Banks in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) have become more willing to finance commercial real estate year-on-year. Over 66% of bankers expect their real estate loan portfolios to grow next year. When financing new construction, banks prefer residential housing, rather than industrial and logistics properties as they did before. This is according to KPMG’s 16th annual survey, which involved 47 financial institutions from nine CEE countries and, for the first time, Austria.
According to the Property Lending Barometer survey, interest in financing commercial real estate has increased noticeably among the surveyed CEE banks. The share of banks for which lending in this segment is more important than in the previous year rose to 36%. Last year, 25% of financial institutions expressed this view.
Over the past year, the differences in the importance attached to the segment in individual countries have also narrowed. In most of them, banks now consider it a strategically important part of their business.
"The increased willingness of banks to finance commercial real estate in the region is also supported by this year's significant revival in transaction activity. Year-on-year, we are again seeing an increase in investment in commercial real estate in CEE, and Czech capital has maintained the strongest share of these investments for several years in a row," said Pavel Kliment, partner at KPMG Czech Republic in charge of the real estate sector.
In the first three quarters of this year, the volume of investment in commercial real estate in CEE reached approximately EUR 7 billion. According to forecasts, the total volume for this year could exceed last year's EUR 8.8 billion by the end of the year, mainly thanks to developments in the Czech Republic and Poland.