Article

Tokyo starts 2018 as world’s most traded real estate market

Tokyo overtook London as the world’s busiest real estate market in the first quarter of 2018, with mega-deals and an unusually positive economic outlook driving demand.

11 juin 2018

Investment volumes in the Japanese capital more than doubled to US$9.1 billion in the three months to March (2017: US$4.3 billion), just beating New York (US$9 billion) and way ahead of third-placed London (US$5.9 billion).

Global deal volumes rose 15 percent to US$165 billion, making the start of 2018 the biggest quarter for commercial real estate deals since 2007. Asia Pacific transactions rose 34 percent to US$40 billion.

“On the one hand, sellers are increasingly focused on the slowing rental growth due to expected new office supply, and on the other, high occupancy ratios in existing buildings are driving transaction up volumes,” says Manabu Taniguchi, Research – JLL Tokyo.

Tokyo will see substantial office construction between now and 2020, which is expected to depress rental growth. But in the short term, rents are still rising (1.8 percent in the 12 months ending April) and Tokyo’s overall office vacancy rate is only 3 percent. Japan saw 1.8 percent GDP growth in 2017 and unemployment is down to a record 2.5 percent, which bodes well for future office demand.

Furthermore, despite rising prices, Tokyo Grade A office capital values are 27 percent below the previous cycle’s peak in 2007, according to research by DWS. The office yield spread — the difference between the office capitalisation rates and ten year bond yields — remains attractive at 2.9 percent in Tokyo, compared to 2.7 percent in London or around 1.7 percent in New York, DWS said.

A big quarter generally comes with big deals and this was no exception with the sale of Shiba Park Building, known as the ‘Battleship’. This 1 million square foot, 14-storey office building was sold to a joint venture between utility companies Kansai Electric and Tokyo Gas for around JPY150 billion, or close to US$1.4 billion. This makes it one of the largest single asset deal in Japan’s history.

The building was sold by a consortium of foreign investors, comprising PAG Asia, CV Starr and Asia Pacific Land, which bought it in 2013 for JPY120 billion (US$1.2 billion at that time) after the collapse of owner daVinci Holdings.

Domestic investors were very much at the fore in the first quarter; foreign buyers accounted for only 17 percent of transactions, JLL research shows, compared with 26 percent for the whole of 2017.

Japanese real estate investment trusts (J-REIT) were also more active, Taniguchi explains.

“Listed REITs prices have stopped falling so J-REITs gained momentum, backed by improved fundraising conditions. Rebalancing of portfolios in time for the fiscal year end among REITs also contributed to investment activity.”

At the same time, outbound investment by Japanese investors fell sharply to US$240 million in Q1, after substantial outflowsof US$34 billion in 2017 (up 70 percent on 2016). “However, pension funds and other institutional investors will maintain acquisition interest in overseas markets and major developers, trading companies, and private funds will continue to seek opportunities in overseas properties,” says Taniguchi.

He expects Tokyo and other major Japanese cities to maintain investment activity for the rest of this year, with national investment volumes set to increase 5 to 10 percent from 2017 to JPY4.3-4.5 trillion.

Click to read about why investors are taking note of Japan’s tourism boom.