Australia Tops Asia-Pacific For Property Investment

 | Dec 10, 2018 15:46

Originally published by Cuffelinks

Melbourne and Sydney have placed first and third as the most popular destinations to invest in commercial property in the Asia-Pacific region in 2019.

Australia’s strong underlying economic growth combined with high yields relative to other Asia-Pacific markets, good prospects for rental growth and market transparency are driving continued domestic and global investor interest in the Melbourne and Sydney commercial property markets according to the latest results from the ULI/PwC 2019 industry survey[1].

h2 Relative yields are important/h2

Although yields in Australia are close to record lows (circa 4.75% – 5.0% for high quality office and retail, and 5.5% for high quality industrial), they remain higher than those in other Asia-Pacific gateways. Hong Kong and Tokyo yields are now below 3.0% while Shanghai yields hover just above 3.0% and Singapore yields are circa 3.5%.

Melbourne has overtaken Sydney as the best prospect in the Asia-Pacific region for both investment and development (see Figure 1), with Sydney slipping from No. 1 to No. 3 this year. The top four markets for investment in 2019 are:

  • Melbourne (first in investment, first in development) – Melbourne offers a constrained office supply pipeline, a good yield spread over the cost of debt and sovereign bonds, a deep, liquid, core market and good prospects for rental growth
  • Singapore (second in investment, eighth in development) – an improvement in Singapore’s office market has caused the city to take second spot as it rebounds from cyclical lows
  • Sydney (third in investment, third in development) – Sydney offers the same reasons as Melbourne, and is a favourite of global investors due to relatively high returns and as a safe-haven play. Competition for assets has helped sustain pricing, while low vacancies and growing demand for space suggest rents will continue to rise.
  • Tokyo (fourth in investment, fourth in development) – Tokyo’s move to fourth is somewhat surprising after last year’s drop. This reflects cheap finance, attractive leverage, a good spread over other interest rates and a large stock of investment-grade assets.

Figure 1: City investment and development prospects: 2019