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Victoria, Leeds
2018 Full-year results 25 February 2019
Agenda
01
2018 overview and 2019 priorities
02
2018 financial results
03
Actively managing the changing shape of retail
04
Conclusion and Q+A
David Atkins – CEO
Timon Drakesmith – CFO
David Atkins – CEO
2
2018 overview
Progress in a challenging market Challenges
2018 performance
Structural shift in retail
Continued demand for our space
UK online penetration 18%
Total leasing £27.7m rent
(1)
Significant increase in tenant failures
6% above ERV, 5% above previous passing rent
Winning and losing brands
Occupancy 97.2%
Tough UK market
Diversified portfolio supports performance
Prevailing economic uncertainty impacting consumer confidence
48% portfolio non-UK LfL NRI: Ireland +1.6%; premium outlets +5.2%
Declining sales and footfall
Weak investment markets resulting in
£570m disposals achieved
valuation decline
Disposals include 50% Highcross and four retail parks
Transaction volumes down 41% in 2018
1 2 3
(2)
Global Data 2019 online penetration See slide 4 Dividends and share buyback
Net debt reduced by £95m, LTV 38% £331m returned to shareholders
(3)
3
2018 overview
Weakening investment market impacting our valuations Market investment volumes (£bn)
2018 valuation change (%) (2)
(1)
12
10
H1
2
£9.7bn
H2
0
-2
8
£6.7bn
-4
6
£4.0bn
-6
4 -8 2
-10
0 2016
2017
2018
UK shopping centres
UK retail parks
France shopping centres
Ireland shopping centres
-12 UK flagships
UK retail parks
France flagships
Ireland flagships
Premium outlets
Group
Outlets 1 2
Source: UK volumes: PropertyData; Other sectors: Cushman & Wakefield Valuation change reflects capital return. UK Other and Development portfolios not shown
4
2019 priorities
Structural retail shift and increasingly challenging markets driving our priorities
Capital efficiency
Optimised portfolio
Exiting retail parks Reducing debt
Pursuing portfolio-wide disposals
Operational excellence
Managing structural shift in retail
5
2019 priorities
Number one priority for 2019 is reducing debt Cash proceeds/uses (£m) 600
Future share buybacks on hold until we achieve our enhanced portfolio disposal goal and see greater market certainty
£95m reduction in debt
500
£179m debt reduction in H2 18 400
300
£570m disposals completed (1)
£339m capex and premium outlet (2) acquisitions
200
100
£127m share buyback (3) Other
0
Reducing debt
Target net debt c.£3.0bn by December 2019
>£500m target disposals
£140m forecast capex
(4)
2018
2019 forecast 1 2 3 4
Shown gross of selling costs. Net proceeds £553 million See slide 14 for capex details. Premium outlets acquisitions of £109m relate to additional Value Retail investor stakes acquired during 2018 Reflects cash flow in year, additional £2 million settled in 2019 See slide 13 for details
6
2019 priorities
Absolute commitment to disposals Hammerson annual disposal proceeds (£m) 700
2018 disposals £570m achieved
600
50% Highcross and four retail parks 7% below Dec 2017 book value
500
400
2014 – 2018 average £395m p.a.
2019+ disposals >£500m target Exit retail parks
300
Pursuing disposals from across the portfolio; discussions under way for over £900m
200
100
0
2014 UK flagships
2015 UK retail parks
2016 UK other
2017 UK office
2018 France
2019 target Ireland
7
2018 financial results Timon Drakesmith – CFO and MD, Premium Outlets
8
Headline financial results
Income statement
31 Dec 2018
31 Dec 2017
Change
Net rental income (£m)
347.5
370.4
(6.2%)
Adjusted profit (£m)
240.3
246.3
(2.4%)
Adjusted EPS (p)
30.6
31.1
(1.6%)
Final dividend (p)
14.8
14.8
−
Total dividend (p)
25.9
25.5
1.6%
Balance sheet
Change Portfolio value (£m) EPRA NAVPS (p) Net debt LTV – headline (%) 1 2
(2)
Capital return Proportionally consolidated LTV 43% (2017: 40%)
9,938
10,560
(4.3%)(1)
738
776
(4.9%)
3,406
3,501
(2.1%)
38%
36%
+2pp 9
Portfolio valuation summary
Sector
FY 2018 H2 2018 capital return (1) capital return (1)
Value at 31 Dec 18 (2)
Portfolio weighting (2)
%
%
£m
%
(10.6)
(9.3)
2,921
29
France
(1.7)
(0.7)
1,885
19
Ireland
0.9
(1.0)
979
10
Premium outlets
2.4
1.2
2,459
25
Developments
4.1
1.2
648
6
UK other
4.5
(5.5)
173
2
(13.2)
(9.9)
873
9
(4.3)
(4.0)
9,938
100
Flagship destinations UK
UK retail parks Total
1 2
At constant exchange rates Figures on a proportionally consolidated basis
10
Valuation drivers: yield and ERV movements
Sector
NEY 31 Dec 2018
NEY increase/ (decrease) in 2018
%
bps
%
UK
5.3
+37
−2.0
Yields underpinned by transactions (Highcross, Clapham) and Dec 18 RICS guidance
France
4.2
−6
+0.5
ERVs driven by leasing at Les Terrasses du Port
Ireland
4.4
+4
+2.8
ERV progression at Dundrum and Pavilions
5.7
−9
+1.7
Driven by sales growth and remerchandising
6.5
+53
−2.7
Weakening transactional evidence and CVA impact
(1)
ERV Commentary increase/ (decrease) in 2018
Flagship destinations
Premium outlets
(2)
UK retail parks
1 2
Figures on a proportionally consolidated basis and exclude UK Other and Developments Premium outlets NEY is based on Cushman & Wakefield exit yields
11
Credit ratios
Internal guidelines
31 Dec 2018
31 Dec 2017
-
£3,406m
£3,501m
<85%
63%
58%
<40%
38%
36%
<45%
43%
40%
Cash and undrawn facilities
-
£729m
£958m
Debt maturing in <2 years
-
nil
£491m
Weighted average cost of debt
-
2.7%
2.9%
>2.0x
3.4x
3.4x
<10x
9.5x
9.3x
>50%
74%
78%
70% - 90%
79%
78%
Net debt Gearing LTV – headline
(1)
LTV – fully proportionally consolidated
Interest cover Net debt/EBITDA Fixed rate debt GBP/EUR FX balance sheet hedging 1 2
(2)
Net debt excludes premium outlets and value includes premium outlet net assets Includes VIA Outlets and Value Retail net debt and property values
12
Net debt analysis
Net debt analysis (£000m)
(1)
3600 3500
3,501
570
3400
117
3,406
3300 230
3,406
Reduce debt
3200 3100 127
3000
c.3,000
2900
203
204
Net operating cashflow
Dividend
2800 2700 2600 Dec 2017
Disposal (2) proceeds
1 2 3 4
Share buyback
Capex
(3)
Outlet acquisitions and (4) other
Dec 2018
2019 target
