Neighbourhood shopping centre, Pakington Strand has sold on a benchmark yield of sub-5.50%. The sale was managed by Colliers’ Tim McIntosh and James Wilson in conjunction with Stonebridge’s Kevin Tong and Justin Dowers on behalf of APH Holding who acquired the centre in 2016.
Located in Victoria’s largest regional city, the 5,317m2 centre comprises a high-performing full-line Woolworths supermarket paying percentage rent and supported by 13 speciality tenants on a 2.1ha mixed-use site with 307 on-grade car spaces.
Pakington Strand is located in Geelong West, one of Geelong’s wealthiest suburbs just 2km from the Geelong CBD and 76km south-west of the Melbourne CBD. The centre is prominently positioned on the popular Pakington Street retail strip, boasting a long-WALE of 12.4 years by area and returning a fully leased net income of approximately $1.7 million at the time of sale.
APH Holding held the property for almost eight years, releasing it to the market with full tenancy, including anchor tenant Woolworths and household names such as Subway and Brumby’s.
With the sale of this high-performing asset, APH Holding will begin 2024 with a renewed focus on their City Park Masterplan in Melbourne’s East with the first stage, a new and exciting retail experience, starting construction later this year.
Colliers’ Director, Tim McIntosh, said: “The benchmark result and depth of interest in Pakington Strand from private and offshore investors, listed and unlisted groups as well as developers reinforces the resilient buyer demand for well credentialed Victorian neighbourhood shopping centres.”
“The centre was unconditionally sold to a high net worth private investor on a yield below 5.50% shortly after a two-round process at the end of the campaign,” McIntosh added.
The campaign, representing only the fifth neighbourhood shopping to be brought to market in Victoria last year generated in excess of 300 inquiries across both agencies with a dozen offers received at the close of the campaign.
Stonebridge Partner Kevin Tong commented, “We continue to field strong depth of buyer interest from local and offshore investors as 2023 saw another year of limited neighbourhood shopping
centre opportunities offered publicly on the market. Although the purchaser was based in Victoria, we witnessed strong competition from offshore investors with multiple groups forming our
underbidders.”
In 2023, there were just five recorded sales of neighbourhood centres across Victoria, 40% down on the ten-year Victorian average and consistent with the national theme showing a 43% reduction in transaction volumes over the same period. Both Colliers and Stonebridge anticipate an increase in supply for the year ahead which will assist in alleviating the depth of investor demand.