the Uncertainty around the Uk’s secession from the EU makes several major London-based companies postpone relocation and ekspansjonsplaner, writes Business Insider.
instead rent them out for large parts of the kontorlandskapene they even rents in London. A total of more than 2.1 million square feet of office space to accommodate 21.000 people – are now on the sublease in the british capital.
It is especially banks and technology companies, among them Deutsche Bank, Citigroup and Microsoft, which now fremleier offices.
May affect the market price
the Proportion of open-plan office in London that is in use is now 30 percent smaller than it was at the same time last year, shows a note written by BNP Paribas Real Estate, courtesy of the Financial Times.
At the start of the year there were less than one million square feet of open-plan office on the sublease, according to the newspaper.

Now disappear bankjobbene from the Uk: These can be Europe’s new financial centre
Because the fremleier often offer more flexible terms than in the common tenancy, open this development up for the competition with the homeowners, points out BNP Paribas’ London-chief Dan Bayley faced with the Financial Times. It can affect the prices in the market something, ” he says.
a Lot of uncertainty after Brexit
Three of the four british top corporate executives considering moving the head office or parts of the business out of the united Kingdom as a consequence of brexit, showed a survey conducted by KPMG in september.
A recent study shows that selskapsledere have been reluctant to carry out additional investments as a result of the weak pound and a lack of clarity around the Uk’s future relationship with the EU.
A third of uk companies have deferred or dropped investments after the vote to leave the EU, according to the study.
In July also showed a survey done by the auditing company Deloitte, that 82 percent of those surveyed økonomisjefene in the companies of the London stock exchange is listed as the 350 largest, expects to cut investment next year, wrote the Swedish daily News.
It is the highest proportion since the survey was conducted for the first time in 2007 – up by 34 percentage points compared with the first quarter of this year.
It was 23. June in the year that the british voted to leave the EU.
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