20154
Q1 2013–
Q1 20144
Share Price Total Return (GBP)1 7.1% 3.3% - - -
NAV Total Return (Euro)2 9.8% 2.1% - - -
NAV Total Return (converted to GBP)3 13.4% 9.4% - - -
Past performance is not a guide to future performance and may not be repeated. The value of investments and the income from them can
go down as well as up and you may not get back the amount originally invested. ¹Source: Schroders, Datastream, bid to bid price with net income reinvested in GBP.
²Source: Schroders, NAV to NAV (per share) plus dividends paid.
³Source: Schroders, NAV to NAV (per share) plus dividends paid. Converted into GBP. 4Performance data does not exist for periods before launch in December 2015.
Schroder European Real Estate Investment Trust – risk factors:
The trust may be concentrated in a limited number of geographical regions, industry sectors, markets and/or individual positions. This
may result in large changes in the value of the fund, both up or down, which may adversely impact the performance of the fund.
The Company may borrow money to invest in further investments, this is known as gearing. Gearing will increase returns if the value of
the assets purchased increase in value by more than the cost of borrowing, or reduce returns if they fail to do so.
The trust can be exposed to different currencies. Changes in foreign exchange rates could create losses.
The dividend yield is an estimate and is not guaranteed.
Appendices
Appendix 1 – Market research
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EU
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Very strong Eurozone economic sentiment Sentiment at mid-2007 peak levels and above long-term averages
Source: European Commission, Schroders, April 2018– last reading Mid-March 2018
For illustrative purposes only and should not be viewed as a recommendation to buy or sell.
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EU28 Eurozone
Economic Sentiment by country
Index. 100 = long-term average 100 = long-term average (Seasonally Adjusted Data)
Economic sentiment in the EU & Eurozone
28
2.0
4.0
6.0
8.0
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14.0
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2022
Germany France Italy Netherlands Sweden
1Source: PMA, Schroders. April 2018. 2Source: Oxford Economics, Schroders. April 2018
The forecast should be regarded as illustrative of trends. Actual figures will differ from forecasts. Please see the information slide at the end of this presentation.
Labour markets continue to recover Unemployment falling – strong growth in office employment
0.0% 2.5% 5.0% 7.5% 10.0% 12.5% 15.0% 17.5% 20.0%
London
Helsinki
Brussels
Barcelona
Vienna
Rotterdam
Manchester
Milan
Dusseldorf
Stuttgart
Lisbon
Paris
Copenhagen
Munich
Hamburg
Lyon
Madrid
Frankfurt
Cologne
Amsterdam
Oslo
Berlin
Stockholm
Luxembourg
Office employment: Forecast growth in absolute
employment between end-2017 to end-20221 ILO-Unemployment rates (%)2
29
European occupier activity remains high Broad based occupier demand
Source: JLL, Schroders. April 2018. Country figures based on major markets. For illustrative purposes only and should not be viewed as a recommendation to buy or sell.
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Iberia
BeNeLux
Italy
UK and Ireland
France
Germany
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Germany France Italy Spain Benelux Nordic Net Additions (lhs)
Office development remains subdued
Building activity supportive of rental growth
Source: PMA, Schroders. April 2018. Net-Additions for Europe ex. UK . Country figures based on major markets. For illustrative purposes only and should not be viewed as a recommendation to buy
or sell. Note forecasts should be regarded as illustrative of trends. Actual figures will differ from forecasts. See Important Information regarding forecasts.
Office completions,
million square metres
Forecast
Net-Additions (% of Stock)
31
32
Source: JLL, May 2018
*Paris, Brussels, Luxembourg and Lyon based on vacancy in newly completed stock
**Barcelona and Madrid estimated
For illustrative purposes only and should not be viewed as a recommendation to buy or sell.
Modern Grade A office space remains scarce Lack of new, grade A space creates opportunity for refurbishments
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
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Q1 2
018
Vacancy Rate Grade A Vacancy Rate
Appendix 2 – Portfolio information
SEREIT portfolio Paris office investment – Boulogne Billancourt
34
Source: Schroders, June 2018. Maps – http://maps.stamen.com. For illustrative purposes only and should not be viewed as a recommendation to buy or sell.
