INVESTOR DEMAND PUSHES PRICE OF MELBOURNE FRUIT SHOP TO $9M
Posted on 13 December 2016

One lucky vendor is banking $9 million – significantly more than what they
paid Coles in 2012 for a former First Choice Liquor store – after selling what
is now a successful fresh food operation in Forest Hill, 18 kilometres east of
Melbourne.
The runaway auction, held on site at 281-285 Canterbury Road, saw eight bidders make 104 bids
before the final offer, which was more than $2 million above the reserve.
Retail properties are in high demand in Melbourne, and this sale comes as
other shops and supermarkets are being snapped up on very tight yields by
investors who see them as a good antidote to low interest rates, agents say.
Leased to Strawberry Point Fresh Food Market, the Forest Hill property
includes a modern 1200-square-metre, enclosed facility and 48 open-air parking
spaces.
With a flexible and valuable Commercial 1 zoning, the asset, with 55 metres
of street frontage has, according to the agents “substantial future development
upside”. The tenant is paying annual rent of $348,140 to occupy the premises,
which the vendor bought for less than $4 million in 2012.
The sale reflected a yield of 3.6 per cent, which is particularly
encouraging for property owners when compared to recent freestanding
supermarket transactions selling for in excess of 5 per cent.
There was significant interest from Asian investors in the mix of
prospective buyers, the agents said.
Whilst the sale price reflected a very tight yield, the rate paid on land
was a moderate $2556 a square metre. Nonetheless it was an exceptional result
give the potentially very long lease.
In the past, sub-4 per cent yields, such as that recorded for 281-285
Canterbury Road, are typically seen when ‘strip shop’ assets sell in the $1
million to $3 million range.
“However, given the current interest rate climate and the increase in the
number of investors, both local and foreign, in the market, it is no surprise
that yields are sitting where they are,” Mr Vinci said. “The alternative to
buying property at 3.6 per cent is leaving your money in the bank at half that
yield, with no tax offsets such as depreciation and also no growth in capital
value.”