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Do structural changes in the market mean the Irish boom is here to stay?

The turnaround in Ireland’s commercial property market has been extraordinary, writes John McCartney, director of research at Savills Ireland.

At the depth of the economic crisis in 2011, one-fifth of Dublin’s offices were vacant and investors spent just €25m (£22m) on income-producing property assets. By 2018, office take-up had recovered to a record level, vacancies stood at a 20-year low, and €3.72bn of property assets traded. Given the natural cyclicality of property markets, are we seeing the upswing of a regular cycle, or have structural factors led to a step-change in the scale of the market?

Sustained low interest rates have driven capital into risk-bearing assets in search of a return. The Irish property market has clearly benefited from this. Initially, with economic recovery still tentative, most of the capital came from US private equity. As transactional evidence accumulated and occupier markets strengthened, the investor pool widened. European capital arrived in 2015, led by German investors and, later, French and Swiss institutions followed. Money is now flowing in from Asia.

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