Commercial transactions decline but market remains positive

16 Aug 2013

Southeast Asia continued to see upbeat commercial property investment sentiment, with Thailand seeing real estate owners inject assets into property funds at a time when overall commercial real estate transaction volume in Asia Pacific declined by 11 percent quarter-on-quarter to US$19.2 billion. This was after an unusually strong first quarter.

The market remained active, and the quarterly total was in line with volumes recorded last year, according to the latest Asia Pacific Capital MarketView report published by property consultancy firm CBRE. Active markets were led by Japan although transaction volume fell by almost 50 percent q-o-q after surging in Q1. Other upbeat markets included Australia, Malaysia, New Zealand, Singapore and South Korea, which all recorded a q-o-q increase in investment turnover.

Comparatively subdued markets included Hong Kong, where the imposition of double stamp duty resulted in the exit of speculators from the market. Taiwan was also quiet as domestic insurance firms remained inactive following the rise in minimum yield requirements on commercial property introduced in November 2012. China also recorded a decline in investment volume by 22 percent q-o-q but market sentiment remained positive.

An improvement in cross-border investment activity was recorded in Q2 with transaction volume surging by 73 percent q-o-q. Asian capital and international institutional investors were the major buying forces. There were also more western property funds with recently raised fresh capital starting to acquire new assets although they remained net sellers in Asia as a number of funds approached maturity.

James Pitchon, Executive Director – Head of CBRE Research, Thailand, said: “There were a number of major acquisitions by locally listed property funds in Thailand and a number of new property funds with several more scheduled to be listed in the second half of 2013”.

Capital values in Asia Pacific continued to increase slowly and outpace rental growth on the back of solid investment demand for quality assets. Yield compression for core assets was observed in several markets including Sydney, Brisbane, Tokyo, Seoul and Singapore.        

Dr. Nick Axford, Global Head of Research at CBRE, said: “On the back of strong investment demand for yield accretive assets, capital values are expected to increase at a steady rate although markets with on-going weak occupier demand could see some mild downward adjustment.”

“The Asia Pacific market is expected to remain active in the second half with a large pipeline of deals in Australia, China and Japan. The steady regional economy combined with high levels of liquidity and relative low borrowing costs will continue to fuel buying momentum,” added Greg Penn, Executive Director, CBRE Investment Properties, Asia.

Andrew Batt, International Group Editor of PropertyGuru, wrote this story. To contact him about this or other stories email andrew@allproperty.com.sg

Recent stories you may have missed:
THB45 billion worth of Bangkok projects on hold
Bangkok serviced apartment rents and occupancy declines
Industrial property demand on the rise
Jakarta still top of the world for prime property price rises

POST COMMENT