Hong Kong, mainland China spur surge in Asia-Pacific commercial property deals



Asia-Pacific’s commercial property investments surged in the first quarter, according to data tracked by analysts, as early signs of recovery in office and retail segments across Hong Kong and mainland China boosted deal volumes.

Total investment in offices, retail spaces, industrial units, data centres, hotels, apartments, senior housing and other asset classes climbed 22 per cent to US$51.1 billion from the same period in 2025, data from MSCI showed.

Hong Kong contributed US$1.8 billion, a 367 per cent surge, the second-biggest improvement after Singapore’s 439 per cent increase, according to the data and analytics firm.

The mainland was the top market, cornering US$13.4 billion, a 55 per cent rise. In the previous quarter, Japan was the top market, accounting for US$10.1 billion out of the US$47.6 billion total. The mainland was the second-largest market with US$8.2 billion.

Knight Frank estimated Asia-Pacific investment activity at US$64.6 billion, rising 13 per cent quarter-on-quarter and 65 per cent year-on-year, the strongest quarterly performance since late 2021.

“Asia-Pacific’s real estate recovery has gained real breadth in the first quarter and Hong Kong was one of the key markets behind the growth in deal activity,” said Benjamin Chow, head of private assets research for Asia at MSCI.

Deal volumes in the Hong Kong market are still modest in absolute terms compared with the longer run, but investors can draw encouragement from the fact that the market has recovered from its low point and maintained its level of activity up until early 2026,” Chow said. “Corporate and owner-occupier buyers have led the office recovery, and the retail sector is also showing early signs of life.”
  • Related Posts

    Samsung expects Q2 profit to surge 19-fold to a record high as AI memory boom lifts chip prices – Firstpost

    Samsung Electronics has forecast a 19-fold jump in second-quarter operating profit, extending its record earnings streak as the global artificial intelligence (AI) boom continues to fuel strong demand for memory…

    Continue reading
    A little-known payments network has caught the attention of Wall Street. Here’s why – Firstpost

    A relatively obscure corner of the US payments industry has suddenly become one of Wall Street’s most closely watched assets. Several of America’s biggest banks, including JPMorgan Chase, Bank of…

    Continue reading

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *