Invitation-only Roundtable
UK residential investment market - too good to be true?
Wednesday 15th May
Capital Economics London, 100 Victoria St, SW1E 5JL
9:00am | 12:30pm | 3:30pm
The UK’s residential investment market has grown rapidly over recent decades with interest at an all-time high since the pandemic. Not only that, but residential is expected to emerge from the current downturn in better shape than most other commercial sectors and outperform over the medium term.
We’re delighted to invite you to join our property economists at our London office for an in-person roundtable on Wednesday 15th May. Our roundtable events give you an opportunity to ask your questions and hear directly from our experts on:
- Our new forecasts for the institutional residential sector, ahead of their inclusion in our UK Commercial Property Outlook;
- Which living sectors offer the best opportunities;
- And whether higher interest rates will prove a tipping point for BTL landlords.
Request your space
Complete the form below to request your space at the event. A member of our team will be in touch to confirm.
Meet the speakers
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Andrew Burrell
Chief Property Economist
Andrew Burrell joined Capital Economics in 2018 as the Chief Property Economist. Prior to this he was the EMEA Head of Economics and Forecasting at JLL, working closely with European property investors. A decade in real estate was preceded by over 15 years as a professional economist at Experian, the Bank of England, RBS and the London Business School. He is an active member of both SPR and IPF.
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Andrew Wishart
Senior Property Economist
Andrew Wishart runs our UK Housing service. Having joined Capital Economics via the graduate scheme in 2015, Andrew spent three years working on the UK Economics service before joining the property team to cover the UK housing market. Prior to joining Capital Economics, Andrew worked in the Macroeconomic Analysis team at HM Treasury covering GDP and inflation. Andrew holds a Master’s degree in Economic History from the London School of Economics and an undergraduate degree in Economics from the University of Surrey