Opportunity Fully let office building with reversion potential
Location Jean Jaurès 221, 92100 Boulogne Billancourt (Paris), France
Tenure Freehold – co-ownership
Asset Description Established market in Paris’ Western Crescent
Good location within Boulogne-Billancourt
Metro line 9 and Paris ring road nearby
Built in 1989, flexible T-shaped floor plates (ca. 800 sqm)
100%-let to ALTEN, a technology consulting and engineering company
until 31 March 2021
WAULT 3.1 years (from 1/4/2018) and 3.1 years to break
Pricing €37.5m / NIY 5.7% / €5,522 psm
Current Value €42.1m as at 31 March 2018
Investment
Rationale
Medium duration lease term with a strong covenant tenant present in
the building since 1998 – provides time to consider refurbishment
Conservative rent level (€312 / ‘office’ sqm/pa) offering a good
alternative to La Défense in a more attractive environment
Area where people live and work; supply constrained
Boulogne-Billancourt is an established market (1.2m sqm of office
stock, the second largest market in the Western Crescent) with average
take-up over 100,000 sqm/pa
Potential to create value and significant reversion potential (c. 30%) by
redeveloping the property at lease expiry
SEREIT portfolio Berlin retail warehouse investment – Mariendorf
35 Source: Schroders, June 2018. Maps – http://maps.stamen.com. For illustrative purposes only and should not be viewed as a recommendation to buy or sell.
Opportunity Long let retail warehouse in a growing Berlin region
Location Großebeerenstraße 30, 12107 Berlin, Germany
Tenure Freehold
Asset Description DIY retail unit in Mariendorf, 10 km south of Berlin City Centre
Asset comprises 3 parts: a DIY unit, a garden centre and a trade counter, let to
Hornbach, with a total lettable area of 16,800 sqm
Urban location, surrounded by medium density residential and commercial
accommodation. A separately owned Aldi supermarket adjoins the site; small
potential residential site within ownership
Large site of over 4 hectares
Let to Hornbach Baumarkt AG until 2026
WAULT 7.8 years (from 1/4/2018) and 7.8 years to break
Pricing €24.25m / NIY 6.2% / €1,443 psm
Current Value €26.0m as at 31 March 2018
Investment
Rationale
Characteristics consistent with our house view of targeting institutional grade
real estate in growth cities
Hornbach Baumarkt is the one of the strongest DIY operators in Germany;
sector has witnessed some consolidation
Long income stream in defensive segment at an attractive cash yield
Land value is relatively high (c. 20-30% of value) underpinning residual value
Potential for residential conversion in the long run
Small residential site at the rear; opportunity to redevelop
Exploring potential to acquire Aldi supermarket alongside
SEREIT portfolio Hamburg office investment
36
Source: Schroders, June 2018. Maps – http://maps.stamen.com. For illustrative purposes only and should not be viewed as a recommendation to buy or sell.
Opportunity Fully let, multi tenanted office property on the edge Hamburg CBD
Location Hammerbrookstraße 94, 20097 Hamburg, Germany
Tenure Freehold
Asset Description Core office investment in Hamburg’s Centre South office sub-market. This
area continues to improve through new retail, residential and office
development; mixed use location
Good micro location, alongside public transport and main arterial roads.
Hammerbrook S-Bahn station (lines S3 & S31) located within 250m, one
stop to central station
Varied office sub-market, catering for private and public sector occupiers.
Increasingly become a back office location; rents at 50% discount to CBD
Modern asset built in 2005. Ground floor retail with strong convenience
offer with office space above
WAULT 2.8 years (from 1/4/2018) and 2.8 years to break
Pricing €14.4m / NIY 6.9% / €2,063 psm
Current Value €16.0m as at 31 March 2018
Investment
Rationale
Sub market is improving and increasingly becoming a place where
people want to live and work
Highly liquid lot size that appeals to both institutional and private
investors
High yielding investment with favourable unexpired lease term and an
acquisition price in line with replacement cost
Opportunity to re-gear head lease with BKK
SEREIT portfolio Stuttgart office investment
37
Source: Schroders, June 2018. Maps – http://maps.stamen.com. For illustrative purposes only and should not be viewed as a recommendation to buy or sell.
Opportunity Fully let, core office investment anchored by Government tenant
Location Neckarstrasse 121, 70190 Stuttgart, Germany
Tenure Freehold
Asset Description Core office investment centrally located in Stuttgart, the political, economic
and cultural centre of Baden-Württemberg, Germany’s third largest state by
population
Strong micro location close to central station and Schlossgarten park. The
sub-market has a range of government occupiers including various courts of
justice and ministries
Originally constructed in 1960 and comprehensively refurbished in 2005 with
a total lettable area of 5,832 sqm and parking for 71 cars
Efficient floor plate of c. 750 sqm, divisible in two for either cellular or open-
plan offices. Good specification.
