VIETNAM BUSINESS NEWS JANUARY 22 Chia sẻ | FaceBookTwitter Email Copy Link Copy link bài viết thành công
22/01/2021 09:01 GMT+7
CBRE: HCM City among top preferred cities for cross-border investments in Asia-Pacific
Ho Chi Minh City has been ranked fifth as Asia Pacific investors’ most preferred market for investments by CBRE Group, Inc.
CBRE’s Asia Pacific Investor Intentions Survey 2021 was conducted between November 9 and December 14 last year. As many as 492 mainly Asia Pacific-based investors participated in the survey, which asked respondents a range of questions regarding their buying appetite and preferred strategies, sectors and markets for 2021.
“Ho Chi Minh City has already been on the radar of investors in recent years, especially those who are looking to invest in Southeast Asia, as the city is viewed as having the potential for greater
SINGAPORE and Ho Chi Minh City are the top Asean cities in which Asia-Pacific-based property investors are interested, CBRE'S 2021 Asia-Pacific Investor Intentions Survey has found. Read more at The Business Times.
Mingtiandi
Username
CapitaSpring will add 650,000 square feet of office space to the Singapore market upon completion in 2021
Despite a downturn in leasing this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, property consultancy CBRE says office rents in Singapore are likely to rise in the second half of 2021, driven by a limited supply of new Grade A space and strong demand from Chinese tech firms and non-bank financial service providers.
Five new projects are set for completion next year, adding 1.23 million square feet (114,271 square metres) to the overall office supply, CBRE said in a release. The five projects include only one Grade A office development, CapitaSpring, which will add 650,000 square feet of office stock to the core CBD market.
December 21, 2020
Private residential buildings in Singapore.
Roy Issa
Singapore may be undergoing its worst recession since independence, with retrenchments and job losses at record levels, but property-obsessed Singaporeans are still queuing up to buy multimillion-dollar homes.
While the coronavirus pandemic , which has killed more than 1.6 million people worldwide, had hit the pause button on ever-increasing price rises, analysts predict Singaporeans will resume their love affair with property as vaccines come on stream and the country moves into the third phase of its reopening later this month.
One big reason why prices had dipped were lockdown measures that prevented people from going to showrooms to view property launches, but experts now expect the market will rebound next year as Singapore continues to open up.