US$26.8 billion of investments recorded as volumes contract in office, retail and hotels sectors.
Commercial real estate investment activity in Asia Pacific declined by 17% year-on-year in the second quarter of 2023 as investors remained cautious when making capital deployment decisions. According to data and analysis from global real estate consulting firm JLL(NYSE:JLL), investment activity in the region totalled US$26.8 billion in the second quarter, owing to ongoing uncertainties in the global economy, with resilience in the logistics & industrial and living sectors offset by a sharp contraction in office, retail and hotel sectors.
The decline in investment volumes comes amid shifts in the investment market over the quarter. JLL proprietary data shows that relative to earlier quarters, most second quarter deals were traded with a narrower bid-ask spread, demonstrating sellers’ willingness to meet buyers by lowering their asking price. Even with asset repricing putting pressure on total returns, capital value appreciation is still forecast across geographies and sectors, speaking to the strength of rental growth and steady valuations, according to JLL.
“Investment activity in Asia Pacific remained muted in the second quarter as investors weighed the impact of macro uncertainty and fluctuating interest rates into decision making. Despite an expected moderation in investment flows over the quarter, our interactions with clients tell us that sentiment is positive with factors including repricing pressure and a narrowing of bid-ask spreads likely to reinvigorate activity in the medium term,” says Stuart Crow, CEO, Capital Markets, Asia Pacific, JLL.
According to JLL analysis, Japan bucked the downward trend and remained the most active market in the region, recording US$7.1 billion in investment activity for the second quarter, up 34% year-on-year. Overseas investors were particularly interested in industrial assets, evidenced by two large portfolio acquisitions made by GIC and Mapletree Logistics Trust respectively.
South Korea registered US$5.7 billion in transactions, declining 20% year-on-year as financial market challenges and liquidity issues of domestic pension funds persisted. Australia registered US$3.1 billion in investment activity, decreasing by 36% year-on-year as the elevated cost of debt and inflation slowed the commercial property investment market. Institutional investors also re-allocated capital towards the industrial and living sectors.
China investment volumes reached US$4.7 billion in the second quarter, falling 20% year-on-year as its post-pandemic economic recovery lost steam and with institutional investors shifting their focus to alternative sectors. In Hong Kong, investment volumes were at US$0.7 billion over the quarter, plunging 76% year-on-year, comprising of smaller ticket sales as market sentiment softened due to high interest rates.
Singapore investments declined 59% to US$1.5 billion in the second quarter, with a large industrial portfolio deal and a business park trade accounting for the majority of investment volume.
Asia Pacific office volume reached US$10.2 billion in the second quarter, the lowest since 2011, due to muted investment activity in China, Hong Kong, Singapore and Australia. However, the dip in activity may be short-lived as deal pipelines have been quickly replenished with large scale core offices across the region’s key office markets.
In the logistics and industrial sector, investment volumes reached US$7.7 billion in the second quarter, rising 9.3% year-on-year with Japan, South Korea and China reporting more trades. At the expense of office investments, global and regional funds have snapped up logistics warehouses sited in Korea, Japan and Australia.
“In the second half of 2023, markets in the region will likely face varied levels of price uncertainty affected by disparate interest rate outlooks and volatility in the debt market,” says Pamela Ambler, Head of Investor Intelligence, Asia Pacific, JLL. “Looking ahead more broadly, the end of the hike cycle may be delayed for some key economies, which will prolong the divergence in Asia Pacific’s lending rates in the near future, but investment activity should be picking up from here.”
Learn more in JLL’s Q2 2023 Capital Tracker.