On a proportionally consolidated basis, excluding premium outlets Excludes selling costs of £17 million which are included in ‘outlets acquisitions and other’ Includes £31 million held in escrow for future Croydon land acquisitions and a £16 million movement in capex receivables and payables Includes outlet acquisitions of £109 million, selling costs, foreign exchange, outlet distributions, debt and loan cancellation costs, acquisition-related costs and dividends paid to non-controlling interests
13
Flexibility over future capital expenditure
Capex 2018-2020 Committed
2018
2019
2020
Actual
Forecast
Forecast
£m
£m
£m
95
70
80
74
25
-
169
95
80
43
38
40
2
7
20
45
45
60
214
140
140
On-site developments Other committed capex
(1)
Discretionary Flagship destination investment City Quarters
Total
1
2018 includes £31 million held in escrow for future Croydon land acquisitions
14
LfL NRI movements
LfL NRI movements across the portfolio (%)
UK Retail Parks
Key drivers
CVAs (-4.7%)
(4.3)
UK Flagships
CVAs (-2.1%), Westquay and Grand Central
(1.3)
France Flagships
Lower occupancy and backdated turnover rent in 2017
(0.9)
Ireland Flagships
Rent reviews and leasing Growth at all centres
1.6
Value Retail
Fidenza, Kildare, La Vallée
4.1
VIA Outlets
Landquart, Lisbon, Mallorca
10.4
0.3
Group
-6
-4
-2
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
15
Stand out growth rates from premium outlets
Premium outlets financial summary 2014-2018
(1)
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
£m
£m
£m
£m
£m
GRI
72
87
101
139
160
22.4%
NRI
52
66
68
98
113
21.3%
13
14
23
27
34
26.5%
18%
16%
23%
19%
21%
32
37
43
59
68
44%
43%
43%
42%
43%
17
23
30
38
41
24.8%
1,028
1,244
1,689
2,234
2,459
24.4%
769
921
1,288
1,575
1,754
22.9%
Marketing expenditure
(3)
Marketing:GRI ratio EBIT EBIT margin EPRA earnings
Property valuations EPRA net assets
1 2 3
All figures at Hammerson share. Source: 2014-2018 Company Annual Reports and Accounts. 4 year CAGR 2014-2018 Marketing expenditure derived from Value Retail and VIA Outlets annual reporting packs
CAGR
(2)
21.1%
16
Premium outlet valuations are driven by sales density levels
Yields on premium outlets Sales densities illustrate appeal to consumers, brands and investors Very high
2
Sales density (€000/m2)
€8,000-39,000/m
(1)
2018 weighted average sales density was €9,800/m2, up +5% YoY Weighted average NIY 4.7%
High
2
€5,000-8,000/m
Medium
2
€3,000-5,000/m
2%
Comparable to European prime shopping centres
(2)
3%
4%
5%
(3)
6%
7%
8%
Dec 2018 NIY (%) 1 2 3
‘Very high’ includes Bicester Village, Fidenza Village, Ingolstadt Village, Kildare Village, La Roca Village, Las Rozas Village, La Vallée Village and Wertheim Village ‘High’ includes Batavia Stad Fashion Outlet, Maasmechelen Village, Mallorca Fashion Outlet, Vila do Conde Porto Fashion Outlet and Zweibrücken Fashion Outlet ‘Medium’ includes Fashion Arena Prague Outlet, Freeport Lisboa Fashion Outlet, Hede Fashion Outlet, Landquart Fashion Outlet, Oslo Fashion Outlet, Sevilla Fashion Outlet and Wroclaw Fashion Outlet
17
2018 earnings and future guidance
2018 EPS walk (pence per share) 2017
Debt reduction phase 2019-2020
Future 2021+
31.1
Net disposals
(3.5) 27.6
Negative
Neutral
LfL NRI
27.1 (0.5)
Negative
Positive
Neutral
Positive
2.1
Positive
Positive
0.4
Positive
Positive
EPS: Negative
EPS: Positive
Development and other Interest, net admin and other Premium Outlets
2018
27.1
1.0
28.1
30.2
30.6
18
Rooftop at Les Terrasses du Port, Marseille
Actively managing the changing shape of retail David Atkins - CEO
19
Hammerson’s geographic diversification mitigates risk
UK
France
Ireland
Premium outlets
2019 online penetration (1)
18%
11%
10%
10%
Consumer spending growth 2019
1.1%
1.3%
2.2%
3-5%
-1.6%
1.1%
4.7%
6.2%
Hammerson portfolio split by value
8%
9%
29%
25% 19%
(4)
(5)
(2)
10% Rental income growth 20192020 (3)
48% non-UK UK flagships
Premium outlets
France flagships
UK retail parks
Ireland flagships
Developments and UK other 1 2 3 4 5 6
Sources: Global Data, CRR Retailmenot Source: Oxford Economics 2019 forecast. Real prices Source: PMA 2019-2020 mall rental growth per annum Source: Bain 2018 Luxury Goods Worldwide Market Study online penetration reflects global luxury sales Source: Bain 2018 Luxury Goods Worldwide Market Study based on spending on personal luxury goods 2019-25 Source: Bain 2018 Luxury Goods Worldwide Market Study. Growth in luxury off-price sales used as proxy for rental income growth as brand sales drive turnover rent
(5)
20
Responding to our changing markets
Structural shift in retail
Elevating experience
Our response: Leasing strategy
Our response: Leisure & super events
Luxury sales outperform
Our response: Premium outlets platform
Thriving cities
Our response: City Quarters
21
Structural shift in retail
Online growth a key factor in declining store numbers
Channel shift has been fast in the UK UK retail online penetration %
Those slow to adapt are failing UK net store openings & closures by category
(1)
22
(2)
2,000
20
1,000
18 0 2012
16
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
(1,000)
14 (2,000)
12
(3,000)
10
1 2
Global Data LDC
2023
2022
2021
2020
2019
2018
2017
2016
2015
(5,000)
2014
6 2013
(4,000)
2012
8
Non-Food
Grocery
Leisure
Service
22
Structural shift in retail
Differentiation between categories and brands in our UK portfolio 2018 footfall
Hammerson UK flagship destinations category sales and range
Hammerson -1.8% Index -3.5%
45%
(1)
35%
2018 sales Hammerson -2.9%
25%
Index -2.7% (2) 2018 price deflation
(3)
Non-food -1.5% Clothing -7%
15% 14.2%
5%
7.7%
0.1%
-5%
-2.2%
-2.7%
Health & beauty
F&B
-3.0%
-3.3%
-3.5%
-4.8%
-5.4%
-9.4%
-15%
Selected winning brands
-25% -35% -45% Dept. stores (aspirational)
1 2 3
Leisure
Source: Tyco Source: BDO BRC Nielsen shop price index
Sportswear
Jewellery High Fashion Home, Dept. & street (aspirational) consumer stores personal fashion brands (mainstream) luxuries (contemporary) & gifts
High street fashion (traditional)
23
Structural shift in retail
Managing the significant increase in tenant failures Number of units impacted by CVAs and admins in UK by category, 2017-2018 2017
(1)
2018
30
86 stores impacted; 80% of units trading
25
£6m NRI impact in 2018, 1.7% group passing rent
20
7 units impacted YTD 2019
15
10
5
0 High street fashion (traditional)
F&B
Department stores Home, consumer (mainstream) brands and gifts
1
Health & beauty
Includes UK flagship destinations, UK retail parks and UK other portfolios
