2. Key Messages on January-June 2o17
• Very solid first half
– Financial occupancy rate rose by 1%-point to 94.4%
– Net sales up 6.9% y-o-y, like-for-like growth 4.9%
– EBITDA up 8.2% y-o-y, like-for-like growth 6.0%
• Services are rapidly becoming a material contributor to our numbers
– Service income growth +16.7% y-o-y to EUR 12.8 million
– EBITDA growth +81.0% y-o-y to EUR 1.6 million
• Macroeconomic tail-wind for the first time in a long time
• Revised strategy now in the implementation phase, progressing as
planned
• Guidance unchanged
August 29, 2017 Half-Year Financial Result 2017 | Keith Silverang, CEO2
4. Group net sales development
EURm
Very Solid First Half 2017
• FX changes increased net sales by EUR 1.1 (-1.6)
• On a constant currency basis net sales were up 5.5%
0
50
100
150
200
2014 2015 2016 H1/16 H1/17
Rental income Service income
161.7 170.6 172.1
84.3
90.1
Group EBITDA and EBITDA-margin
EURm, %
• FX changes increased EBITDA by EUR 0.8 (-1.1) million
• On a constant currency basis, EBITDA grew 6.5%, and EBITDA margin
was 54.3%.
August 29, 2017 Half-Year Financial Result 2017 | Keith Silverang, CEO4
87.2
93.0 93.1
45.4
49.1
54.5%
50%
51%
52%
53%
54%
55%
0
20
40
60
80
100
2014 2015 2016 H1/16 H1/17
EBITDA Margin-%
+6.9% +8.2%
5. FOCR by Business Unit
%
FinancialOccupancy Rate Hit 94.4%
• Group average in January-June 2017 was 94.4 (93.4)%.
• Group 10-year average FOCR is 94.3%
93.3 92.5 94.8
90.0
97.2 100.0
92.9
100.0 97.3 97.9
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
HMA Jyväskylä Kuopio Oulu Tampere Gothenburg Oslo St. Petersburg Tallinn Vilnius
Q2/16 Q2/17
August 29, 2017 Half-Year Financial Result 2017 | Keith Silverang, CEO5
Finland average: 93.2 (91.7)%
Scandinavia average:
94.9 (95.6)% Baltic Rim average: 98.3 (99.3)%
n/a
6. Service Income
EURm
Services on the Rise
• Service income grew in all campuses.
16.9
20.3
22.4
11.0
12.8
0
5
10
15
20
25
2014 2015 2016 H1/2016 H1/2017
Service EBITDA and EBITDA-margin
EURm, %
• Margin improvement through scale benefits
i.e. higher service income and growth in
more profitable services.
Service Penetration H1/17*
%
• Service penetration in Q2 was 14.9%.
Service income as
% of Group net
sales
14.2%
August 29, 2017 Half-Year Financial Result 2017 | Keith Silverang, CEO6
* Service Income’s share of Group net sales.
+16.7%
0.9
0.8
2.1
0.9
1.6
12.6%
0%
2%
4%
6%
8%
10%
12%
14%
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
2014 2015 2016 H1/16 H1/17
EBITDA Margin-%
+81.0%
7. FairValue of Investment Properties
EURm
August 29, 2017 Half-Year Financial Result 2017 | Keith Silverang, CEO7
YieldCompression Increased FairValues the Most
Division of FairValue by Segment
%
Finland
61%
Baltic Rim
19%
Scandinavia
20%
1 378.4
1 426.0
1 624.2
1 631.5
1 200
1 300
1 400
1 500
1 600
1 700
1 800
12/14 12/15 12/16 6/17
EUR
+9.6 m
10. Our long-term financial targets are:
• EPS growth of 8–10% per annum on an EPRA Earnings
basis
• ROE over 8% per annum on an EPRA Earnings basis
• EPRA NAV / share growth of at least 5% per annum
• Equity ratio over 35%
11. We are targeting to increase the like-for-like share
of services above 20% on all campuses. We will
also increasingly focus on the profitability of the
service business … targeting a margin of at least
20% by 2020.
- We are currently at 14.9% penetration in Q2 and at
margin of 13.4%.
12. Service Income
EURm
Services on the Rise
• Service income grew in all campuses.
16.9
20.3
22.4
11.0
12.8
0
5
10
15
20
25
2014 2015 2016 H1/2016 H1/2017
Service EBITDA and EBITDA-margin
EURm, %
• Margin improvement through scale benefits
i.e. higher service income and growth in
more profitable services.
