European Office Real Estate 2025: Buying the U? - Webinar Summary

15.07.25

The webinar, hosted by Matthew Richardson, was the third in a series, this time exploring the European office market. It featured three expert speakers: Andrew Angeli (Zurich Insurance), Cecile Babcock (Edge Technologies), and Mike Barnes (Savills).

 

Market Outlook – Andrew Angeli (Zurich Insurance)

Andrew Angeli presented a cautiously optimistic view of the European office sector. Despite recent underperformance and negative sentiment, he argued that offices remain a strategic asset class, especially for institutional investors like Zurich Insurance.

  • Offices still accounted for 21% of European investment activity in 2024.
  • Investor surveys may overstate the decline in office appeal.
  • Zurich’s portfolio remains heavily weighted toward offices, particularly in Switzerland, Germany, Iberia, and France.

Angeli emphasized that asset-level selection is now more critical than sector-level allocation. He noted that while the U.S. office market suffers from high vacancy and oversupply, Europe’s Grade A space remains in demand. Asia-Pacific markets like Tokyo and Singapore are also performing well.

He also highlighted that:

  • Remote work is stabilizing, with more companies mandating office attendance.
  • Supply pipelines have largely shut down, limiting new development.
  • This supply-demand dynamic could lead to rental growth and improved performance.

 

Developer Perspective – Cecile Babcock (Edge Technologies)

Cecile Babcock echoed Angeli’s optimism but focused on the development and sustainability angle. Edge Technologies, a sustainable real estate developer, is shifting from ground-up projects to retrofits and refurbishments, driven by both carbon concerns and market timing.

  • Demand is rising for Grade A+ office space in prime locations.
  • Institutional capital is returning as risk perception declines.
  • Sustainability is no longer a premium—it’s a prerequisite for tenants and lenders.

She noted that private equity and family offices have been the most active investors recently, but institutional players are re-entering the market. Cecile emphasized that brown-to-green strategies require deep technical expertise to be financially effective.

Return expectations:

  • Core-plus risk for value-add/opportunistic strategies in line with INREV’s definitions.
  • The current opportunity window may close within 12–18 months.

 

Research & Leasing Trends – Mike Barnes (Savills)

Mike Barnes provided a data-driven view of the leasing and investment landscape. He confirmed that leasing activity is recovering, with a 3–5% year-on-year increase in 2025. Demand is strongest in CBDs, especially in cities like London, Milan, and major German hubs.

  • Rental growth over the past 5 years: ~19% in CBDs vs. ~8–9% in non-CBDs.
  • Grade A vacancy in prime cities is low (~2–4%), supporting further rental growth.
  • Flex space and plug-and-play offices are gaining popularity.

Barnes also addressed the impact of AI, suggesting it will have a modest net positive effect on office-based employment. He noted that lease terms are evolving, with more landlords offering flexible, ready-to-occupy spaces.

 

Q&A Highlights

  • Zurich is not increasing its office exposure but is rebalancing toward logistics and residential.
  • Debt markets are active for green, prime assets; private credit is growing as banks retreat.
  • Demographic shifts (e.g., aging populations) may lead to more repurposing of older stock.
  • The end of upward-only leases in the UK is not expected to impact prime assets significantly.
  • Swiss office markets remain attractive due to favourable yield spreads over low bond rates.

For the full webinar recording click here