Intu warns over rental income in 2019

Shopping centre owner Intu has warned that rental income in 2019 is likely to fall by 9 per cent, with more than half the decline coming from Arcadia and Monsoon pushing through an insolvency process known as a Company Voluntary Arrangement (CVA).
Intu's Trafford Centre.Intu's Trafford Centre.
Intu's Trafford Centre.

Bosses said rent in 2020 is also expected to drop, but at a slower rate than 2019, and added that the political and economic uncertainty is putting off current tenants from signing up to new lettings.

But the company insisted it was performing ahead of its rivals and only expects a further impact this year if any write-offs are required due to more retail failures.

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Intu said: “Although new lettings and rent reviews are still positive overall, CVAs in the period were slightly worse than expected and the political and economic uncertainty is causing customers to delay new lettings, with letting activity in the third quarter slower than forecast and at a lower level than 2018.

“We anticipate that like-for-like net rental income for 2019 will be down by around 9 per cent, with more than half the reduction coming from the impact of CVAs such as Arcadia and Monsoon.”

CVAs have been used by several retailers to reduce rents. It involves landlords voting to cut bills to avoid a full-scale collapse of the retailer seeking a reduction.

Beyond the CVA issues, Intu said customers are well-financed and it continues to attract top brands to its sites, which include Lakeside in Essex, the Metrocentre in Gateshead and the Trafford Centre in Manchester.

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Chief executive Matthew Roberts said: “In the last quarter, we have continued to face challenging market conditions along with the rest of the sector. In particular, CVAs were slightly worse than expected. In the face of these challenges, there is much that gives me confidence about Intu.

“Many of our top customers are global, well-capitalised businesses and, having visited 17 Intu centres in recent weeks, there is a very different feeling on the ground to the one we read about regularly.

“While letting activity has been slower in the third quarter as some customers delay decisions due to continued political and economic uncertainty, we are still signing a good number of new deals with great brands.”

Harrods has recently taken a 23,000 sq ft site at Lakeside and Zara has signed up for a new flagship store at St David’s in Cardiff.

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Mr Roberts also revealed that he has been meeting the chief executives of Next, Primark and Sports Direct to improve Intu’s working relationship with the brands.

Overall, footfall was up 1.2 per cent in the three months to September 30, with £5m of new rent coming in, although occupancy levels have fallen from 97 per cent to 95.1 per cent so far this year, with leases averaging 6.5 years versus 7.4 years in 2018.

Intu is struggling under a massive debt mountain and has vowed to sell off £2bn of assets to shore up its balance sheet. But analysts have warned that the current climate could make it difficult.

Liberum property analyst Tom Musson said: “If there is a positive, it is that the majority of the rent has been collected for the year, meaning some confidence can be taken from today’s guidance.

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“But the investment case continues to be clouded by extreme uncertainty, with the business reliant on the disposal of circa £2bn of assets into the most difficult backdrop for retail transactions on record.”

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