Real Estate
Index Of Prime Office Rents In Asia-Pacific Shows Drop In Q2

An index of Asia-Pacific prime office rents – tracking the sort of locations used by wealth managers among others – fell by 0.7 per cent in the second quarter of 2014 from the previous three-month period.
An index of Asia-Pacific prime office rents – tracking the sort
of locations used by wealth managers among others – fell by 0.7
per cent in the second quarter of 2014 from the previous
three-month period.
Over a 12-month period, the biggest gain (29.6 per cent) was
logged by Jakarta’s central business district.
Only three markets – Phnom Penh, Sydney and Singapore –
registered more than 0.5 per cent rental growth in the second
quarter of this year despite a large rise in net absorption and
fall in vacancy rates, according to Knight Frank, the
global estate agency and consultancy.
“Q2 2014 registered little rent movement, demonstrating less
volatility than the previous quarter. 10 markets, out of the
20 markets tracked, this quarter saw less than 0.5 per cent
rental movement, compared to six markets in the previous
quarter,” Nicholas Holt, head of research for Asia Pacific,
said.
Phnom Penh registered the highest growth at 3.8 per cent whilst
Hanoi saw the largest decline at -4.1 per cent, the Knight Frank
Prime Office Rental Index showed.
The firm predicts that over the next 12 months, rents in 14
cities out of the 20 tracked are expected to either remain steady
or increase, which is in line with the previous forecasts.