In 2014, Asian investment in European hotels increased by 90%.
According to CBRE, Asian investment in European hotels would exceed $22.7 billion in 2015, owing to the loosening of domestic limitations on outbound investment. property for sale in qatar
In 2014, Asian hotel real estate
acquisitions in Europe increased by 90% year over year and by 20%
internationally. Due to a lack of investable stock in domestic markets, CBRE
predicts a 58 percent increase in hotel acquisitions by Asian investors in
Europe this year.
CBRE Hotels Asia Pacific Executive Managing
Director Arthur Buser remarked, "Due to rigorous rules, particularly
around offshore assets, Asian institutional funds are often under-allocated to
real estate. The majority of their international investments are in liquid
assets including stocks, cash, fixed income, and government bonds. This is
beginning to change, as China, South Korea, Taiwan, and other governments have
begun to enable abroad direct investments, bigger real estate allocations, and
a streamlined clearance procedure."
"Fixed-income lease terms are
frequently longer than other asset categories, and yields are now higher than
traditional real estate segments, even in premium locations, making hotel real
estate an ideal asset class for insurance firms diversifying their portfolios.
This has attracted Asian investors to hotels in major European cities such as
Paris, Frankfurt, and, in particular, London."
According to CBRE, Asian insurers'
investment assets would grow from US$129.3 billion in 2013 to US$204.2 billion
in 2018. This is due to the combined effect of an increase in the overall
amount of assets held by Asian insurers and increased liberalization. This
would result in an additional US$75 billion in real estate investment,
including both direct and indirect investment.
A major chunk of worldwide hotel deals will
be completed by Asian capital in 2015, according to high-profile acquisitions
by Chinese investment companies into abroad real estate, notably hotels. Fosun,
China's largest privately owned business, paid US$25 million per share for
French Club Med, valuing the company at US$953.5 million. The Waldorf Astoria
hotel in New York was recently sold to China-based insurance giant Anbang
Insurance, making it the most costly hotel sale in the United States to date.
Sunshine Insurance Group, based in Beijing, has announced plans to purchase the
Baccarat Hotel New York for US$230 million.
Jileen Loo, EMEA Director of CBRE Hotels,
said, "REITS, high-net-worth individuals, and emotive purchasers made up
the initial wave of Asian hotel buyers, who were primarily looking to acquire
trophy hotel assets for wealth preservation and prestige. Asian insurance
funds, mainly from China, are currently heavily investing in the global hotel
business as a result of a series of relaxations in domestic government laws. In
domestic markets, these buyers are discovering a scarcity of investable stock,
and when quality assets do become available, competition is severe."
"Legal liberalization would hasten the
pace of Asian insurance companies' global real estate investments, and we
foresee additional foreign hotel acquisitions as regulators develop confidence
in monitoring such investments and insurance firms become more savvy about
investing worldwide."
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