
Global funds exit China's commercial properties with fourth year of net selling
Advertisement
They bought US$5.9 billion worth of office, hotel, industrial and retail properties last year, the lowest since 2014, as risk appetite waned, according to MSCI, which tracks property transactions worth at least US$10 million. Investors also sold US$6.9 billion of assets at the same time.
The US$969 million net selling last year brought the cumulative 2021-to-2024 outflows to US$11.2 billion, exceeding the net inflows for the preceding two years combined. Since the Covid-19 outbreak in early 2020, global funds were net sellers in every segment bar industrial assets, MSCI data showed.
'The office market has welcomed a lot of new supply, meaning that existing stock has faced downward pressure on occupancy and rents,' said Benjamin Chow, head of Asia real estate research at MSCI. 'Investors have been less acquisitive' since rates increased from late 2022, and were likely to wait and see until values stabilised, he added.
Office properties, once favoured by funds betting on China's rapid economic development, bore the brunt of the retreat as vacancy rates climbed. Net disposals amounted to US$1.9 billion last year, the largest among all commercial asset classes.
Advertisement
Blackstone, the world's largest alternative asset manager, sold three logistics projects in the Greater Bay Area to Ping An Insurance Group in February, according to a Bloomberg report. The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board sold its 49 per cent stake in four shopping complexes to state-owned Dajia Insurance in January.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
26 minutes ago
- South China Morning Post
US Treasury chief says China talks could cover Iran, Russia oil buys
The next round of US-China talks could include Chinese purchases of Russian and Iranian oil, US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Monday, a move that would shift the focus of trade negotiations into national security issues. Advertisement US President Donald Trump has imposed fresh tariffs on allies and competitors alike this year, and Washington and Beijing in April rapidly increased duties on each other's goods in a tit-for-tat escalation. But after high-level talks in Geneva and London, the world's two biggest economies temporarily lowered tariff levels until mid-August while discussions continued. 'I think trade is in a good place,' Bessent told CNBC in an interview. 'And I think now we can start talking about other things. 'The Chinese, unfortunately, are very large purchasers of sanctioned Iranian oil, sanctioned Russian oil. So we could start discussing that.'


The Standard
2 hours ago
- The Standard
Fed adds video tour footage to building renovation information page on website
The Federal Reserve building is seen as it goes under construction on July 17, 2025 in Washington, DC. U.S. AFP


The Standard
2 hours ago
- The Standard
Cathay Pacific, HK Express carried 2.9 million passengers in June, up 23pc
US not rushing trade deals ahead of August deadline, will talk with China, Bessent says