A new landscape in Singapore
A new landscape in Singapore
While revaluations in the Asia Pacific are unlikely to be as steep as in the West, there remains little clarity on where values will eventually settle. The causes are not simply economic but also involve structural changes in future demand for space. The ongoing influx of multinational companies looking to establish operations in Singapore has led to tight bid-ask spreads for prospective deals in the office sector.
Transformation of real estate development
Transformation of real estate development
High vacancy rates in most CBDs have now turned this into a zero-sum game, where buildings are unable to compete in terms of location, or facilities lose out. Residential conversions have obvious appeal in the Asia Pacific, given chronic shortages of housing stock, especially in city cores. Singapore, for example, has initiated a CBD Incentive Scheme, whereby developers receive an additional 25 to 30 percent of developable area for conversion of office buildings older than 20 years to residential or hotel purposes.
Data centres and energy efficiency
Data centres and energy efficiency
One aspect of market dynamics that changed significantly in 2023 was geographic. Japan and Australia dominated data centres in the previous two years, the focus has now shifted towards emerging markets, in particular India and Southeast Asia (Singapore excepted).
The Singapore government has approved construction of ocean-based data centre modules which can reduce energy needed for cooling purposes by as much as 97% – are now coming of age, and will be widely adopted by newly constructed data centre projects.
Real estate capital flows
Real estate capital flows
Of the two remaining top-ranking cities, Sydney and Melbourne, investors continue to see Singapore as a viable core market given limited supply, booming demand for space, and prospects for rental growth that are among the highest of any Asia Pacific city.