Jewellery & personal luxuries
24
Structural shift in retail
Successful brands want the right physical presence +11% brands taking space
(vs. 2013)
(1)
The role of physical space is evolving
Brand awareness
Online catchment sales
Service
Fulfilment
Returns
Morphe, Bullring
1
Source: LDC growth in brands with at least five UK stores, 2013-2019
25
Structural shift in retail
Strong leasing volumes in our flagship destinations Flagship destinations leasing (£m) 5.0
25.0
Flagship leasing volumes
2018 £m
2017 £m
14.4
13.4
France
7.3
9.8
Ireland
2.6
1.9
24.3
25.1
UK
4.5 4.0
20.0
3.5 3.0
15.0
2.5 2.0
Total
10.0
1.5
Group leasing key facts
1.0
5.0
Leasing vs. Dec 17 ERV +6%
0.5
Monthly leasing 2018 (LHS)
Cumulative leasing activity 2017 (RHS)
1
December
November
October
September
August
July
June
May
April
March
February
0.0 January
0.0
Leasing vs. previous passing +5% Average lease term: 11 years Average incentive: 6 months
(1)
(1)
Cumulative leasing activity 2018 (RHS)
New lettings across UK, France and Ireland flagship destinations. 2017: group average lease term 11 years; group average incentive 6 months
26
Structural shift in retail
Actively managing the mix, leasing to winners Category
Current mix
Future mix
Rent/sq ft
New leasing (1)
Department stores
38%
c.28%
c.£10/sq ft
nil
High street fashion (traditional)
16%
c.10%
c.£30/sq ft
13%
F&B
10%
c.12%
c.£40/sq ft
11%
8%
c.12%
c.£30/sq ft
24%
18%
c.20%
>£50/sq ft
31%
Leisure/events
6%
c.10%
c.£15/sq ft
14%
Fashion (aspirational)
4%
c.8%
>£30/sq ft
7%
100%
100%
High street fashion (contemporary) Non-fashion and consumer brands
1
UK flagship destinations 2018 new lettings
Near-term rental levels
100%
27
Structural shift in retail
Proven success with repurposing department store space Cabot Circus: income uplift of £1.1 million, yield on cost +9%
Former BHS store
TK Maxx
Metro Bank
Indicative plan for further repurposing
Indicative financials Income uplift +50% Costs c. £20m Target yield on cost 5-8%
28
Elevating experience
Humans are social creatures Participation in free time activities (%)
(1)
Watching TV
Spending time with friends/family
Shopping
Eating out at restaurants
Days out or visits to places
Internet/emailing
Going to the cinema
Going to pubs/bars/clubs
Theatre/music concerts
2016/17
2006/7
0
20
1
40
60
80
100
YouTube vlogger James Charles at Bullring
Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport. Proportion of adults who participated in specific free time activities in the 12 months prior to interview, 2006/07 to 2016/17, England
29
Elevating experience
Bringing excitement back to F&B
55% of new UK F&B lettings in 2018 were to independent, local or emerging brands Mowgli
Brewdog
Miami Burger
Mission Burrito
BH byDessert Beef House Little Shop
Herman Ze German
30
Elevating experience
Creating a buzz: events people want to experience +£2m investment in experiential events in 2019
£10m online sales - 2019
Festival of Light at Westquay, Southampton
Transactional websites at Bullring and Westquay
1
Transactional websites allow shoppers to purchase online from tenants within our flagship destinations with access through the venue’s website
(1)
31
Luxury sales outperform
A desire for off-price luxury underpins high-end spending Global personal luxury goods off-price store sales (€bn)
(1)
50 45
6.2% CAGR 40 35 30 25
€47bn
20 15
€31bn
10
5 Bicester Village
0 2018
2025F
1
Source: 2018 Bain luxury goods study
32
Luxury sales outperform
Our premium outlets are differentiated
The six most high-end outlets
(1)
make up more than 65% of total income
Income by outlet – Hammerson share (£m)
Bicester Village, London La Vallée Village, Paris
Income £183.5m (2)
La Roca Village, Barcelona Las Rozas Village, Madrid Freeport Lisboa Fashion Outlet Mallorca Fashion Outlet Other
1 2
Top four Value Retail Villages and top two VIA Outlets based on brand mix Source: Cushman and Wakefield. Figures represent annualised base and turnover rent at 31 December 2018 at Hammerson’s ownership share
33
Thriving cities
We are in thriving cities Consumer spending and population growth forecast in Hammerson flagship locations
(1)
6%
London
Forecast population growth (2018-23), %
5%
Birmingham Ireland
4%
Leicester
3%
Southampton
Bristol
Dublin
Reading
Croydon
UK 2%
1%
France 0.7%
0% £10k
£15.1k
Leeds Glasgow
Marseille Paris
Nice £12k
£14k
£16k
£18k
£20k
£22k
£24k
£26k
Aberdeen
-1%
European average Country Benchmarks
-2%
Total consumer spending per capita (2018) 1
Source: Oxford Economics
34
Thriving cities
Development expertise in action: on-site at two French flagship destinations On-site schemes
Major developments Les 3 Fontaines, Cergy
Start on site Opening Cost to complete Pre-let
Les 3 Fontaines, Cergy
Italik, Paris
Jan 18
Jun 18
Q2 2021
Q2 2020
£145m
£22m
23%
34%
Italik, Paris
2018 progress Brent Cross Ongoing discussions with key stakeholders Reviewing optimum mix of uses Croydon CPO powers granted H2 2018
Future outlook Reviewing schemes to ensure they respond to changing retailer requirements and are appropriate for the future
35
Thriving cities
City Quarters: an opportunity beyond retail Moving beyond retail to create vibrant city neighbourhoods
97 acres 6,600 residential units 1,200 hotel rooms 200,000m2 work space 9 parks and public spaces
Bristol
Metrics include City Quarters and major developments
36
Thriving cities
City Quarters: creating value today and tomorrow Short term opportunities
Residential building, Dundrum
Hotel, Victoria Leeds
Uses to include residential, co-working, hotel Planning consent on at least two sites in 2019
Initial delivery by end of 2021 Target YOC 5-6%
Strategic sites
Martineau Galleries, Birmingham
Key schemes include: Martineau Galleries, Birmingham Broadmead, Bristol Dublin Central Dundrum Phase 2
Victoria Phase 2, Leeds Existing land value £360m Current NRI £10m 37
Conclusion
38
A clear plan to create value
Build balance sheet strength
Continually evolve our spaces
Beyond retail
Shareholder returns
Reducing debt Exiting retail parks and pursuing portfolio-wide disposals
Repurposing retail space Enhancing experience with F&B, super events and digital
