BlackRock sees Singapore
office market improving as supply tapers
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[April 06, 2017]
By Aradhana Aravindan and Anshuman Daga
SINGAPORE
(Reuters) - BlackRock said the worst was over for Singapore's office
property market with supply tapering off, and that elsewhere in Asia
Pacific, the world's largest asset manager was looking to raise its real
estate exposure in Japan and Australia.
Prime office rents in Singapore's financial district dropped by more
than 10 percent in the past two years due to oversupply, making it one
of the worst performing major Asian markets. But the outlook is
improving with analysts expecting limited new developments until 2021
after some constructions this year.
"You get short supply and demand holds up, then all of a sudden rents
start going up. We are already past that inflection point in Singapore,"
John Saunders, Asia-Pacific head at BlackRock Real Estate, told Reuters
on Thursday.
"We are starting to see it become more of a landlord's market and we are
starting to see rents move again and that makes it very attractive," he
said, adding the firm was mulling investments in malls and industrial
assets in Singapore.
He said a tighter Chinese grip on capital outflows was not having a
major impact on real estate investments, as most purchases from the
mainland were outside Asia.
BlackRock is looking to buy more office properties in Japan and retail
assets in Australia, where it recently invested in an office complex, he
said.
Asia Pacific accounts for about 30 percent of the $21 billion in assets
under management at BlackRock Real Estate. The office segment is top
ranked in its portfolio, followed by retail, residential and industrial
sectors.
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The BlackRock logo is seen outside of its offices in New York City,
U.S., October 17, 2016. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
In Singapore, BlackRock last year sold its 43-storey office building,
Asia Square Tower 1, for $2.5 billion to Qatar Investment Authority in
what was the city state's largest ever office transaction. The U.S. firm
hailed the deal as indicating gloomy views about the market were likely
overdone.
But others have been less optimistic, with Singapore ranked 21st out of
22 Asia Pacific real estate markets for investment prospects in a recent
survey by PwC and Urban Land Institute.
Saunders, however, highlighted strong investment interest in Singapore
from funds and corporates.
"There's competition from all around - funds, domestic capital and
there's also non-domestic Asian capital," he said.
He said BlackRock's remaining tower, also in the Asia Square development
and nearly 95 percent occupied, was "a very sought after asset", but
declined to comment on a potential sale.
(Reporting by Aradhana Aravindan and Anshuman Daga; Editing by Himani
Sarkar)
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