Institutional Real Estate Asia Pacific

January 1, 2013: Vol. 5, Number 1

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From the Current Issue

Asia Pacific

Report from Korea: Investments in Overseas Markets Continue

Korean investors have been active in overseas real estate markets for several years, and many observers believe that sooner or later large Chinese and Japanese institutional investors will follow suit. That is why it is quite interesting to see how this investments activity in overseas markets continues to unfold in Korea.

Asia Pacific

Leveraging Up: Caution Still Prevails in the Use of Debt Since the Global Financial Crisis

Reservoirs of capital greater than the world has ever known await release onto global and Asian asset markets — perhaps real estate foremost — pending any set of economic signals that would sustain confidence. Money managers despair of finding good yield while awaiting opportunity — even as major central banks expand quantitative easing programmes to lap up the supply of bonds. Real estate investors describe caution as the byword for Asian institutional property markets during 2013, though investor interest in well-secured real estate–backed debt is stronger than in the actual asset.

Asia Pacific

Far and Wide: Pension Funds and Sovereign Wealth Funds Are Set to Make Their Presence Felt in Global Property Markets

While overall investor sentiment remains cautious, recent economic and financial conditions have allowed large investors such as pension funds and sovereign wealth funds to increase their exposure to property and, in the process, to provide much-needed equity at a time when debt finance is in short supply. Australian and Canadian pension funds, in particular, have been increasing their allocations to real estate and are about to assume a much higher profile on the international property scene.

Asia Pacific

Steering a Firm Course: Real Estate Investors Should Not Be Deterred by Short-Term Events in China

Negative news and reports on the Chinese economy have emerged as the world’s growth engine shows signs of decelerating. People have started to question China’s growth pattern, which relies heavily on investment, and real estate investors are afraid of being caught in a bubble. Although it is prudent to be sceptical and cautious, investors should not be pessimistic. A more in-depth look at the risks associated with the Chinese economy and the property market demonstrates that much of the perceived risk is, in fact, overstated.

Asia Pacific

A Conversation with Nathan Dodd

Nathan Dodd recently joined Mayer Brown as a partner in the Global Projects Group. He has more than 13 years' experience in project development and finance in Asia and Africa and has extensive experience with energy, natural resources and infrastructure mergers and acquisitions. Institutional Investing in Infrastructure senior editor Drew Campbell spoke with Dodd about infrastructure and infrastructure-related industries in two promising countries in Southeast Asia — Indonesia and Thailand.

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