John Evans is the Principal of NAI Harcourts Rinnovate. They are the business broking office with offices in Shepparton and Melbourne.
Despite the COVID-19 pandemic and the resulting Australian Government closure of the international border from 20 March 2020, The Australian Bureau of Statistics estimated that Tasmania’s population increased by 0.16 per cent in the June quarter 2020 or from 30 June 2020, 1.12 per cent higher than the level at 30 June 2019.
Connected with local, national and international operators, NAI Harcourts enjoys access to opinions formed from a broad range of data sets and experiences. There are numerous business confidence and economic outlook surveys around, and the greater number of these indicate a sense of hope and enthusiasm about the year ahead, but they are also tempered with caveats of caution around the range of risks that still exist- known and unknown. So, what are some of the elements that the educated commercial market observer might like to consider. Jason Luckhardt, National Manager of NAI Harcourts shares some insights.
When it comes to the property industry, many companies boast a full end-to-end real estate service. But what does that actually mean?
Like so many areas touched by the requirements of financial services and their increasingly stringent regulations, business sales are heavily affected by the bank lending environment, which remains tight but active in 2018.
NAI Market Leader, business broking, Nai Harcourts - Commercial
Are neighbourhood centres/small strip retail still a place to invest? There is little doubt it is a very attractive asset class, often sitting in the pricing “sweet spot” for a broad range of investors. Much of the equation may lie in who is the cornerstone tenant underpinning the property.
Increased activity of Tasmania’s tourism sector is giving Hobart’s CBD an unprecedented surge in development activity.