For the second successive quarter, developers have attempted to establish equilibrium between units sold and new units coming onto the market. Rising inflation continues to drive buyers to developers’ offices, with sales for the first three quarters of 2021 exceeding 2020’s annual total.
The pandemic is still affecting - although in a slightly different way than last year - the residential market. On the one hand, it is significantly stimulating demand. Buyers are seeking security for their savings through property purchases, but also improved housing conditions for fear of further pandemic restrictions. On the other hand, disruptions in supply chains have increased the cost of building materials, and inefficiencies in public administrations’ limited supply. In this situation, it is extremely difficult for developers to plan sales and rationalise financial assumptions, and the attempt to mitigate the risks involved manifests itself primarily in launching projects at ever higher prices,
comments Aleksandra Gawrońska, Head of Residential Research at JLL.
Although prices cross new thresholds, buyers are still not in short supply
Warsaw is in an extremely unfavourable situation, where reserves have to all intents and purposes been exhausted. Wrocław and Kraków are in a slightly better situation, where their respective reserves do not exceed 30% of their current annual production. In Tri-City, permit reserves are estimated at approx. 40-50% of annual supply, while in Łódź developers have permits to match annual production. On the other hand, a very unusual situation is observed in Poznań, where the surplus of units on permits issued in the last three years over the number of units commenced stands at the near equivalent of two-years' output, a record for this city,
comments Aleksandra Gawrońska, an expert at JLL.
Investors come under fire
The numbers we are talking about are 25,000 to 30,000 units in institutional rental, which may, on an annual basis, mean about 4,000 such units in all of the largest markets combined. If we put this annual total against the100,000 to 140,000 units per year built by developers in recent years, this is definitely a small percentage. It is worth noting that foreign funds do not decide on purchasing at prices higher than the current market offer, while a significant proportion of developments that are in the portfolios of institutional investors are on land where residential units, by Polish law, cannot be built (these are usually retail premises sold with 23% VAT),
explains Aleksandra Gawrońska, Head of Residential Research at JLL.