Peel Hunt's James Carswell and team warn in a note sent to clients this week that: "Following the Brexit vote, uncertainty has replaced confidence and it is very possible that the long bull market in physical real estate is over."
Carswell and team don't expect a repeat of the 2008/9 property crisis but they think we will see a stagnation in rent growth and a nosedive in office and retail property values.
The note says: "We expect rental growth to disappear or even reverse and expect London property valuations to fall by around 5-10%."
Finance firms are unlikely to take on any more staff in London while the UK's future relationship with Europe remains uncertain and this fall-off in demand will hit rents. If the UK fails to negotiate passporting rights, which let finance firms operate across Europe from their UK base, then up to 4% of London office space could fall empty as companies relocate staff, Peel Hunt says.
The broker says that "even before Brexit, there were concerns of an overhang in the City" and the broker says it "now predicts a c15% fall in capital values for City offices over the next 18 months and a 8% fall for West End and other London offices."
Peel Hunt says that the fall in the pound against the dollar and the euro in the wake of the Brexit vote will add to retailers' costs and it expects shopping centres and other retail space to suffer as a result. Continued competition from online retailers won't help either.
This chart shows just how bad the stagnation and slump in UK property is set to be - note the big falls across the board for the City and the big fall in the value of retail property:
Peel Hunt
Property stocks have also taking a beating, as this graph showing percentage changes since the referendum from Peel Hunt indicates:
Peel Hunt