APREA ロゴ

Asian Real Estate Securities — June 2026 Outlook (B&I Capital)

Asian real estate securities continue to underperform broader equity markets, which have been carried by technology, semiconductor, and banking names. Real estate fundamentals across the region remain sound; the disconnect between fundamentals and price performance reflects investor apathy toward rate-sensitive assets in an environment where inflation remains elevated and central bank direction is uncertain. A resolution of Middle East tensions and a shift toward less hawkish central bank guidance remain the most likely catalysts for a sustained sector recovery.

  • June 16th is the pivotal date for the region. The BOJ and RBA announce rate decisions simultaneously. We expect the BOJ to hike despite May’s softer Tokyo CPI print, where core-core inflation decelerated to 1.6% against a 1.9% consensus. The RBA is expected to pause, with three of the four major banks now seeing 4.35% as the cycle peak and the next move a cut in 2027. BOJ guidance on the pace of subsequent hikes will matter as much as the decision itself.
  • Japan: valuations are mispriced and offer a good risk/return for medium-term investors. Developers and J-REITs have struggled as JGB yields have moved higher, yet cap rates remain firm and transaction activity is robust. The sale of Fuji Media’s Sankei Building subsidiary, which has attracted bids exceeding ¥1 trillion against a book value of ¥613bn, is the largest property transaction in Japanese history and will establish a definitive cap rate benchmark for Grade-A Tokyo office. A transaction at current bid levels, driven by TSE governance reform pressure, would accelerate the broader wave of corporate real estate asset monetisation across the market.
  • Australia: A-REIT valuations in some cases have reverted to 2022 levels, when rate increases were only beginning. Given the severity of the correction relative to other markets, a confirmed RBA pause followed by softer macro data could produce a stronger-than-expected rally. Residential developers Mirvac and Stockland are the most direct beneficiaries of a rate peak, with settlement volumes and lot sales acutely sensitive to mortgage affordability. The 2026 Federal Budget’s negative gearing reform, restricting deductions to new builds from July 1, 2027, adds a structural tailwind for both names. Goodman offers defensiveness in a higher-for-longer scenario, with data center development now representing 73% of work-in-progress.
  • Hong Kong: capital control enforcement is the key near-term risk to monitor. Mainland Chinese buyers set a record HK$43bn in residential purchases in Q1 2026. Beijing’s May tightening of cross-border capital flow rules has raised concern, though JPMorgan estimates that non-HKID mainland buyers represented only 5.5% of transaction volume and 7.2% of value, limiting the practical impact. Mid-end residential demand remains supported by population growth and rental yields. Q2 transaction data due in July will be the first clean read on whether stricter enforcement is affecting volumes.
  • Singapore: the catalyst must come from outside. With no MAS meeting until October and 3-month SORA at 1.06%, the domestic policy backdrop is benign. S-REITs offer reasonable yields and solid underlying fundamentals across retail, office, and data center sectors, yet remain lackluster absent a broader shift in sentiment. A drop in crude oil prices and less hawkish global central banks would likely be the trigger. City Developments’ strategic review, due by end of June, is the most significant near-term company-specific catalyst, with SGD 6-7bn of non-core asset disposals identified and the return of Kwek Leng Peck as Vice Chairman signalling active family involvement in the portfolio repositioning.