City Quarters beyond flagship destinations Vibrant neighbourhoods in thriving cities
39
Questions
40
Victoria, Leeds
Supplementary Appendices
41
Contents
01 02 03 04 05 06
Group UK flagship destinations France flagship destinations Ireland flagship destinations
Premium outlets UK retail parks 42
Westquay, Southampton
01
Group
43
£9.9 billion leading pan-European retail platform
54
European flagship destinations
14
countries
8% 9%
29%
Top 3
market position in all chosen sectors 25% 19% 10%
UK flagship destinations - £2.9bn France flagship destinations - £1.9bn Ireland flagship destinations - £1.0bn Premium outlets - £2.5bn UK retail parks - £0.9bn Development & UK other - £0.7bn
48%
non-UK assets
2.3m
m2 retail space
430m visitors
4,800 tenants
11 - UK flagship destinations 7 - France flagship destinations 3 - Ireland flagship destinations 13 - UK retail parks 20 - Premium Outlets
44
Appendices: Group
2018 Group leasing performance 2018 leasing and cumulative vs. 2017 and 2016 (£m) 5.0
35
4.5
30
4.0 25
3.5
3.0
20
2.5 15
2.0 1.5
10
1.0 5
0.5
Monthly leasing 2018 (LHS)
Cumulative leasing activity 2016 (RHS)
Cumulative leasing activity 2017 (RHS)
December
November
October
September
August
July
June
May
April
March
February
0 January
0.0
Cumulative leasing activity 2018 (RHS)
45
Appendices: Group
2018 Group leasing performance by sector 2018 leasing by sector (£m) 5.0 4.5 4.0 3.5 3.0 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5
UK flagship destinations
France flagship destinations
Ireland flagship destinations
UK retail parks
December
November
October
September
August
July
June
May
April
March
February
January
0.0
UK other
46
Appendices: Group
2018 portfolio leasing overview Leasing vs previous passing (%)
Leasing vs ERV (%)
Like-for-like ERV growth (%)
New rent secured from leasing (£m)
UK flagship destinations
+1
+5
–2.0
14.4
France flagship destinations
+5
+5
+0.5
7.3
Ireland flagship destinations
+28
+8
+2.8
2.6
UK retail parks
+19
+11
–2.7
2.4
+5
+6
–0.9
Group
1
Including UK Other properties (principally assets held for development and non-core)
27.7
(1)
47
Appendices: Group
2018 administrations and CVAs UK France Ireland UK flagship flagship flagship retail parks destinations destinations destinations
UK other interests
Group
Dec 17 total units in administration or CVA
17
27
-
3
3
50
Dec 18 total units in administration or CVA
49
23
-
12
8
92
Dec 18 total units occupied
40
23
-
12
6
81
1.8%
0.7%
-
0.5%
0.2%
3.2%
3.0
1.0
0.2
2.8
0.1
7.1
0.9%
0.3%
-
0.8%
-
2.0%
Admin/CVA % of Group passing rent at Dec 18 NRI impact – FY 2018 (£m) FY 2018 impact (% passing rent)
Note: 50 units in administration at 31 December 2017 (0.9% group passing rent). 41 of these units were occupied (0.8% group passing rent)
48
Appendices: Group
2018 operational statistics UK flagship destinations
Sales
(1)
Footfall
(2)
Rent:sales OCR
(3)
(3)
Sales densities
France flagship destinations
UK £/ft2
(4)
France (5) £/ft2
–2.9%
+2.2%
2018
235 – 496
356– 490
–1.8%
+2.5%
2017
240 – 490
402 – 500
13.3%
10.7%
2016
250 – 515
350 – 562
22.6%
13.7%
Occupancy (%)
UK flagship destinations
France flagship destinations
Ireland flagship destinations
UK retail parks
Group
31 December 2018
97.6
97.1
99.0
96.9
97.2
30 June 2018
97.2
97.1
98.9
94.5
96.6
31 December 2017
98.1
97.9
99.7
99.4
98.3
1 2 3 4 5
Sales: 2018 UK benchmark –2.7% (Source: BDO); 2018 France benchmark -1.8% (Source: CNCC, as at Dec 2018) Retail sales on same-centre basis Footfall: 2018 UK benchmark -3.5% (Source: Tyco Shoppertrak); 2018 France benchmark -1.7% (Source: CNCC) Excludes anchor stores. French data includes VAT (rent:sales and OCR), excludes Les 3 Fontaines, Cergy Excludes anchor stores. French data includes VAT French data restated to exclude Les 3 Fontaines, Cergy, due to redevelpment
49
Appendices: Group
Our Product Experience Framework We create desirability
Iconic destinations
Retail specialism
Experience led
Customer first
Built environment
Optimal retail mix
Food & beverage
Insight driven
Placemaking
Fresh concepts
Leisure as anchor
Frictionless experience
Seamless technology
Innovative retail technology
Engaging events
Enhanced services
Flexible construction
Operational efficiency
Surprise & delight
Sensory experience
Positive for the environment | Positive for the community 50
Appendices: Group
2018 components of valuation change Components of valuation change in 2018, total portfolio (£m) 100 5
19
2
0 -8
-8
-14
9
16
40
56 2
-10
-26
-73
-100
39
34 30
-2
-6 -46
-98 -126
-200
-300
-279 -347
-400
-385
-392
-500 UK flagship destinations
Yield
Income
France flagship destinations
Ireland flagship destinations
Development and other (1) 1
Premium outlets
UK retail parks
Developments and other
Group
Total
Development and other includes the movement in the UK Other interests portfolio where valuations increased by a total of £7m and Developments which increased by £23m during 2018. Other capital movements reflect the impact of changes in purchasers’ costs, development surpluses and capital expenditure
51
Appendices: Group
2018 valuation data UK flagship destinations
France flagship destinations
Ireland flagship destinations
UK retail parks
UK other interests
Total portfolio
True equivalent yield (%) 31 Dec 2018
5.5
4.3
4.5
6.8
8.0
5.3
31 Dec 2017
5.1
4.4
4.4
6.2
7.2
5.0
Change (bps)
+40
–10
+10
+60
+80
+30
31 Dec 2018
169.3
89.3
45.3
59.7
13.3
376.9
31 Dec 2017
186.7
91.7
43.3
75.4
14.1
411.2
–2.0
0.5
2.8
–2.7
0.3
–0.9
ERV (£m)
LfL change (%)
52
Appendices: Group
Key disposals achieved 2016 - 2018 2016 : average -2% below book value
Proceeds (1) £m
Monument Mall, Newcastle
75
Buyer
Standard Life
Villebon 2, Villebon-sur-Yvette
132
French Institution
Thurrock Shopping Park
100
TH Real Estate
Manor Walks shopping centre, Cramlington
78
Arch (local authority)
Westmoreland retail park, Cramlington
36
Arch (local authority)
Grand Central, Birmingham (50%)
175
Westquay South, Southampton (50%)
47
CPPIB GIC
2017: average -3% below book value Westwood and Westwood Gateway Retail Parks, Thanet
80
BMO (private equity)
Saint Sébastien, Nancy(2)
140
AEW (private equity)
Place des Halles, Strasbourg
167
Greenstone Oxford Limited
2018: average -7% below BV Battery Retail Park, Selly Oak
58
NFU Mutual
