German property shares up on reports of watered down Berlin rent cap


By Reuters

BERLIN - Shares in German real estate company Deutsche Wohnen (DWNG.DE) surged more than 10% on Friday after a newspaper reported a rent freeze in Berlin could be watered down after a meeting of local governing parties.

General view at residential building of village Karlsfeld near Munich, Germany August 24, 2016.  (REUTERS / Michaela Rehle / MANILA BULLETIN) General view at the residential building of village Karlsfeld near Munich, Germany August 24, 2016.
(REUTERS / Michaela Rehle / MANILA BULLETIN)

While the ruling coalition in Germany’s capital — made up of center-left Social Democrats (SPD), far-left Die Linke and the Greens — is still planning a rent freeze it will be possible for landlords to increase rents moderately, tabloid Bild reported.

The benchmark for rent hikes will be the inflation rate, the newspaper added.

Initial details of the rent freeze, which were leaked last weekend, shocked investors. Analysts and critics said the planned measures amounted to a rent cut.

Berlin’s SPD Mayor Michael Mueller later distanced himself from the plans.

They were drawn up by his administration’s housing department, which is led by far-left politician Katrin Lompscher.

The government of the 3.6 million-strong city state decided in June to freeze rents for five years, heeding complaints from many residents that their once famously affordable city was pricing them out.

Experts have said the rent freeze could worsen Germany’s housing crisis by scaring off real estate investors eager to build in urban centers.

Berlin is a key market for Deutsche Wohnen, which has 116.000 units in the capital, including four landmark housing estates that are included in Unesco’s world heritage list.

Shares in Deutsche Wohnen rose as much as 11.8% and were up 9% at 0740 GMT. Its bigger peer Vonovia (VNAn.DE), which is listed in the blue-chip DAX index .GDAXI, was up 3.9%.