Deutsche Bank has reduced its recommendation on Workspace Group, moving the stock from a "buy" to a "hold" rating and trimming the target price from 480p to 400p. The brokerage said the change reflects ongoing operational strain following Workspace's fourth-quarter trading update.
In its update, Workspace reported that like-for-like occupancy was broadly flat at 82% in the fourth quarter, despite what Deutsche Bank quoted as "relatively resilient enquiry levels and conversion rates." The update also disclosed that the company introduced "some further mild discounting," with like-for-like rent per square foot down 1ppt, a sign of limited pricing traction in recent trading.
Analyst commentary from Deutsche Bank described the results as "another challenging picture for the business," noting that current trading dynamics have not yet produced gains in occupancy. The brokerage highlighted that management is deliberately not prioritizing further price reductions to fill vacant space. Instead, leadership is focusing on repositioning the business "as the value option for occupiers" while attempting to "better monetize the platform."
Deutsche Bank cautioned that the strategic shift is expected to require more time to show results and could pressure financial outcomes in the near term. The bank said the approach "will take (even more) time and impact profitability (and valuations) even further in the near term."
The update and subsequent rating change underscore that, for Workspace, healthy levels of enquiries and conversions have so far failed to move occupancy or pricing materially. Management's pivot toward value positioning and platform monetization is a deliberate trade-off against near-term profitability, according to the brokerage, with the expectation of slower payback than strategies that rely primarily on discount-led demand stimulation.
Context and implications
- Occupancy held at 82% on a like-for-like basis in the fourth quarter, showing no material improvement despite steady enquiries.
- Like-for-like rent per square foot declined by 1ppt after the firm applied limited discounting.
- Management is shifting emphasis away from price-led filling of vacancies toward repositioning and platform monetization, a move Deutsche Bank believes will weigh on near-term profitability and valuations.