Tokyo is leading the pack of 'underdogs' who are about to see their home prices rise.
Several cities that many would consider underdogs appear to be on track to outperform the rest of the decade in terms of home price increases. properties in qatar
According to Real Estate Foresight, a Hong
Kong-based independent property analysis firm, Tokyo has the highest
residential returns prospects in the next five years.
Smaller cities like Washington and
Frankfurt come in second and third, respectively, with Sydney and Berlin
rounding out the top five.
While it's rare to see secondary or
out-of-favor markets (with the exception of Sydney, which is a perennial
favorite) rank so high in terms of property prospects, it's even more shocking
to see which cities rank last.
According to the company's report, Hong
Kong, Singapore, and London would have the worst results over the next five
years. Hong Kong is the "city we love to live in," according to Real
Estate Foresight founder and former global head of real estate markets at Reuters
Robert Ciemniak, but it appears to be doomed to low returns due to its very
high rates, low median incomes, short leaseholds, and current negative
regulatory climate.
Many institutional investors have predicted
that Tokyo will be a good performer. While the city may not be their first
option, it is a safe bet that property prices will be buoyed by the strong
performance of Japanese stock markets and optimism about Prime Minister Shinzo
Abe's economic policies.
According to the property site Homes,
borrowing costs in Japan remain near zero, leaving an appealing gap when
compared to yields that average 6% in a neighborhood like Minato-ku. Minato is
home to 49 embassies as well as the headquarters of major Japanese corporations
including Honda, Sony, and Toshiba.
The company's analysts, Ciemniak and Green
Investments portfolio manager Diana Olteanu-Veerman, find that "the key
strengths for Tokyo as a city are relatively low valuations and vacancies
coupled with high median household income and the large scale of its metropolitan
economy."
Despite concerns about long-term economic
prospects and ageing demographics, the Japanese capital has a stable regulatory
climate, a large number of wealthy citizens, and a healthy working-age
population. Economic growth does not equal that of Asia's turbo-charged cities,
but it is comparable to that of major European and American cities.
These conclusions are based on a review of
the city's global appeal, local economic patterns, demographics, and current
property prices.
In terms of residential prospects, New York
and Paris are in the center of the pack, while Shanghai and Beijing are in the
bottom fifth.
Property investors will have to start
factoring in the long-term certainty of the end of heavy central-bank money
printing, which has sparked the growth of many types of assets, including real
estate, as we head into 2014. This is particularly true in places like Hong
Kong and Singapore, which were spared the brunt of the global financial crisis
but were able to import low US interest rates thanks to currencies that tracked
the greenback. As a result, home-buying mortgages and borrowing rates have been
highly appealing.
Of course, Japan is an exception to the
decline in central bank funding, as Abe and the Bank of Japan have just
launched an ambitious reform and asset-purchase program aimed at ending the
country's more than two decades of economic stagnation.
After losing about 5% last year, Singapore
real estate is expected to lose another 5% or so in 2014, with Hong Kong homes
losing five to 10%, according to Knight Frank's prime global residential
forecast for 2014.
Investment banks have been much more bearish
than the property brokerage, which makes its money from property transactions.
Residential property in Hong Kong is expected to fall 15 to 20% in a year,
according to Deutsche Bank, with Barclays predicting a 30% drop.
According to Knight Frank, Dubai, which was
hit so hard by the global financial crisis that expatriates fled in droves,
leaving keys to apartments with brokers and leased cars at the airport, would
be the best performer this year, rising by 10 to 15%. The Real Estate Foresight
study did not include Dubai.
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