Service Penetration H1/17*
%
• Service penetration in Q2 was 14.9%.
Service income
as % of Group net
sales
14.2%
August 29, 2017 Half-Year Financial Result 2017 | Keith Silverang, CEO12
* Service Income’s share of Group net sales.
+16.7%
0.9
0.8
2.1
0.9
1.6
12.6%
0%
2%
4%
6%
8%
10%
12%
14%
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
2014 2015 2016 H1/16 H1/17
EBITDA Margin-%
+81.0%
13. The plan is to allocate approximately EUR 30
million to development of UMA coworking
network during the next five years.
- We are currently scouting for new locations.
14. We expect to spend EUR 200‒250 million on
organic development projects by 2020, including
10–15 new projects.
- We are currently at around EUR 130 million and
5 projects.
15. EUR 93.9 millionWorth Organic Projects in Progress
Area Name Pre-let rate,% Rentable area, m²
Total investment,
EURm
Stabilized
yield, % 1) Completion
Helsinki Ruoholahti 3 41.2 10,300 33.2 7.0 7/2018
Tallinn Lõõtsa 12 23.1 9,700 13.6 9.0 7/2018
Vilnius2)
Penta 46.4 13,800 32.02)
8.4 10/2017
Vantaa Aviapolis Bldg H 0.0 5,100 15.1 8.0 11/2018
TOTAL 38,900 93.9
August 29, 2017 Half-Year Financial Result 2017 | Keith Silverang, CEO15
1) Stabilized yield = estimated net operating income / cost
2)Total investment including also the neighboring land plot with an expansion potential of at least 20,000 m2 for which a purchase agreement has been signed.
• Building H on the Aviapolis campus was launched in Q2/17.
16. Aviapolis
Building H
• Building H was launched in
Q2/17.
• The extension will grow the
campus to around 30,000
m².
• After this project, we can
still expand the campus by
another 25,000 m².
August 29, 201716
18. We currently foresee EUR 100-200 million
spend on acquisitions during 2017-2020, but
will only act if a compelling value creation
opportunity presents itself.
19. We Still Miss Spots on the Map
August 29, 201719
• We will do selective acquisitions in the
Nordic – Baltic Sea Area
• We have a clear set of criteria
• The focus will be more on assets with
development potential rather than fully
standing assets
20. .
Technopolis will also evaluate divestiture
opportunities … based on the
competitiveness, future prospects and value
creation potential of individual campuses
and sites.
21. It’s Nothing New,We’ve DoneThis in the Past
Divestitures
from 2000-
Time of
Divestiture
Sales Price,
EUR million vs FairValue
Tampere
Hepolamminkatu
2007 2.3 N/A
Oulu
Hanhitie 13
2010 2.2 positive
Tampere
Metso telatehdas
2010 3.7 positive
Tampere
Inion
2010 0.5
slightly
negative
Oulu
PKC house,Technocenter
2011 0.8 neutral
Oulu
Others in total
2011-2016 12.5 neutral
Lappeenranta
Vapaudenaukio
2013 5.1 negative
Kuopio minority 40% 2015 126.2 positive
Tampere & Lappeenranta
Finnmedi & Skinnarila
2016 60.6 positive
23. Macro EconomicTailwind
% Finland Norway Sweden Estonia Lithuania Russia
GDP growth forecast
y-o-y change '16-17 +2.0 +1.3 +2.7 +3.5 +3.1 +1.4
y-o-y change '17-18 +1.5 +1.5 +2.3 +3.3 +2.9 +1.6
CPI growth forecast
y-o-y change '16-17 +1.2 +1.9 +1.6 +3.2 +3.3 +4.2
y-o-y change '17-18 +1.5 +1.8 +1.8 +2.8 +2.7 +4.0
August 29, 2017 Half-Year Financial Result 2017 | Keith Silverang, CEO23
Source: OECD, June 2017
24. Prime OfficeYield Development inTechnopolis Markets
%
August 29, 2017 Half-Year Financial Result 2017 | Keith Silverang, CEO24
Yields are on the decline
Source: JLL (8/17), for Tallinn: Seven Real Estate Advisors (8/17)
0.0
2.0
4.0
6.0
8.0
10.0
12.0
14.0
12/06 12/07 12/08 12/09 12/10 12/11 12/12 12/13 12/14 12/15 12/16 6/17
Helsinki Oslo Gothenburg St Petersburg Tallinn
25. Financial Occupancy Rate, Group
%
August 29, 2017 Half-Year Financial Result 2017 | Keith Silverang, CEO25
Our Business Is Doing Fine
90
92
94
96
98
100
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 6/17
Group 10-yr average
26. Guidance unchanged:The company expects its
net sales and EBITDA to improve from 2016
based on its current investment property portfolio
and foreign exchange rates.
