Real Estate
Knight Frank Upbeat On Asia-Pacific, Says Many Risks "Priced In"

While there are a number of challenges, Asia-Pacific is one of the "bright spots" of the world economy looking into 2023, the firm said.
The Asia-Pacific region is set to remain the world's
fastest-growing region, despite headwinds caused by the
Russia-Ukraine conflict and global financial volatility, a report
by Knight
Frank, the real estate consultants, said yesterday.
The firm’s report predicts that the market conditions in 2023
will continue to favour tenants as highly-amenitised office
buildings with sustainable credits are being completed and ready
for occupancy. Rents in the logistics sector are forecast to
increase by 5.5 per cent, while office rents will rise by 2 per
cent across the region.
The predictions come in the Asia-Pacific Outlook Report 2023:
Pivoting Towards Opportunities.
"With much of the known risks largely priced in and likely to
have overshot on current negativity, there remains scope for
fundamentals to surprise on the upside, underpinned by the
marginal easing of zero-Covid strategy and the
lower-than-expected terminal interest rates,” Christine Li, head
of research, Asia-Pacific, said.
“As of late, Chinese authorities have lowered the duration of
quarantine for inbound travellers, a step in the right direction
that could set the tone for more calibration and an eventual exit
in 2023/2024. We can afford to be sanguine given that nascent
signs of inflation peaking have crept into the Fed's data watch,"
Li said.
Kevin Coppel, managing director, Asia-Pacific added: “While the
Asia-Pacific economy will face significant headwinds in 2023, it
will remain a bright spot amid the shadows cast by the slowing
global economy. Economies in the region will once again dominate
growth worldwide, which will have implications for its real
estate markets. That underlying growth will continue to underpin
its attraction to occupiers, while its economic diversity offers
ample opportunities for investors to target a range of asset
classes to position their portfolios for the post-pandemic
landscape.”
The APAC commercial property market, meanwhile, has been through a tough period. According to MSCI Real Assets, part of index and market data group MSCI, inflationary pressures and a spike in borrowing costs bore down on deal-making in the third quarter of the year. Investment volume totalled $32.6 billion in Q3, slumping by 38 per cent on a year before. The drop followed a 16 per cent year-over-year decline in the second quarter. Trades across all the major property types fell and few country markets escaped the fall.