Currently 100% occupied with the main tenant being the Federal State of
Baden-Württemberg (81%) with a lease expiry in July 2026
WAULT 7.6 years (from 1/4/2018) and 7.3 years to break
Pricing €14.4m / NIY 5.0% / €2,478 psm
Current Value €15.6m as at 31 March 2018
Investment
Rationale
Characteristics consistent with our house view of targeting institutional grade
real estate in growth cities
Stuttgart is one of Germany’s top 7 office markets; very low vacancy
Excellent covenant strength providing long term, secure cash yield
Highly liquid lot size that appeals to both institutional and private investors
SEREIT portfolio Frankfurt retail investment
38
Source: Schroders, June 2018. Maps – http://maps.stamen.com. For illustrative purposes only and should not be viewed as a recommendation to buy or sell.
Opportunity Multi let convenience retail centre anchored by Lidl supermarket, located
in a growing urban area of Frankfurt am Main
Location Lorscher Straße 41, 60489 Frankfurt/Rödelheim, Germany
Tenure Freehold
Asset Description Fully let, multi tenanedt convenience retail centre located in Rödelheim;
a growing suburb of Frankfurt am Main with good transport
connections and visibility to main highway
Built 2004 and modernised in 2015 to a high specification
4,525 sqm total rental space with more than 350 parking spaces. 1,600
sqm Lidl supermarket is considered to be the ideal size for new style
convenience/small basket retailing
All retail units have dedicated, secure delivery areas
Site area 8,097 sqm
WAULT 6.3 years (from 1/4/2018) and 6.3 years to break
Pricing €11.05m / NIY 5.6% / €2,478 psm
Current Value €11.45m as at 31 March 2018
Investment
Rationale
Well located, high quality building, catering for demand for
grocery/convenience stores from locals and commuters
Fully let with opportunity to change tenant mix and increase rental
income over the medium term
Income underpinned by c.11 year unexpired lease term with main
tenant Lidl
Plan to introduce drug store to improve footfall
SEREIT portfolio Paris (Saint Cloud) office investment
39
Source: Schroders, June 2018. Maps – http://maps.stamen.com. For illustrative purposes only and should not be viewed as a recommendation to buy or sell.
Opportunity Best premises in a large office complex at an extremely attractive price
Location Saint-Cloud, an upscale suburban city bordering Paris
Tenure / Built Freehold in a co-ownership / Built in the 1970s, well maintained since
Asset Description Ca. 15,800 sqm of office and storage areas located in ‘Les Bureaux de la
Colline’, a well maintained 65,000-sqm office complex;
Entire building E and the four highest floors in building D i.e. the best
premises in the complex: located near the main entrance with the best views
of Paris and over Parc de Saint-Cloud;
Office area 100% let to 12 tenants with very high historical occupancy ratio (>
90%) at a defensive average rent of €215/sqm/year, but with high service
charges;
Office floor areas range from 700 to 1,500 sqm;
Very good accessibility to the property by car (A13 in front of the building)
and good accessibility using public transport (tramway, metro and bus
stations nearby). Premises includes 303 car spaces
WAULT 5.0 years (from 1/4/2018) and 1.7 years to break
Pricing c. €30m i.e. €1,959/sqm and 9.5% NIY
Current Value €35.2m as at 31 March 2018
Investment
Rationale
Acquisition at a discount to conservative estimate of intrinsic / long term
value given special situation (sale before year end)
5 largest tenants of good covenant account for 70%+ of rental income;
Largest shareholding stake in the co-ownership by far (22.4%).