Wrekin Retail Park, Telford
35
Ediston/Europa
Imperial Retail Park, Bristol/Fife Central Retail Park, Kirkcaldy
164
Capreon (private equity)
Highcross, Leicester (50%)
236
Asian investor, introduced by M&G Real Estate
Total 2016 – 2018
£1.6bn
(2)
1 2
Gross proceeds Total annual gross proceeds: 2016 - £651m; 2017 - £402m; 2018 - £570m
53
Appendices: Group
On-site and recently completed developments On-site developments
Italik, Italie Deux extension, Paris Les 3 Fontaines extension, Paris
Total
Lettable area m2
Expected completion
Value 31 Dec 2018 £m
Estimated cost to complete (2) £m
Estimated annual income (3) £m
6,400
Q2 2020
22
22
2
34
44,300
Q2 2021
194
145
16
23
216
167
18
50,700
Recently completed developments Parc Tawe redevelopment, Swansea Orchard centre extension, Didcot
Total
1 2 3 4 5
Total development cost (2) £m
21,400
Feb 2018
16
2
67
8,700
Mar 2018
44
3
76
60
5
Group ownership 100% for all on-site schemes Incremental capital cost including capitalised interest Incremental income net of head rents and after expiry of rent-free periods Estimated rental value as per the Group’s valuers at 31 December 2018 Let or in solicitors' hands by income at 22 February 2019
Let
%
Completed
(4)
£m
(5)
Lettable area m2
30,100
ERV
Let
(5)
%
54
Appendices: Group
Debt maturity profile Debt maturity profile 31 December 2018 (£m) 900 800 700 600
Revolving credit facilities
Private placement Sterling bonds Euro bonds
500
400 300
Secured debt 200 100
0 2019
2020
2021
2022
Note: Proportionally consolidated, excluding premium outlets
2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
2028
2029
2030
2031
55
Appendices: Group
LTV methodology 31 December 2018 Headline (£m)
Fully proportionally consolidated (£m)
3,406
3,406
VIA Outlets
-
242
Value Retail
-
658
3,406
4,306
7,480
7,480
VIA Outlets
-
636
Value Retail
-
1,823
326
-
Value Retail net assets
1,211
-
Value
9,017
9,939
38%
43%
Net debt Group
Loan Property values Group
VIA Outlets net assets
LTV
56
Appendices: Group
Gearing sensitivity
Disposals (£m)
Reduction in Group values (1)
0
100
200
300
400
(2)
500
600
700
800
900
1000
0%
63%
61%
59%
57%
55%
54%
52%
50%
48%
46%
44%
5%
69%
67%
65%
63%
61%
59%
57%
55%
53%
51%
49%
10%
77%
74%
72%
70%
68%
65%
63%
61%
59%
56%
54%
15%
86%
84%
81%
79%
76%
74%
71%
69%
66%
64%
61%
20%
99%
96%
93%
90%
87%
84%
81%
79%
76%
73%
70%
25%
116%
112%
109%
105%
102%
99%
95%
92%
88%
85%
82%
Gearing covenant 150%
1 2 3
(3)
Gearing sensitivity on changes in December 2018 values and future disposal proceeds. Values on a proportionally consolidated basis including premium outlets Calculations assume disposals are achieved at December 2018 book values Group’s tightest gearing covenant on unsecured bank facilities and private placement senior notes
57
Appendices: Group
Cost savings delivery on track to support reinvestment Breakdown of annual cost savings (£m)
2019 reinvestment (£m)
£7m p.a. £1.3m p.a. from future disposals Disposals £0.3m
£5.7m p.a. of cost savings delivered in 2018
Operational £2.7m
Board and management £2.7m
£4m p.a. Technology and innovation £2m
Super events £2m
58
Our Sustainability Vision: To create retail destinations that deliver positive impacts economically, socially and environmentally
Positive Places is our strategy for making that happen
2018 Materiality Review We regularly review our sustainability strategy with key stakeholders to ensure we stay focused on the most relevant issues for our business and stakeholders. Following our 2018 review, our material sustainability issues and response to them are as follows:
Material Issues
Our Response
Governance and Reporting
Comprehensive, sector leading sustainability reporting
Energy demand and security of supply Materials use and waste management Climate risk Sustainability of our product Community engagement Building certifications Placemaking
Clear focus on energy demand management Net Positive targets for carbon emissions, water and resource use Portfolio wide climate risk review completed Driving operational excellence in the environmental performance of our assets Extensive, locally focused community engagement programme Positive Places thinking underpinning our City Quarters concept to deliver best in class placemaking
59
Our achievements in 2018 11% reduction in energy demand £790k energy costs savings for retailers and JV
Delivering against our Positive Places Strategy
partners 11% reduction in carbon emissions across UK,
Ire and France portfolios Completed climate risk study for the managed retail portfolio using 2030 & 2050 scenarios Generated 450mWh clean electricity
Installed smart metering at nine sites to enable daily energy monitoring Recycled of 75% of operational waste across the portfolio 100% diversion of waste from landfill at 18 of 25 directly managed centres. £1.7 million+ invested in work with 452 community groups and organisations. Supporting 150+ business start-ups with PopUp Business and Initiative France
Our plans for 2019 Reducing energy demand across the managed retail portfolio by a further 11% Installing additional renewable electricity capacity at three sites Reviewing our energy procurement model to leverage additional renewable capacity and offer grid balancing Working with retailers to support efficiency improvements through fit out Embedding Positive Places within City Quarters concept
Working with our design teams to deliver best in class sustainability in our Dublin developments Working with regional water companies to support water reduction initiatives Working with re-use partners to reduce waste Continuing our programme of portfolio-wide, locally focused community engagement initiatives 60
Hammerson has set a target to be Net Positive for carbon, water, resource use and socio-economic impacts by 2030
“Hammerson was the first real estate company globally to set such comprehensive, challenging Net Positive targets and we are making good progress. Creating Positive Places underpins our delivery of best in class retail assets that respond to the major challenge presented by climate change.” David Atkins, CEO
Carbon
Resource Use
Net Positive for carbon means carbon emissions avoided exceed emissions generated.
