GERMAN home prices are rising at the fastest pace in decades, reviving talk of a property bubble. Michael Zahn鈥檚 company owns more than 160,000 apartments and he鈥檚 having none of it.
鈥淔or 20 years, we had no growth in Germany at all — nothing,鈥 the 54-year-old chief executive officer of Deutsche Wohnen SE said in an interview. 鈥淲e鈥檙e now making up for lost ground, but that doesn鈥檛 mean the market has peaked.鈥
German homes have appreciated by about 60% since 2010, Fitch Ratings Ltd. said in a report last week. That鈥檚 an unprecedented increase for a market that was slow to embrace home ownership and attract foreign investors.
鈥淧roperty yields have come under extreme pressure in the big cities,鈥 said Udo Cordts-Sanzenbacher, co-head of residential investment at BNP Paribas Real Estate in Frankfurt. 鈥淥n the other hand, there鈥檚 a huge amount of liquidity in the market, and prices are still relatively low by international standards.鈥
Berlin, Deutsche Wohnen鈥檚 base and its largest market, has been the boom鈥檚 biggest winner. This month, the city came top of a global ranking of 150 residential property markets compiled by Knight Frank, sealing its transformation from a grungy backwater to one of Europe鈥檚 most sought-after locations. Three other German hot spots — Hamburg, Munich and Frankfurt — also appeared in the top 10.
Investors spent a total of 鈧14 billion ($17 billion) on German homes last year, up from 鈧13.5 billion in 2016, data compiled by BNP Paribas show. North American buyers accounted for about 5% of the total, the most of any region outside Europe.
Zahn has spent his entire career working for Berlin-based property companies. Yet even he was surprised by the speed of the change, which he attributes to the city鈥檚 rising population, combined with record-low unemployment, a shortage of new properties and high levels of liquidity. 鈥淭here鈥檚 still a lot of upside potential,鈥 he said.
Not everyone is so bullish about German real estate. Fitch last week predicted that price gains will slow to 5% this year and 3% in 2019, compared with 8.6% last year.
In a January report, Deutsche Bank said the risk of a bubble is increasing, while a month later, Germany鈥檚 central bank expressed its concern about the boom. The Bundesbank said properties in locations such as Berlin, Frankfurt and Munich may be overvalued by as much as 35%.
鈥淢arket crashes are typically caused by too much construction, and the opposite is true in many German cities,鈥 said Michael Voigtlaender, senior economist at the German Economic Institute. A potential drop in immigration is a bigger issue, according to Voigtlaender, who expects prices to be little changed next year after a further increase in 2018.
Rising borrowing costs may also damp demand. Deutsche Bank expects five- to 10-year mortgage rates to rise to 2% by the end of the year, from about 1.7% at the moment. However, the speed of the increase — from a very low level — is likely to limit the impact, according to German lender Helaba.
Zahn was appointed Deutsche Wohnen CEO in December 2008. Since then, the company鈥檚 rental income has more than doubled, helped by acquisitions such as the 鈧3.4-billion purchase of GSW Immobilien AG and of 13,500 homes from Patrizia Immobilien AG for 鈧1.1 billion. That鈥檚 lifted its market value to more than 鈧13 billion.
However, Zahn can no longer count on acquisitions for growth because far fewer large portfolios are coming onto the market. 鈥淭hese days, our strategy isn鈥檛 M&A, it鈥檚 asset management,鈥 he said.
Deutsche Wohnen is spending 鈧1 billion to add value to its properties. That includes modernizing homes, expanding them by adding an extra story or even, in some cases, rebuilding them.
鈥淲e鈥檙e not in a position where we can expand at the same pace as we did in the last three or four years,鈥 Zahn said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why we鈥檙e investing so much in our existing portfolio.鈥 — Bloomberg


