Owner of major Scottish shopping centres collects just two-fifths of rents from tenants amid pandemic

Hammerson, the retail ­property giant that owns Aberdeen’s Union Square ­centre, has revealed it collected just 41 per cent of rent from its tenants as lockdown restrictions hit income.
Aberdeen's Union Square centre is among Hammerson's assets.Aberdeen's Union Square centre is among Hammerson's assets.
Aberdeen's Union Square centre is among Hammerson's assets.

Bosses at the company, which is also joint owner of the Silverburn shopping centre in Glasgow, said of the £61.5 million rent due by the end of 2020 just £19.8m was collected.

Some £12.9m has been deferred or not yet due, with £28.8m outstanding. The 41 per cent figure is lower than the 63 per cent collected in the second quarter of 2020 at the previous peak of the pandemic.

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Data revealed in Ireland, where the company owns a handful of shopping centres, showed that rent collection was just 31 per cent, the UK was 41 per cent and France was 46 per cent.

In the UK,flagship sites, typically found in city centres, were particularly hard-hit, with just 36 per cent of rent collected – although retail parks, with a greater number of essential stores, had a better time with 64 per cent paid. Among Hammerson’s other major retail assets are Birmingham’s Bullring and London’s Brent Cross.

The firm pointed to encouraging boosts in customer numbers during the Christmas trading period from November 30 to December 24 as the second English national lockdown ended and the tiering systems allowed for more stores to reopen.

However, city centre sites continued to struggle to return to levels seen in pre-pandemic times, with footfall hitting just 60 per cent of the previous year.

Retail parks were more positive, with customers typically feeling more comfortable visiting outdoor sites with parking facilities to avoid public transport. The firm said footfall on these sites was at the same level as a year ago.

During the Christmas run-up, 75 per cent of tenants in the UK were open or offering click and collect.

So far this year, however, this has fallen to just one-in-four open – either as essential retailers, non-essential stores offering click and collect, or restaurants and cafes providing takeaways and deliveries.

Hammerson’s Irish portfolio is also seeing only a quarter of occupiers open and French sites are being hit by a 6pm national curfew.

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