Net Positive for resource use means waste avoided, recycled or re-used exceeds materials used that are neither recycled, renewable nor sent to landfill.
Water
Resource Use
Net Positive for water means water replenished by external projects exceeds water consumed from mains supply.
Net Positive for socio-economic impacts means making a measurable positive impact on socio-economic issues relevant to our local communities beyond a measured baseline. 61
Steps to becoming Net Positive
Our phase one target is to be Net Positive for landlord controlled carbon emissions, water demand, resource use and socio-economic impacts by the end of 2020
2015 27,000 tonnes CO2e 539,082
m3
2016
water
18,243 tonnes waste not recycled or reused
24,000 tonnes CO2e 511,888
m3
2017
water
17,293 tonnes waste not recycled or reused
Delivered carbon neutral development at Rugby
40,000 FTE jobs supported Installed 3 further solar PV across our assets arrays
2018 32% reduction in phase 1 NP Carbon footprint
Reduce energy demand by 23 tonnes CO2e savings further 8% v 2015 baseline from EV charging Achieved 73% recycling rate and reduced net operational resource use from 3,000 tonnes to1,200 tonnes
Generated 450mWh clean power
4 additional PV arrays installed
2019-2021 Landlord CO2 e reductions optimised and offset opportunities in place for remainder Energy procurement model
16% reduction in phase 1 driving additional NP water demand renewable capacity 34% reduction in Phase 1 Net positive approach NP resource use footprint 150+ business start ups supported
embedded City Quarters Increase onsite renewable and EV capacity Improve energy efficiency of retail units
62
Westquay, Southampton
02
UK flagship destinations
63
Appendices: UK flagship destinations
2018 operational update
UK flagship destinations
UK flagship destinations
2018
2017
LfL NRI (%)
−1.3
+1.8
Occupancy (%)
97.6
98.1
Leasing activity (£m)
14.4
13.4
Leasing vs. ERV (%)
+5
+8
Leasing vs previous passing (%)
+1
+6
−2.9
−2.7
−1.8
+0.4
In-store retail sales (%) Footfall (%)
(1)
(2)
1 2
Sales: 2018 UK benchmark –2.7% (Source: BDO) Retail sales on same-centre basis Footfall: 2018 UK benchmark -3.5% (Source: Tyco Shoppertrak)
11
64
Appendices: UK flagship destinations
2018 UK flagship leasing performance 2018 leasing and cumulative vs. 2017 and 2016 (£m) 3.5
16
3.0
14 12
2.5
10 2.0
8
2018 leasing £m Principal leasing
8.6
Reconfigurations
3.7
Temporary and other
2.1
Total
14.4
1.5 6
UK flagship leasing key facts
1.0
4
Leasing vs. Dec 17 ERV +5%
0.5
2
Monthly leasing 2018 (LHS) Cumulative leasing activity 2017 (RHS)
1
December
November
October
September
August
July
June
May
April
March
February
0 January
0.0
Leasing vs. previous passing +1% Average lease term: 11 years Average incentive: 7 months
(1)
(1)
Cumulative leasing activity 2016 (RHS) Cumulative leasing activity 2018 (RHS)
New permanent lettings only. 2017: average lease term 11 years; average incentive 8 months
65
Appendices: UK flagship destinations
Profile of leasing at UK flagships 60% of total leasing to principal lettings Principal lettings vs ERV (%) 100%
26% to reconfigured space Drives income Rebases value Next, Oracle
80% 60% 40% 20% 0% -20%
14% to short term/pop ups Trial new concepts Enliven space Contribute to NRI but rents below ERV Mercedes, Highcross
-40% -60%
66
Appendices: UK flagship destinations
UK flagship destinations leasing vs. previous passing rent Principal lettings vs previous passing rent (%) 120%
100%
71% leases at or above previous passing
80%
60%
40%
20%
0%
-20%
-40%
-60%
67
Appendices: UK flagship destinations
Leasing to quality operators in 2018 Digital brands and direct to consumer
Personal luxuries
Fashion – aspirational
F&B and leisure
68
Appendices: UK flagship destinations
Continued leasing demand in F&B Key leasing deals
2018 F&B leasing (£000) 2017
1000
2018
Coffee and Grab & Go
Fast Casual
Oracle
Dundrum
Renewal +11% uplift
New unit +104% vs ERV
Mid Market
Other
Highcross
Union Square
Former House of Fraser
Former Byron unit
Rent +630%
-28% below previous rent
900
+38% YoY 800 700
600 500 400
300 200 100
0 Coffee and Grab & Go
Fast casual
Mid market
1
Other
(1)
Other includes bars and restaurants, and premium dining categories
69
Appendices: UK flagship destinations
Exposure to department stores Hammerson exposure to department stores in UK Number of stores
(‘000 sq ft)
Harvey Nichols
2
85
Selfridges
1
260
John Lewis
5
1,230
Marks & Spencer
4
305
Fenwick
1
175
Debenhams
5
805
House of Fraser
3
490
21
3,350
Total
Floorspace
John Lewis, Grand Central, Birmingham
Hammerson sales growth
+ve
-ve
70
Proactively reconfiguring department store space
Upsized Zara store now trading
House of Fraser Highcross, Leicester
Proactively took back underperforming House of Fraser unit 11,000m2 across 3 floors Replaced with upsized Zara and JD Sports flagships, Adventure Golf, restaurants and additional car parking Advanced negotiations underway with F&B operator Additional £1.5m of rental income £17m project cost 71
Appendices: UK flagship destinations
Repurposing retail to F&B at Grand Central Comptoir Libanais
Mowgli
Opportunity to create vibrant 1,700m2 F&B terrace Replaced underperforming retailers with local and independent F&B operators Income uplift of £835,000
Holy Moly Macaroni
72
Les Terrasses du Port, Marseille
03
France flagship destinations
73
Appendices: France flagship destinations
2018 operational update
France flagship destinations 2018
2017
−0.9
+2.6
97.1
97.9
Leasing activity (£m)
7.3
9.8
Leasing vs. ERV (%)
+5
+5
Leasing vs. previous passing (%)