Paris
Opportunity Spanish recovery play via the acquisition of a dominant urban shopping centre
located in one of the fastest growing and most affluent suburbs of Seville,
Spain’s fourth largest city
Location Located in the south western Seville suburb of Mairena del Aljarafe. The centre
benefits from easy car access and is well serviced by public transport with
frontage to the only line that services this part of Seville with the city centre,
making the area a key growth corridor
Tenure / Built Freehold. Constructed in 2006 and acquired by UBS for €104m in 2007
Asset Description Urban shopping centre totalling 23,506 sqm servicing a catchment of 250,000
people within 15 minutes
Strong tenant mix centred on grocery, fashion (50%) and leisure. Recognised
as the fashion destination for its catchment and surrounding towns. Key
fashion brands include H&M, Mango and the majority of Inditex brands (Zara,
Bershka et al)
Strong like for like sales growth; +8% in 2015 and +4% in 2016 and a annual
footfall of c. 4 million. Reasonable rent/TO ratios
Good income diversification with over 50 occupiers
2,787 sqm of vacancy providing for upside potential
WAULT 7.6 years (from 1/4/2018) and 3.2 years to break
Pricing €25.5m and 6.2% NIY (50% interest)
Current Value €26.0m as at 31 March 2018
Investment
Rationale
Spain is in its early stages of recovery. Retail is expected to be a key
beneficiary of improved economic and consumer sentiment
Established and dominant centre within its trade area offering scope for
income growth potential
SEREIT portfolio Metromar Shopping Centre - Seville
40 Source: Schroders, June 2018. Maps – http://maps.stamen.com. For illustrative purposes only and should not be viewed as a recommendation to buy or sell.
Central Seville
SEREIT portfolio Data centre / office investment, Netherlands
41 Source: Schroders, June 2018. Maps – http://maps.stamen.com. For illustrative purposes only and not a recommendation to buy or sell
Opportunity Opportunity to acquire a freehold office / data centre in Apeldoorn (NL), fully
leased to KPN till Dec ‘26, the largest telecom/IT service provider in the
Netherlands. Attractive yield and purchase price at a significant discount to
replacement cost
Location Apeldoorn (pop. c. 160k) is located in the centre of the Netherlands with good
infrastructure links to both the north/south (via the A-50) and the east/west
(via the A-1). Amsterdam is within an hour drive. The city is an important ICT
employment centres in the Netherlands, catering for over 6,500 jobs in the
sector and growing
Tenure / Built Freehold – Constructed in stages between 1975-85. Renovated 2006, 2016
Asset Description 23,700sqm of GLA (56% office, 22% dataroom, 23% storage) across four
floors + basement.
Site area of 35,731sqm with 495 on site parking spaces (1:48sqm)
Strategic location for KPN – 1 of 10 locations for key data centres
Average rent of €101/sqm – discount to Apeldoorn prime
WAULT 8.8 years (from 1/4/2018) and 8.8 years to break
Pricing €19.8m / 9.9% NIY and €835/sqm
Investment
Rationale
Attractive inflation linked 9 year income stream, strong covenant
Good location: central Netherlands and at the intersection of the A-1 and
A-50, with strong alternate use potential
Apeldoorn expected to be a beneficiary of the trend of the relocation of
back-office functions (particularly ITC) to secondary cities (rents currently
stand at c. 30% of Amsterdam rents)
Apeldoorn
A-50
A-1
Appendix 3 – Financial information
Summary balance sheet
43
Source: Schroders. For illustrative purposes only and should not be viewed as a recommendation to buy or sell.
Numbers based on proportionally consolidated basis and therefore represent SEREITs share of joint ventures.
*FX rate of £1 : €1.138 as at 31 March 2018 (FX Rate: 30 Sept 2017 £ : €1.134) Source:www.xe.com.
As at 31 Mar 2018 (€m) As at 30 Sept 2017 (€m)
Investment properties 237.0 211.6
Cash 24.9 27.2
External third-party loans (73.4) (60.4)
Net current liabilities (1.4) (0.1)
NAV 187.1 178.3
NAV per share €/£* €1.399 / £1.23 €1.333 / £1.18
– Sale of Casino supermarket investments at the end of July will result in:
– Reduction in property portfolio of €44.8m
– Increase in net cash balance of €27.9m
– Reduction in net debt balance of €18.2m
– Resulting new investment capacity will be €45m - €50m, including debt
Impact of sale of Casino supermarkets
Simple balance sheet with low leverage
Statement of comprehensive income
Source: Schroders as at June 2018
Period 6 months to
31 Mar 2018 (€m)
6 months to
31 Mar 2017 (€m)
Rental income 10.3 7.4
Other income (surrender premium) 2.4
Property operating expenses (3.9) (2.0)
Net rental and related income 8.8 5.4
Net valuation profit on investment property 6.4 1.6
Net change in fair value of financial instruments 0.0 0.2
Expenses (1.6) (1.9)
Finance costs – net interest payments (0.1) (0.5)
Share of profit / (loss) on joint venture 0.3 0.0
Profit before tax 13.7 4.8
Income Taxation (0.8) 0.2
Profit after tax 12.9 4.6
Attributable to owners 10.8 4.2
Non-controlling interests 2.1 0.4
44
Earnings excluding property revaluations, gains on disposals, deferred tax, derivative adjustments, and minority interests
Underlying EPRA earnings
Source: Schroders, June 2018.
