Shanghai Daily

China H1 property investment up

- Cao Qian

REAL estate investment picked up in Shanghai in the first half of 2021, with greatly improved interest from institutio­nal buyers, according to the latest research from major internatio­nal property consultanc­ies.

In the first half, 39 en bloc deals worth 29.4 billion yuan (US$4.54 billion) were completed in the city, an increase of 80 percent and 19 percent from the second half of 2020, according to Cushman & Wakefield.

“Shanghai’s property investment market demonstrat­ed great resilience in the first six months of this year, with major deals including Link REIT’s purchase of a 50 percent stake in Shanghai Qibao Vanke Plaza for 3.2 billion yuan,” said Alvin Yip, Cushman & Wakefield’s China president of capital markets.

“Notably, buyers purely looking for investment accounted for 69 percent of the total transactio­n value, a significan­t rise from the 26 percent share registered in the second half of 2020.”

Overseas buyers accounted for 38 percent of the total transactio­n value, Cushman & Wakefield said.

For the three months to end-June, a separate report by Savills showed 15 investment transactio­ns worth 13.4 billion yuan were concluded across the city, a year-on-year drop of 21 percent.

The total value, however, could be close to 42.3 billion yuan if the estimated value of assets from portfolio transactio­ns is included, according to Savills’ research.

“The market is seeing a rise in interest from institutio­nal buyers looking to capitalize on the attractive pricing environmen­t, access to sizable portfolios and the recovery of market fundamenta­ls,” said Elle Xu, senior manager of research at Savills China.

“Several big-ticket portfolio transactio­ns were announced toward the end of June, such as Blackstone’s purchase of 55 percent of SOHO China for 19.5 billion yuan, Brookfield’s purchase of a five-retail property portfolio from Macquarie for 8.9 billion yuan and Ping’an Insurance’s purchase of partial stakes in six Raffles City developmen­ts for 33 billion yuan, all of which includes one or more core or core-plus assets in Shanghai.”

Looking forward, end-use buyers will remain active and more investors are likely to tap the rental housing segment.

This sector has received growing support from the government amid robust demand for affordable housing from young profession­als — mainly by converting idle or underutili­zed assets and cashing out of the market by launching real estate investment trusts, according to Savills’ forecast.

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