Key Highlights

  • European real estate has shown signs of resilience in listed property company performance since ‘Liberation Day’, supported by more rate cuts.
  • Rental growth and the position in the capital cycle are key supporting elements for performance prospects in Europe. 
  • We expect total returns of 7.4% from the region over the next 12 months, although we are monitoring the impact of trade policy.
  • Considering tariffs and ongoing negotiations, we anticipate elevated uncertainty and heightened financial market volatility. We are monitoring the situation and will communicate any changes to the real estate Houseview, should the need arise. Please contact a member of the team for more information.

European economic outlook

Activity

The US’s 10% baseline tariff, in addition to sectoral tariffs, will give rise to a significant negative demand shock for the Eurozone. Worse, trading relations with the US might become even less favourable after the 90-day pause on reciprocal tariffs expires. And compounding the headwinds is a hit to wealth and confidence. These developments prompt us to factor in a further 0.5 [1] percentage point (ppt) shock to gross domestic product (GDP) on top of the 0.7ppt we had already incorporated into our base case. We expect the economy to just about avoid recession, but the risk of a downturn is elevated. 

Inflation

Weaker demand, a stronger euro, and cheaper energy commodity prices will accelerate the Eurozone economy’s already advanced process of disinflation. This will drive an undershoot of the European Central Bank’s (ECB) 2% target. Given the limited scope of the EU’s proposed retaliatory measures and the US’s relatively small share of total EU imports, the potential for this to reignite inflation is limited. We now see the headline rate averaging 1.9% [2] this year and 1.6% in 2026.

Policy

With both growth and inflation outlooks now weaker, the case for more aggressive ECB easing is growing stronger. We expect a 25 basis-point (bp) cut next week. In addition, another reduction in the summer is now likely. However, comments by some Governing Council (GC) officials point to concerns over a rebound in inflation because of supply-side disruption. It’s not surprising to see policymakers remain cautious on inflation, given the recent memory of the 2022/23 overshoot and anticipated fiscal easing. Despite their caution, we think a weak run of data will force a third additional cut later this year.

Key takeaway

Listed real estate has generally outperformed equities since ‘Liberation Day’. We believe the asset class will prove more resilient than most during the period of heightened volatility. 

Eurozone economic forecasts

(%) 2024 2025 2026 2027
GDP 0.8 0.6 1.0 1.5
CPI 2.4 1.9 1.6 1.9

Deposit rate

3.00 1.75 1.75 2.00

Source: Aberdeen April 2025 
Forecasts are a guide only and actual outcomes could be significantly different.

European real estate market overview

In March 2025, our Aberdeen multi-asset investments Houseview committee adjusted global real estate to a “+1 overweight” recommendation (maximum score +4). While liquid assets – such as fixed income, equities and real estate investment trust performance – have been volatile in recent weeks, we remain confident of an ongoing recovery in direct real estate total returns in Europe. The downgrade to risk in the houseview affected all asset classes, with cash weights increasing at the expense of risk positions.

While still positive, we acknowledge that the real estate backdrop has become riskier and relative pricing measures have become slightly less compelling in the last quarter. The volatility is evidenced by a sharp fall in global equity markets on the last day of the quarter, with the German DAX losing 2% [3]. The real estate component of the DAX was the best-performing sector on the day. This highlights the sentiment behind real estate as a relative winner in a more benign economic environment. Since then, listed property companies have generally outperformed all equities. 

The equity market sell-off has coincided with lower bond yields, with the German bund having eased off a recent high of 2.9% to 2.5% [4] at the time of writing. The level had briefly drifted to 2% at the start of the year, leaving real estate looking very cheap. However, following the 90-day pause on most tariffs and the focus on China, Europe currently looks better placed. Therefore, a balance of modest growth, gradual rate cuts, and easing inflation should leave European real estate looking better value.

Market momentum in European real estate is gathering pace. MSCI annualised European total returns increased to 4.8% [5] in 2024, the highest level since the second quarter of 2022. The fourth quarter of 2024 returned 1.8%, a notable increase from 1.4% in the third quarter and well above the long-term quarterly average return of 1.3%. Capital growth of 0.6% helped push total returns higher at the close of the year. The Netherlands, Portugal, Sweden, Spain and Denmark outperformed, as did the industrial, hotel and residential sectors. Indeed, some segments covered in the pan-European Pooled Fund Index hit double-digit returns in 2024, with Lisbon, Stockholm offices and Stockholm residential all clearing 10% [6].

The catalyst for improving returns has been a notable improvement in liquidity and capital markets. Investment volumes jumped by 46% [7] in the fourth quarter, compared with the same quarter of 2023; annual volumes were up 15% in 2024, as a whole. This chimes with INREV’s quarterly Consensus Indicator, which showed liquidity and financing as the strongest drivers of improving sentiment since the middle of 2024 [8].

An important feature that underpins our cyclical recovery thesis is ongoing rental growth in good-quality assets. European all-property rents increased by 4% [9] over the year to December 2024, a slight moderation from 4.1% in September. Residential and logistics assets have outperformed, but rents have increased across all sectors. Low supply persists and new construction orders are falling at a steady pace. High construction costs, high development finance rates, and tight labour markets mean we believe that nominal rental growth will beat inflation in 2025 and beyond. 

Outlook for performance and risk

The outlook for European direct real estate returns has improved in recent quarters, despite an increase in the risk backdrop. The yield spread against German bunds has been volatile, but in early April it was roughly 240 bps versus the all-property real estate yield. The margin between prime real estate yields and long-term bond yields is now only 30 bps weaker than in September 2024. With income growing through indexation and rental growth, direct real estate remains good value and will draw capital back in during 2025.

We forecast European all-property total returns of 7.4% in 2025 (a slight downgrade versus our December 2024 forecast because of higher interest rates, currently). Our three- and five-year annualised total-return forecasts are 9.3% and 8.8%, respectively. Returns are income-driven, with rental growth and yield impact both contributing to improving capital growth performance. We favour the UK, the Netherlands, Spain, Denmark, and Sweden in the near term.

We no longer anticipate any further falls in prime European all-property values. Secondary assets, particularly weak offices, have not repriced enough and will suffer further valuation declines. The main risks to our outlook are ongoing market disruption from US trade tariffs and reciprocal measures, a steeper yield curve through greater sovereign risk, and a much sharper economic slowdown across continental Europe (as a direct result of the trade war). A recession or stagflation are not our base case, and we believe there could be downside risks to interest rates that would support asset values and could drive yields lower than forecast. Low supply should insulate rents from a weaker macro backdrop.

In terms of strategy, core pricing remains attractive, particularly when considering income-growth potential from rental growth and indexation, and the heightened risk backdrop. However, value-add strategies should benefit from stronger underwriting on exit yields in a lower-rate environment. We favour overweight allocations to logistics, rented residential, hotels, student accommodation, retail warehousing, core offices, and alternative segments like data centres.

European total returns from March 2025

  1. Aberdeen Global Macro Research</span>
  2. Aberdeen Global Macro Research</span>
  3. LSEG
  4. LSEG
  5. MSCI
  6. MSCI PEPFI 
  7. MSCI Real Capital Analytics
  8. INREV
  9. MSCI Pan-European Index
  10. JLL
  11. JLL
  12. MSCI Real Capital Analytics 
  13. MSCI Pan-European Index
  14. Savills
  15. Property Market Analysis
  16. MSCI Real Capital Analytics
  17. MSCI Real Capital Analytics
  18. CBRE
  19. Green Street Researchn
  20. Eurostat, LSEG
  21. Euroconstruct
  22. MSCI Real Capital Analytics