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Private Rented Sector in Ireland well below European norms

Written by Robert McHugh, on 28th Aug 2018. Posted in Property

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AIB Real Estate Research economists Pat O’Sullivan and Rory McGuckin have released a new paper on the Private Rented Sector (PRS) in Ireland which finds that institutional investors require high quality, large scale apartment units and this source of equity capital is key in supporting the development of a sustainable, functioning PRS sector.
 
Just 10% of Ireland’s housing stock is accounted for by apartments, compared with 30-50% in some other European countries. According to an AIB analysis, there are almost 13,000 apartments currently in the pipeline in Dublin, with over 9,500 having already been granted planning permission.

There are currently 1,261 apartments proposed in Dublin’s docklands specifically aimed at the PRS sector, while a further 1,268 are proposed in South Dublin. 
 
The growth of the PRS sector as an investment asset class saw €386.8m of capital transacted in the sector in 2017 across 24 deals, up from €269.1m in 2016.  Further growth is expected this year. 
 
The paper raises concerns about the prevailing level and rate of growth in rents in Dublin, and to a lesser extent other urban locations.  Dublin rents are at the sixth highest level in the world according to EU research, comparable with New York, London and Singapore. 

The paper also finds it’s possible, if not likely, that the current growth in rents will be curtailed once new residential supply approaches underlying levels of demand. 
 
Source: www.businessworld.ie 

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