International investment in SoFla hit $913
million for the first half of 2015
A 2009 photo of Miami’s skyline (Credit: Nigel Morris)
South Florida is once again a rising star
among the world’s top destinations for commercial real estate investments, with
new interest from international buyers pouring cash into the region.
For the first time since the global financial
crisis, the region has made it into CBRE’s top 10 metropolitan areas for
commercial investments. In 2014, Miami ranked 12th with a total of $13.1
billion in activity by the year’s end.
The first half of 2015 saw roughly $407
billion circle the globe through commercial real estate investments, of which
South Florida saw $7.7 billion, according to a new CBRE report.
That puts the region in seventh place among
the world’s most active investment destinations, behind metros like New York,
which ranked first, London, second and Los Angeles, third. South Florida edged
past Tokyo and Boston.
Most of that money is from domestic
investments, according to the report. International money accounted for $913 million during the
first half of 2015, or roughly 11.8 percent.
But that’s quickly changing: last year, Miami
ranked 49th in the world for international investments. Now, the region ranks
19th.
The United States as a whole was one of the
world’s largest markets for commercial real estate, along with the United
Kingdom and Germany. The trio represented $301 billion, or 74 percent of the
world’s commercial investment activity for the first half of 2015, according to
CBRE’s report.
“There are numerous new sources of capital
that have emerged only recently. With its commodity driven economy slowing,
Canadian investors have sought opportunities abroad. The lower oil price has
triggered and accelerated global deployment of capital from the Middle East’s non-institutional investors, particularly
private high net worth,” Chris Ludeman, CBRE’s global president of capital
markets, wrote in the report. “However, of all the new sources, Asia has been
the most captivating due to the size, speed and potential long-term impact
brought by the recent regulatory changes; this has allowed many of the local
pensions funds and insurance companies to invest globally for the first time.”
Original Content from
The Real Deal
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