UBS office fund closure marks new phase in Germany's property fund stress

The UBS office in Frankfurt am Main, Germany
The UBS office in Frankfurt am Main, Germany (Photo: philipus/Depositphotos.com)

Thirty months of consecutive net outflows. Three fund suspensions in the space of ten weeks. A sector average return of minus 1.2%. By any measure, Germany’s open-ended property fund sector is navigating its most sustained period of stress since the post-financial crisis closures of the early 2010s. And yet the picture is more nuanced than the headlines suggest, because the flagship funds are, for now, holding the line.

The latest analysis from rating agency Scope, covering 26 funds, makes for sober reading. Net outflows reached€7.6bn in 2025, up from €5.9bn in 2024, with total assets expected to decline further in 2026. The twelve-month return at end-2025 stood at minus 1.2%,masking a wide dispersion from minus 18.2% to plus 3.2% as performance diverges between funds. Scope sees no near-term reversal in outflows, though some providers report a tentative slowdown in redemption notices.

The two earlier suspensions of 2026 had already sharpened investor anxiety. Wertgrund WohnSelect D halted redemptions on 15 January; Fokus Wohnen Deutschland followed on 26 February. In the latter case, outflows accelerated sharply from December 2025. Despite selling ten properties worth €163m since 2024, liquidity proved insufficient. As Thomas Wirtz of INDUSTRIA put it, the decision was taken to “safeguard the interests of all investors.” The constraint is straightforward: in a weak transaction market, assets cannot always be sold quickly enough to meet redemptions.

The adjustment now underway reflects the interest rate shift of 2022. Financing costs rose, transaction volumes fell, and alternative investments regained appeal for retail investors. Open-ended funds are absorbing that repricing with the delay inherent in an illiquid asset base.

The first commercial fund falls

The stakes shifted materially on 25th March, when UBS Real Estate suspended redemptions in UBS (D) Euroinvest Immobilien — the first open-ended fund focused on commercial property to close since the interest rate turnaround. The previous two closures involved residential funds; this one is 85% invested in offices, and that distinction matters.

The closure had been signalled. In its November report, management had warned that gross liquidity of just 9%left the fund exposed if redemption requests continued at pace. They did. Despite efforts to sell assets — including the WTC Almeda business park in Barcelona and a logistics property in Bensheim — the fund could not generate sufficient liquidity. With net assets of around €460m, an occupancy rate of only 77%, and eight of its 14 properties clustered in the Pleyad Business Park north of Paris, the fund’s limited diversification left it structurally vulnerable. The market discount currently stands at 27%, and with the fund closed for up to 36 months under KAGB provisions, most analysts expect an eventual wind-down rather than a reopening. It is worth noting that UBS Euroinvest has been here before: the fund closed once already in 2014, reopening after 28 months. The second closure suggests the underlying issues were never fully resolved.

“The high vacancy rate and limited property diversification are weighing on the product,” said Sonja Knorr of rating agency Scope — a verdict that applies not just to this fund, but as a broader caution about office-heavy vehicles with concentrated portfolios.

The flagship funds are not the problem

The key distinction remains between the sector’s core and its periphery. The large, banking-backed flagship funds continue to view suspension as unlikely, and the aggregate data supports that view. Across the 26 funds analysed by Scope, liquid assets totalled €15.4bn at end- January 2026, representing an average liquidity ratio of 15.2% —well above the 5% regulatory minimum. Werner Rohmert of Der Immobilienbrief, a long-standing advocate of open-ended funds for retail investors, notes that the banking-backed heavyweights are currently generating sufficient property sales to meet redemption requests. The stress, he argues, is concentrated in smaller and more specialised vehicles.

That liquidity is being actively managed. Funds sold €6.7bn of property in 2025 against net outflows of€6.2bn. The balance is tight, but functioning. Occupancy across the sector remains stable at 92.6%, supported by long leases agreed in earlier years, and valuations have already been adjusted to reflect the new rate environment. BaFin president Mark Branson has distinguished clearly between the larger and smaller funds, stating he cannot rule out further closures among the smaller vehicles while considering the majors to be less at risk. In aggregate, the sector appears less exposed to a further broad-based valuation correction than in earlier phases of the cycle.

Pressure is concentrated in smaller and more specialised vehicles — and as the UBS closure now makes clear, not exclusively in residential funds. The Wohnen ZBI fund was written down by around 17% in 2024, while Leading Cities Invest has seen cumulative devaluations of roughly 28% since late 2023. Legal disputes over risk classification and investor advice are beginning to surface, adding to the wider erosion of confidence rather than driving it.

The office question and the structural shift

Beneath the liquidity story lies a longer-term shift in portfolio composition. Office property remains central, but its weight is declining. According to BVI, the share of net rental income from offices has fallen from 68% to 46%. The so-called investment diamond of earlier decades — the large-scale, low-maintenance office asset with secure long-term income — is being fundamentally reassessed. Hybrid working, changing space requirements, finite building lifecycles and the end of yield compression have collectively undermined the assumptions that once made heavy office allocations self-evident. The UBS closure is a reminder that funds still carrying secondary office exposure with high vacancy are particularly exposed. Those that diversified earlier are better positioned.

Scope expects a recovery in returns in 2026 on average, barring further redemption shocks. But the environment remains fragile, shaped by weak transaction markets, geopolitical risk and higher long-term rates.

The sector is under pressure,but continuing to function. Asset sales are sustaining liquidity and the largest funds remain stable. But the underlying promise of the product — a liquid structure backed by illiquid assets — is being tested in real time. With a third fund now closed and the first commercial casualty on the books, the question of where the bottom lies is becoming more pressing by the week.

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