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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Marange, Chiadzwa and other diamond fields and the Kimberley Process - Index of articles
Harare's
changing spaces
Jason
Moyo, Mail and Guardian (SA)
May 31, 2013
http://mg.co.za/article/2013-05-31-00-zimbabwes-changing-spaces
Blue chip companies
are moving out of Harare's central business district into outlying
suburbs as retailers dominate office space.
At Joina City,
central Harare's prime mall, its four floors full of shops are bustling
with shoppers hopping though trendy stores, but only half of its
12 000m² of office space is occupied.
It is a picture
seen across much of Harare's central business district: as the economy
becomes ever more dominated by retailers, office space lies empty,
whereas retail space is booming. The result is a marked shift in
the profile of tenants in the central business district as retailers
demand more space, pushing other businesses out of the centre of
the city to office parks on the northern verges of the city.
"Retail
space remains in high demand, both in the CBD and suburban
locations. There has been an uplift in retail prime rents for new
lettings in Harare of about 60% during 2012, but the sustainability
of the achieved rents is doubtful in an environment of weak consumer
spending," says leading agents Knight Frank.
Take-up of office
space has been poor, Knight Frank reports, and tenants are struggling
to meet rent and service charges. "Voids have increased, in
some buildings to over 30%," it says.
Larger property
investors are now looking outside the city centre for better-quality
tenants and rentals. Old Mutual, the country's largest property
owner, continues to look outside the city and is building a new
office complex along Borrowdale Road in Borrowdale, an affluent
area just outside Harare.
Just down the
road from the Old Mutual building is the site of the proposed Mall
of Zimbabwe, a large mall and office park. According to investors
in the project, more than 60% of the leases with tenants have already
been signed. The project will provide more than 68 000m² of
mostly retail space, much of which has been taken up by South African
retailers. Valued at $100-million, property agents say it is the
largest single private property development so far in Zimbabwe.
Construction had been expected to begin this month.
Rush
for retail space
According to
agents, another investor recently bought Pomona, a shopping centre
in Borrowdale, for $7.8-million. Sugar company StarAfrica sold its
headquarters in the same area for $3.55-million.
Although Knight
Frank is cautious of how long the rush for retail space in the Harare
city centre can last, Old Mutual, which has the largest property
holdings in the city centre, is more optimistic about the economy,
which it believes will sustain retail property.
"The central
business district retail sector property is arguably the most thriving
property sector in Zimbabwe, partly due to macroeconomic recovery
strides supporting increased consumer spending," Old Mutual
says.
With consumer
spending rising, property owners are looking to attract retailers
and are charging higher rent. Retailers, from large supermarket
chains to small, independently owned stores, now dominate the city
centre. "The future outlook suggests an increased redistribution
of tenants, with more client-interfacing tenants filling up CBD
retail, while less front- office-orientated tenants fill up the
suburban office parks as more players in the respective sector enter
the market," says Old Mutual.
But estate agents
paint contrasting pictures on the state of the market. Though retail
space is booming, there is some worry over the rate of rent defaults.
The Estate Agency Council of Zimbabwe says the rate of rent defaults
has risen to 60%, well above the 20% that is considered safe.
Quality
of tenants
"The quality
of tenants has significantly changed since the turn from the Zimbabwean
dollar to the multicurrency system," the council's chairperson
Oswald Nyakunika says. "We lost quality tenants during the
Zimbabwean dollar era. But we are now seeing new blue-chip tenants
and survivors of the crisis." Pearl Properties, one of the
country's largest property owners, recently announced it was opening
a new real estate agency to respond to growing demand for quality
properties from some of its clients.
Like other investors,
Pearl Properties had to look outside the city for growth. It got
better returns than it expected when it refurbished a mall in Greendale,
where it made Pick n Pay its anchor tenant. Managing director Francis
Nyambiri this week said profit in the first four months of this
year was 4.64% ahead of last year, and 9.69% above the forecast.
Still, the company's expenses are up about 33% as it looks to refurbish
some of its properties to attract more quality tenants.
But, like many
property investors, the company has had to write off a lot of debt
owed by tenants who are failing to pay rent. Still, the company
is not giving up on the city centre. It is spending $50-million
on a new taxi rank and mall in central Harare.
It is a strategy
many investors are following: buying properties and refurbishing
them for better tenants. It worked for Pearl, which saw the value
of its investment properties growing 9.6% to $120-million last year
due to refurbishments and increased rental income.
Foreign
traders without licences to be expelled
If Empowerment
Minister Saviour Kasukuwere has his way, thousands of foreign-owned
retailers will have to shut down - from the bargain clothing stores
in downtown Harare to the $100-million shopping mall that is being
built uptown. The government recently published a notice giving
all foreigners in the retail sector six months to clear out, saying
foreigners will no longer be allowed to operate in "sectors
reserved for locals", one of which is retail.
These sectors
range widely from primary production of food and cash crops, transport,
retail and wholesale trade to bakers, advertising agencies and even
hairdressers.
All businesses
in these sectors have been given six months to get a compliance
certificate from the National Indigenisation and Economic Empowerment
Board, which oversees implementation of the empowerment regulations.
According to the notice, foreign-owned companies will not be licensed.
But it is hard to see how Zanu-PF could allow expulsions.
A mass expulsion
of West African traders from Harare appears unlikely for a government
still keen on having friends. And, if it follows the law to
the letter, the planned Mall of Zimbabwe - the largest private property
development by one investor in the country - will have to stop construction.
The mall, according to developers, has already signed up much of
its store space to large South African retailers looking to jump
in on what some see as a consumer spending boom.
The law would
also have to shut down the Long Cheng Plaza, a large shopping mall
built by Chinese company Anjin, which has a joint venture with the
military in the Chiadzwa
diamond fields.
"Any person
who operates a business referred to [in the law] without an indigenisation
compliance certificate with effect from January 1 2014 shall be
guilty of an offence and liable to a fine not exceeding level four,
or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding three months or to
both such fine and such imprisonment," the notice reads.
Bargain
clothing stores face closure
If the law is
implemented radically, many of the bargain clothing stores that
dominate downtown Harare will have to shut down. This would pander
to pressure from Zanu-PF-aligned groups, among them the Affirmative
Action Group and Upfumi Kuvadiki, an outfit that held demonstrations
against West African store-owners in last year.
But though Zanu-PF
may curry favour with those groups with the regulations, it is unlikely
to actually implement the law in its radical form, according to
the head of one of the country's largest retailers, who declined
to be named. "In its present form, the law would make it illegal
for Pick n Pay or Edgars to operate in Zimbabwe, even if their local
operations are majority owned by locals. I do not think they [the
government] want that," he said. "From discussions, it's
clear [they want] to appear to be caring for local small businesses."
But Zweli Lunga,
general manager for compliance at the National Indigenisation Economic
Empowerment Board, said the regulations were meant to bar foreigners
from the targeted sectors.
"We will
only give indigenous Zimbabweans [a compliance certificate] because
these are sectors we feel do not require huge capital investments.
Foreigners who apply will be turned down and we will ask them to
close shop," said Lunga. The law has some oddities; according
to Lunga, a foreign-owned restaurant that does not serve local
food could be exempted.
This would likely
save the many Chinese restaurants in Harare. Zimbabwe National Chamber
of Commerce president Oswald Binha said his group backs the move,
but cautioned against rash implementation. "As much as we don't
want to destabilise the economy, we welcome the move and we are
behind the government in implementing it. We must do it in a manner
that does not cause chaos."
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