+5
+8
+2.2
+0.1
+2.5
+1.6
LfL NRI (%) Occupancy (%)
In-store retail sales (%) Footfall (%)
(1)
(2)
France flagship destinations
7
1 2
Sales: 2018 France benchmark -1.8% (Source: CNCC, as at Dec 2018)Retail sales on same-centre basis Footfall: 2018 France benchmark -1.7% (Source: CNCC)
74
Appendices: France flagship destinations
Portfolio weighted towards flagship assets
Focus on flagship destinations
Investing to enhance leading assets
89%
Les Terrasses du Port, Marseille Consistently strong footfall growth +5%
New brands including Boggi Milano, Polo Ralph Lauren Italie Deux, Paris Les Terrasses du Port Italie Deux
Transforming the centre into a cultural destination
Les 3 Fontaines
Italik extension launched in Jun-18
Other
Largest three assets 89% of portfolio
(1)
Les 3 Fontaines, Cergy Major 44,300m2 extension started in Jan-18 23% pre-let
1
Les Terrasses du Port, Les 3 Fontaines, Italie Deux; by value at 31 December 2018
75
Appendices: France flagship destinations
Differentiation between categories and brands in France Sales 2018
Hammerson +2.2% Index -1.8% (1) Footfall 2018
Hammerson flagship destination category sales and range, France 45% 35% 25%
Hammerson +2.5% Index -1.7% (2)
15% 5%
5.0%
2.7%
0.6%
0.5% -0.6%
-5%
-1.0%
-1.5%
-2.1%
-2.4%
Jewellery & personal luxuries
Dept. store (mainstream)
Leisure
-2.7%
-3.3%
-15% -25% -35% -45% Sportswear
1 2
Fashion Health (aspirational) & beauty
Dept. store (aspirational)
Home, consumer brands & gifts
F&B
Sales: 2018 France benchmark -1.8% (Source: CNCC, as at Dec 2018) Retail sales on same-centre basis Footfall: 2018 France benchmark -1.7% (Source: CNCC)
High High street street fashion fashion (contemporary) (traditional)
76
Appendices: France flagship destinations
2018 leasing performance
2018 leasing and cumulative vs. 2017 and 2016 (£m) 2.5
2018 leasing £m
12
10
2.0
8 1.5
6
Principal leasing
5.5
Reconfigurations
1.4
Temporary and other
0.4
Total
7.3
1.0
0.5
France flagship leasing key facts
2
Leasing vs. Dec 17 ERV +5%
Monthly leasing 2018 (LHS) Cumulative leasing activity 2017 (RHS)
1
December
November
October
September
August
July
June
May
April
March
February
0 January
0.0
4
Leasing vs. previous passing +5% Average lease term: 10 years Average incentive: 3 months
(1)
(1)
Cumulative leasing activity 2016 (RHS) Cumulative leasing activity 2018 (RHS)
New permanent leasing only. 2017: average lease term 10 years; average incentive 3 months
77
Dundrum, Dublin
04
Ireland flagship destinations
78
Appendices: Ireland flagship destinations
2018 operational update
Dundrum: repurposing retail space to F&B
Ireland flagship destinations 2018
2017
LfL NRI (%)
+1.6
+7.4
Occupancy (%)
99.0
99.7
Leasing activity (£m)
2.6
1.9
Leasing vs. ERV (%)
+8
+10
Leasing vs previous passing (%
+28
+4 4,100 sq m former Hamleys store Extended and repurposed into 5,220 sq m of catering and leisure space
Rental uplift from €20/sq ft to €37/sq ft Cost €14.8m Value uplift €21.1m YOC 7.9% 79
Appendices: Ireland flagship destinations
2.2m sq ft of prime space and sustainable development opportunities Contracted rent 11%
Hammerson portfolio
(2)
Hammerson / Allianz 50:50 JV
5%
18% 66%
Dundrum Town Centre
Dundrum Phase 2 Development Site
Dundrum
Swords Pavilions Ilac Shopping Centre Other (inc. Dublin Central)
Total rent: €51m (£45m)
(1)
The Pavilions, Swords 1 2 3 4
(3)
The Ilac Centre
(4)
Hammerson share at 31 December 2018 Hammerson portfolio participation under 50:50 Allianz joint venture structure 50% co-ownership with IPUT (25%) and Irish Life (25%). Development site 100% Hammerson 50% co-ownership with Irish Life (50%)
Dublin Central Development Site (100%) 80
Appendices: Ireland flagship destinations
Platform encompasses key retail centres in Dublin
81
Appendices: Ireland flagship destinations
Progress with ERV uplift at Dundrum Uplift in Dundrum ERV since ownership
Dundrum, Dublin
(1)
c.€90m
+17% €11m €65m
Acquisition ERV July 2016
Uplift at Dec 2018
Expected growth 2019-2021
Forecast 2021 ERV
On track with targeted 4-5% ERV CAGR 1
Dundrum ERV 100%
82
Bicester Village, Oxfordshire
05
Premium outlets
83
Appendices: Premium outlets
2018 operational update Value Retail (1)
Brand sales (€m)
(2)
Brand sales growth (%) Footfall (m)
(3)
(2)
Average spend per visit (€)
(2)
Average sales density growth (%)
(3)
Like-for-like net rental income growth (%) Occupancy (%)
(5)
1 2 3 4 5
(4)
VIA Outlets
(1)
2018
2017
2018
2017
2,903
2,693
1,071
930
8
8
9
13
36.8
35.4
30.3
28.3
79
76
35
33
4
5
5
10
4
14
10
5
97
95
92
91
With the exception of LfL net rental income growth, figures reflect overall portfolio performance, not Hammerson’s ownership share. 2017 figures have been restated at 31 December 2018 exchange rates Figures include acquired assets from the acquisition date. 2017 VIA Outlets figures have been restated to reflect more accurate footfall data and include Zweibrücken Fashion Outlet from the acquisition date Figures include assets owned for 24 months LfL NRI growth now excludes the impact of extensions and re-modellings. VIA Outlets 2017 LfL NRI has been restated for a foreign exchange correction (-4% impact to 2017 LfL NRI) 2017 VIA Outlets figures have been restated to reflect spot occupancy rather than assets owned for 12 months
84
Appendices: Premium outlets
Expanding outlets through extensions and remodelling Hede Fashion Outlet, Gothenburg
La Roca Village, Barcelona
Kildare Village, Dublin
2,700m2
2,500m2
5,500m2
15 units
c.25 units
29 units
TDC €11m
TDC €50-60m
TDC €50-70m
Opening Q4 2019
Opening Q4 2020
Pipeline
Note: TDC (total development cost) at 100%
