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Singapore's GIC is reportedly considering the sale of a Hilton hotel in Fukuoka, left, while railway operator Seibu hopes to raise up to $2 billion through a sale of an upscale office and hotel complex in central Tokyo. (Source photos by Kyodo)
Market Spotlight

Hotels are new darling of foreign investors in Japanese property

Deals expected to maintain 2023 levels, thanks to weak yen

MITSURU OBE, Nikkei Asia chief business news correspondent | Japan

TOKYO -- Investors remain bullish about Japan's property market this year. Funding is easy to come by, despite the county's first interest rate hike in 17 years in March. Further fueling their optimism is a flood of overseas tourists, workers returning to the office in droves and rising rents.

Not everything will be a repeat of last year, though. Hotels and apartment buildings, rather than warehouses, are expected to be hot in 2024, with less leveraged investors expected to play a more prominent role, including sovereign wealth and public pension funds, said Yuto Ohigashi, senior director of research at Jones Lang LaSalle (JLL), a property market specialist. Such investors are less affected by rising interest rates and have more capacity to deploy capital in overseas real estate, Ohigashi said.

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