The Group’s financial performance depends on the development of the
overall business environment, customer operations, financial markets,
market yields, and exchange rates. Furthermore, any changes in the
property portfolio may have an impact on the guidance.
27. Capital Markets Day
on Nov 22, 2017 in Helsinki
Save-the-date invitations will be sent out shortly.
If you wish to participate, please send an e-mail with your contact
details at ir@technopolis.fi
33. Changes in FairValues, January-June 2017
EURm
August 29, 2017 Half-Year Financial Result 2017 | Keith Silverang, CEO33
Changes in FairValues
EURm
Yield
requirement
Occupancy
assumption
Moderniz-
ation
Other
changes
Projects in
progress Total
Finland 10.3 -6.2 -4.3 0.4 0.5 0.7
Baltic Rim 6.3 0.6 -1.2 -2.9 5.7 8.5
Scandinavia 2.6 0.0 -1.3 -0.9 0.0 0.4
TOTAL 19.2 -5.6 -6.8 -3.4 6.2 9.6
* Other changes include changes in market rents, operative expenses, exchange rates as well as inflation assumptions.
34. August 29, 2017 Half-Year Financial Result 2017 | Keith Silverang, CEO34
Lease Stock and Customer Base
• A total of approximately 1,700 customers
• 10 largest customers let approximately 21.9% of rented space and the single largest customer 4.1%
• In January–June, 10 largest customers accounted for 20.8% of rental income and the single largest customer 4.6%
Lease stock, % of space
Maturity, years Jun 30, 2017 Mar 31, 2017 Dec 31, 2016 Sep 30, 2016 Jun 30, 2016
< 1 21 21 19 18 17
1 – 3 19 20 21 22 22
3 – 5 18 18 17 17 15
> 5 16 15 16 15 18
Open-ended leases 26 25 27 28 28
Average lease term in months 34 34 35 35 36
Lease stock, EUR million 397.6 389.1 392.7 430.0 424.8
35. Interest-Bearing Liabilities, June 30, 2017
Total EUR 887.4 (905.0) million
Division of IB Debt
In addition, the Group has
an outstanding hybrid
loan of EUR 75 million,
which is not included in the
interest-bearing liabilities.
The average interest rate
on interest-bearing
liabilities (excluding the
hybrid loan) was 2.47%.
635.3
150.0
34.9
32.2
35.0
Bank Loans
Unsecured Senior Bond
Commercial Papers
Financial Leases
Other*
August 29, 2017 Half-Year Financial Result 2017 | Keith Silverang, CEO35
36. Maturity Profile of IB Debt*, EUR million
Maturity Profile of IB Debt
• The EUR 75.0 million hybrid loan has a redemption option in March 2018.
• EUR 150 million unsecured bond (maturity in 2020), callable in May 2018 at 101.88.
85.2
190.7
86.3
235.1
124.2
165.8
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022-
August 29, 2017 Half-Year Financial Result 2017 | Keith Silverang, CEO36
* Not including EUR 75 million hybrid loan.
38. Share Information: Largest Shareholders* on June 30, 2017
38
# of shares % of shares
Varma Mutual Pension Insurance Comp. 38,172,288 24.0
Ilmarinen Mutual Pension Insurance Comp. 16,634,470 10.5
City of Oulu 3,917,926 2.5
Laakkonen Mikko 2,139,276 1.4
Technopolis Plc 1,903,373 1.2
The Finnish Cultural Foundation 1,782,063 1.1
Jenny and AnttiWihuri’s Foundation 1,107,597 0.7
Jyrki Hallikainen and company 1,000,000 0.6
Etola Erkki 865,500 0.6
National Broadcasting Company’s Pension F. 828,744 0.5
10 largest shareholders, total 68,351,237 43.1
Foreign and nominee registered, total 55,220,234 34.8
Others, total 35,222,191 22.2
Total amount of shares 158,793,662 100.0
* Not including nominee-registered shareholders