US investment manager Atlantic Property Partners has offered around £190 million to buy 88 Wood Street in the City, London's financial district. And German property fund manager DekaBank is in talks to buy the nearby Moorhouse building for around £230 million pounds.
Both offers reflect a growing trend and if they go ahead will achieve net rental income yields higher than 6.2%, trumping the 5.7% yield British Land achieved in its £400 million pound sale of the Willis Building to the property arm of the State of Kuwait in May.
The Willis Building sale is currently regarded by numerous market players as the milestone to gauge how prime office prices have adjusted during a year-old UK property correction.
But if either bid from DekaBank or Atlantic Property Partners proves successful, it will forge a new benchmark for the pricing of prime central London office assets.
Several central London office buildings such as the HSBC Tower in Canary Wharf were sold at prices representing yields of around 4% during the last boom, but average yields have crept steadily higher as a commercial mortgage famine puts dozens of debt-driven buyers out of action.
Deka, one of Europe's biggest real estate investors, is looking to buy the 305,000 square foot Moorhouse property as part of a UK acquisition drive fuelled by a hike in cash inflows to its open-ended funds.