Period 6 months to
31 Mar 2018 (€m)
6 months to
31 Mar 2017 (€m)
Profit after tax 12.9 4.7
Excluding:
Net valuation profit / loss on investment property (6.4) (1.6)
Share of Joint Venture loss on investment property (0.2)
Deferred tax 0.4
Adjustment for Minority Interests net revenue (0.4) (0.4)
Finance costs – interest rate cap 0.1 (0.2)
EPRA earnings 6.4 2.5
Weighted average number of shares 133,734,686 131,811,609
Underlying EPRA earnings per share (pence) 4.8 1.9
45
Schroder European Real Estate Investment Trust Plc
Discrete yearly performance
46
Q4 2016–
Q4 2017
Q4 2015–
Q4 2016
Q4 2014–
Q4 2015
Q4 2013–
Q4 2014
Q4 2012–
Q4 2013
Share Price Total Return (GBP)¹ +4.1 0.8 - - -
NAV Total Return (Euro) ² +7.3 -0.3 - - -
NAV Total Return (converted to GBP) ³ 11.7 15.4 - - -
Past performance is not a guide to future performance and may not be repeated. The value of investments and the income from them may go down as well as up
and investors may not get back the amounts originally invested.
¹ Source: Schroders, Datastream, bid to bid price with net income reinvested in GBP.
² Source: Schroders, NAV to NAV (per share) plus dividends paid.
³ Source: Schroders, NAV to NAV (per share) plus dividends paid. Converted into GBP.
Risk Factors:
– The trust may be concentrated in a limited number of geographical regions, industry sectors, markets and/or individual positions. This may result in large
changes in the value of the fund, both up or down, which may adversely impact the performance of the fund.
– The Company may borrow money to invest in further investments, this is known as gearing. Gearing will increase returns if the value of the assets purchased
increase in value by more than the cost of borrowing, or reduce returns if they fail to do so.
– The trust can be exposed to different currencies. Changes in foreign exchange rates could create losses.
– The dividend yield is an estimate and is not guaranteed.
Important information
47
For professional investors or advisers only. This material is not suitable for retail clients.
Past performance is not a guide to future performance and may not be repeated. The value of investments and the income from them may go down as well as
up and investors may not get back the amount originally invested.
Schroders has expressed its own views and these may change. The data contained in this document has been sourced by Schroders and should be independently
verified before further publication or use. This presentation is intended to be for information purposes only. The material is not intended as an offer or solicitation
for the purchase or sale of any financial instrument. The information provided is not intended to constitute investment advice, an investment recommendation or
investment research and does not take into account specific circumstances of any recipient. The material is not intended to provide, and should not be relied on
for, accounting, legal or tax advice. Information herein is believed to be reliable but Schroder Unit Trusts Limited (Schroders) does not warrant its completeness or
accuracy. No responsibility can be accepted for error of fact or opinion. Reliance should not be placed on the views and information in the document when taking
individual investment and/or strategic decisions.
Risk factors:
The forecasts included in this document should not be relied upon, are not guaranteed and are provided only as at the date of issue. Our forecasts are based on
our own assumptions which may change. We accept no responsibility for any errors of fact or opinion and assume no obligation to provide you with any
changes to our assumptions or forecasts. Forecasts and assumptions may be affected by external economic or other factors.
The trust may be concentrated in a limited number of geographical regions, industry sectors, markets and/or individual positions. This may result in large changes
in the value of the fund, both up or down, which may adversely impact the performance of the fund.
The Company may borrow money to invest in further investments, this is known as gearing. Gearing will increase returns if the value of the assets purchased
increase in value by more than the cost of borrowing, or reduce returns if they fail to do so.
The trust can be exposed to different currencies. Changes in foreign exchange rates could create losses.
The dividend yield is an estimate and is not guaranteed.
Issued in June 2018 by Schroder Unit Trusts Limited, 31 Gresham Street, London EC2V 7QA. Registered No: 4191730 England. Authorised and regulated by the
Financial Conduct Authority. UK12914
Contact Schroder Investment Management Limited,
31 Gresham Street, London EC2V 7QA.
schroders.com