Thursday, July 20, 2017

London Development 2017 & Multihousing 2017

With the media launch of Knight Frank’s inaugural Active Capital Report, additional coverage is as follows:
·         Five Asian countries rank high in cross-border real estate investmentAsian real estate investors have launched themselves onto the global stage over the last few years to become one of the most important global capital exporters – with China (11%) ranking number two behind the US, Singapore (7%) in sixth position, Hong Kong (5%) in seventh position, South Korea (3%) in eleventh position and Japan (1%) significantly further down the list in sixteenth position of the top 20 list.
Alice Tan, Nicholas Holt & Kenji
 Nagamine (Japan Desk) are quoted in iProperty’s article. 
·         HK bags crown for most expensive office towers
Hong Kong skyscrapers are considered as the priciest commercial properties in the world, reported Bloomberg, citing a report from Knight Frank. Based on their prime yields and rents as of Q4 2016, office towers in the city were valued at US$8,000 psf. This is followed by second-place Tokyo with about US$4,900 psf and New York at US$3,800 psf. On the other hand, Singapore took the seventh place in the rankings at about US$1,900 psf.
Nicholas Holt is quoted in CommercialGuru’s article. 
On Wednesday, we ran a media event at Singapore’s Berkley Group’s premises to launch Knight Frank’s London Development 2017 & Multihousing 2017.
Below is an article from by Luxuo, a luxury lifestyle portal.
·         Top 5 Upcoming London Luxury Real Estate Developments and Knight Frank London Development Design Study
It’s no surprise that London Luxury Real Estate is really pricey. What is of surprise is that recent London Development Design Study completed by Knight Frank’s development consultancy division shows a surprising new direction in terms of market trends. Where the adage for property used to be “location, location, location”, market trends and demands are beginning to show that design and specification are becoming more important than locality.

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