Singapore investors pile into Japan investment properties on attractive yield spread
Samuel Oh
SINGAPORE-BASED investors are making a beeline for Japanese real estate, as low borrowing costs push up the market’s yield spread and increase its relative attractiveness.
Almost US$3 billion worth of real estate assets were purchased in the first eight months of this year, a Knight Frank report indicated, up from US$977 million in the same period last year.
Big spenders include Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund GIC, which bought six logistics facilities for US$800 million; Mapletree Logistics Trust, which acquired six warehouses for US$480 million; and real estate group CapitaLand Investment (CLI), which purchased six multifamily assets in Osaka for S$141.4 million.
TRENDING NOW
Why China is tightening controls on overseas stock trading
Xi Jinping has just rewritten the rules of US-China rivalry
‘Even a CEO’s job can be replaced by AI’: DBS CEO Tan Su Shan bets big on agentic AI
‘Whole deck of cards just toppled’: FoodXervices’ Nichol Ng on how a 92-year-old family business unravelled – and what’s next