85
Premium outlets portfolio Value Retail Villages
VIA Outlets centres
Bicester Village, Oxford GLA: 28,000m2 Boutiques: 161
Batavia Stad Amsterdam Fashion Outlet GLA: 30,900m2 Units: 130
La Roca Village, Barcelona GLA: 23,400m2 Boutiques: 135 Las Rozas Village, Madrid GLA: 16,500m2 Boutiques: 98 La Vallée Village, Paris GLA: 21,900m2 Boutiques: 106 Maasmechelen Village, Brussels GLA: 19,800m2 Boutiques: 97 Fidenza Village, Milan GLA: 20,900m2 Boutiques: 120 Wertheim Village, Frankfurt GLA: 21,200m2 Boutiques: 113 Ingolstadt Village, Munich GLA: 21,100m2 Boutiques: 113 Kildare Village, Dublin GLA: 16,700m2 Boutiques: 98
Fashion Arena Prague Outlet GLA: 24,100m2 Units: 99 Landquart Fashion Outlet, Zürich GLA: 21,100m2 Units: 79 Freeport Lisboa Fashion Outlet GLA: 36,500m2 Units: 119 Hede Fashion Outlet, Gothenburg GLA: 16,100m2 Units: 52 Mallorca Fashion Outlet GLA: 30,500m2 Units: 78 Wroclaw Fashion Outlet, Poland GLA: 13,700m2 Units: 88 Seville Fashion Outlet GLA: 15,800m2 Units: 64 Zweibrücken Fashion Outlet, Germany GLA: 29,100m2 Units: 114 Vila do Conde Porto Fashion Outlet GLA: 27,800m2 Units: 117 Norwegian Outlet, Oslo GLA: 13,300m2 Units: 96
86
Appendices: Premium outlets
Hammerson’s total investment in Value Retail
Holding companies 25% equity Bicester Village
La Roca Village
Las Rozas Village
La Vallée Village
Maasmechelen Village
Fidenza Village
Wertheim Village
Ingolstadt Village
Kildare Village
37
29
25
14
14
22
33
2
28
50
41
37
26
27
34
45
15
41
Village ownership via LPs (%) Total Village ownership (%) (1)
1
Total Village ownership calculated as economic entitlement of directly held and indirectly held interests
87
Appendices: Premium outlets
Tax free sales in our premium outlets portfolio have outperformed the overall European trend (1) Tax free sales by source market YoY growth (%) (1)
CAGR 20142018
+3%
+13%
South and East Asia
+15%
+15%
Gulf/Middle East
+10%
+8%
-5%
-8%
India
+18%
+33%
USA
+32%
+27%
+10%
+11%
+7%
+12%
Greater China 19.8%
1.8% 3.5%
45.9%
4.4% 10.2% 14.5%
Russia
Other
(2)
Total European benchmark
(1)
-4%
Outperformance due to enhanced international marketing strategy, an appealing and comprehensive brand offer and a best-in-class hospitality management
1 2
Source: Global Blue, (Value Retail Villages and European Snapshot December 2018) Other includes countries which are not in the top 15
88
Birmingham City Centre
06
City Quarters
89
Appendices: City Quarters
Short to medium term concepts Ladywood House Birmingham
Victoria hotel Leeds
Dundrum residential Dublin
9,400m2 vacant office
Under offer with international hotel operator
Opportunity to develop 100 unit residential scheme adjacent to Dundrum
Opportunity to develop 200 bed hotel
Strong local PRS market
Adjacent to Victoria Gate, Leeds
Target planning permission Q4 2019
Will complement existing offer and drive evening economy
Phase one of 600 unit opportunity at Dundrum
c.£28m development cost
Will drive additional retail and leisure spend at Dundrum
Opportunity to upgrade to modern workspace City centre hub with leading retail and leisure adjacencies Will drive footfall and spend into the Bullring Estate Forecast development cost £24m
(1)
Forecast development cost £17.5m (1)
Target YOC 5-6% 1
At Hammerson share
90
Appendices: City Quarters
The City Quarters opportunity
Major
Strategic
Near term
Key schemes
Area
Next Start on planning site submission
Retail
F&B
Residential
Workspace
Leisure
Les 3 Fontaines, Cergy
8,500m2
n/a
On site
Citywall House, Southampton
2,800m2
2019
Q2 2020
10,000m2
2019
Q2 2020
Victoria Hotel, Leeds
8,400m2
2019
Q2 2020
Ladywood House, Birmingham
9,400m2
2019
Q2 2020
Martineau Galleries, Birmingham
7 acres
2019
Dundrum Phase 2
5 acres
2020
Broadmead, Bristol
9 acres
2020
Dublin Central
6 acres
2021
Pavilions Phase 3, Swords
13 acres
2021
Victoria Phase 2, Leeds
10 acres
2021
Brent Cross
15 acres
n/a
Croydon
22 acres
n/a
Bishopsgate Goodsyard, London
10 acres
2019
Dundrum Building 5, Dublin
TOTAL
Education
Culture
Hotel
Public spaces
97 acres
91
Elliott’s Field Shopping Park, Rugby
07
UK retail parks
92
Appendices: UK retail parks
2018 operational update
UK retail parks 2018 2018
2017
LfL NRI (%)
−4.3
−2.5
Occupancy (%)
96.9
99.4
Leasing activity (£m)
2.4
6.3
Leasing vs. ERV (%)
+11
+11
Leasing vs previous passing (%)
+19
+9
−1.3
−0.4
Footfall (%)
(1)
1
Footfall: 2018 UK benchmark -0.5% (Source: Springboard Retail Parks index)
93
Appendices: UK retail parks
UK retail parks market split and Hammerson ownership Shopping parks
Hybrid parks
Key homeware goods parks
Standard homeware parks
Solus units
Higher rental growth segments
Higher rental growth
UK retail parks market
Hammerson portfolio
(1)
Shopping parks Hybrid parks
58%
92%
Key homeware goods Standard homeware Solus 1
Source: MSCI. Market and portfolio split by number of parks
94
Appendices: UK retail parks
Retail park disposals 2016 to 2018 2016: average 7% below BV
Proceeds (1) £m
Thurrock Shopping Park, Thurrock Fir Lane, Folkestone
100 7
(2)
Buyer TH Real Estate The Drapers Company
Cramlington Retail Park, Cramlington
78
Arch (local authority)
Westmorland Retail Park, Cramlington
36
Arch (local authority)
80
BMO (private equity)
2017:
average -3% below BV
Thanet Retail Parks, Kent Avenue Retail Park, Cardiff
6
(2)
Greenstone Oxford Limited
2018: average -7% below BV Battery Retail Park, Selly Oak
58
NFU Mutual
Wrekin Retail Park, Telford
35
Ediston/Europa
Imperial Retail Park, Bristol/Fife Central Retail Park, Kirkcaldy
Total 2016 – 2018
164
Capreon (private equity)
£564m
1
Gross proceeds
95