Real Estate
APAC Real Estate Investment Volumes Sag In Q1; Some Brighter Spots – Knight Frank
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Although the overall APAC region saw a downturn in cross-border investment activity from a year before, the Singapore, Japan and South Korea markets gave a different story, according to Knight Frank.
Cross-border investment in Singapore’s real estate market rose
22.8 per cent above its 10-year average, although the volume of
investment in Q1 2024 slumped 44.5 per cent on a year
ago, according to Knight Frank in a study
of Asia-Pacific property market trends.
The Asian city-state received the highest share (45.6 per cent)
of overseas capital among APAC markets during the quarter,
the global property consultancy said.
South Korea saw a "powerful comeback," underscored by office
and hotel acquisitions, the firm said. Japan recorded the
highest investment volume in APAC, bolstered by office and
industrial transactions.
A hotspot for such activity – hotels, for example – is the
“MICE” sector (meetings, incentives, conventions, and
exhibitions), Knight Frank said. However, across APAC in general,
asset allocation to hotels dipped in relative terms from a year
ago.
The purchase of Citadines Mount Sophia Singapore and Hotel G
Singapore, both being rebranded, were cited by Knight Frank as
examples of the kind of investment going on in Singapore. For
example, earlier this year Weave Living formed a joint venture
with a BlackRock fund to buy Citadines Mount Sophia for S$148
million ($109.6 million). The property is a 154-unit property
near the city-state’s Bugis area. It was bought from CapitaLand
Ascott Trust.
“Our research shows that in the face of a 29 per
cent quarter-on-quarter decline in cross-border activities
across Asia-Pacific, Singapore bucked this trend,” Christine Li,
head of research, Asia-Pacific at Knight Frank said. “The
hospitality sector attracted significant interest from
institutional investors with its optimistic outlook and improving
operational metrics."
Turning to the MICE factor, Li noted that government initiatives
such as the China-Singapore 30-Day Mutual Visa Exemption were
notable boosts for increasing tourism demand.
Rising interest rates – with Japan finally joining the trend –
alongside geopolitical and macro-economic uncertainties, have
taken some heat out of APAC’s real estate investment markets in
general. The offices sector continues to feel the impact of
pandemic lockdowns and the move to remote and hybrid working
practices.
Softening volumes
Data for the latest quarter shows that for all the oft-mentioned
woes of the offices sector post-pandemic, offices as a share of
total real estate allocations rose to 39 per cent in 2024 from 32
per cent in the first quarter of 2023. Retail rose to 24 per cent
from 21 per cent, and industrial shrank to 18 per cent from 27
per cent. "Living sectors" fell to 6 per cent from 8 per cent;
hotels dipped from 8 per cent from 9 per cent, and the
remainining "niche" sector rose to 5 per cent from 3 per
cent.
Knight Frank said that US institutional investors were
particularly focused on office opportunities, with the biggest
deal being the Vision Crest acquisition, at $348 million.
Singapore investors were more interested in hotel assets,
however, such as the $318 million Conrad Seoul Hotel in South
Korea.
South Korea, Japan
Although the Asia-Pacific trend is one of softer volumes of
cross-border investment, South Korea and Japan have attracted
renewed commercial investment interest, particularly in the
office sector.
In South Korea, investment volume reached $5.8 billion, surging
180 per cent year-on-year. Office deals dominated the market, at
64.7 per cent of the total investment volume – with a 69.6 per
cent quarter-on-quarter rise and a sixfold year-on-year
increase.
Hospitality assets in South Korea attracted $850 million in
investment, up 234.7 per cent from Q4 2023 and a 44-fold
year-on-year expansion, primarily funded by institutional
investors.
In Japan, despite an overall contraction in real estate
investment volume, with a 28.3 per cent year-on-year decline, the
country saw renewed investor interest in office and
industrial assets.
Office transactions in Japan accounted for almost half of the
total volume, which doubled from the previous quarter but dropped
31.6 per cent year-on-year. Investors are motivated by the
positive momentum anticipated for the office sector, underpinned
by consistent occupier demand, Knight Frank concluded.