For example, it took just 15 months for the US Federal Reserve to raise borrowing costs by 525 basis points, a dizzying pace compared to the prior four cycles when it increased rates by 280 basis points over a 23-month period.
“Due to the rise in rates, fixed-income instruments have once again become yield-attractive assets to institutional investors, causing them to reconsider allocations to fixed-income versus other asset classes,” the property consultancy said in its report.
With property’s share of institutional investors’ portfolios rising to about a third in 2022 from just 8.7 per cent in 2021, JLL said investors had “reported overweight exposure to real estate.”
Measured by local currency and the US dollar, commercial property in the region yielded the fourth- and sixth-highest annual returns respectively among asset classes, generating between about 6 per cent and 8 per cent. It was outperformed by American, Japanese and Australian equities as well as global private equities.
“Private commercial real estate also offers lower volatility and correlation to other assets, while acting as an inflation hedge as it captures rental reversion alongside rising price levels,” JLL said.
Strate-title refers to the purchase of multiple levels or units within a building, as opposed to buying the whole building.
One of the key transactions in the third quarter was the sale of the Hotel Ease in Mong Kok for HK$560 million (US$71.7 million) to a local investor, the report said. The property was put on sale by the family of the late retail tycoon Tang Shing-bor, known as the “shop king”, who had initially wanted HK$730 million for it.
Slow economic growth and high interest rates have hobbled property investment in Hong Kong, JLL said.
“Institutional investors have been on the sidelines amid tightened financial conditions,” the report said. “The office investment market was especially quiet as investors remained cautious about the weak rental performance and high vacancy situation of the sector.”
Investors believe interest rates are likely to remain elevated until the middle of 2024, hampering investment volumes, JLL said.
South Korea, Japan, Australia and Singapore received investment of between US$2 billion and US$4.2 billion in the period.
Bagikan Berita Ini
0 Response to "Commercial property investment in Asia-Pacific plunged in third quarter: JLL - South China Morning Post"
Post a Comment