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Asia Pacific real estate market outlook Q4 2025

We have raised our total return forecasts for real estate in APAC over the next three-to-five years. Read more about our outlook.

Authors
Head of Asia & North America Real Estate Investment Strategy
Real Estate Research Analyst
Asia-Pacific skyline graphic

Duration: 10 Mins

Date: 28 Oct 2025

Key Highlights

  • The short-term economic outlook remains cautious, but prospective fiscal support in some markets complicates the longer-term outlook for interest rates.
  • Occupier performance has rebounded, with lower borrowing costs increasingly being priced-in. But investors are likely to stay selective.
  • Refinancing needs and unlisted fund expiries present more deployment opportunities, including recapitalisation/continuation vehicles outside Australia.

APAC economic outlook 

Trans-shipment tariffs will curtail China’s ability to re-route exports. Meanwhile, Chinese household consumption is being weighed down by falling house prices and negative perceptions about job prospects. We forecast growth to slow in the coming quarters, with full-year growth at 4.8% and 4% in 2025 and 2026, respectively. We expect weak investment data to spur further stimulus measures and for more steps to loosen financial conditions [1]. 

The US-Japan trade deal has removed more extreme downside risks, but the tariffs still represent a significant shock and uncertainty is likely to linger. We expect Japan to narrowly avoid a recession, registering growth of just 0.1% in 2026 (from 1.1% in 2025). With the Liberal Democratic Party-led coalition having no majority in either house, there will be more pressure to increase spending in social security, childcare, and education. This has unnerved the JGB markets, but the BOJ has the tools to manage bond market dislocation. We expect the BOJ’s policy normalisation to remain very gradual and for the next rate hike to be in January 2026.  

Australia’s gross domestic product grew 1.8% year on year (YoY) in the second quarter of 2025, marking the fastest yearly pace since the fourth quarter of 2023. Policy support is clearly acting as a catalyst, and the recovery is likely to broaden as the rate cuts work through the economy. While this introduces some hawkish risk to the Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) cash-rate outlook, the markets expect the RBA to remain on a gradual easing path. It’s expected to deliver another two rate cuts to bring the cash rate to a terminal level of 3.1% by early-2026. 

The markets also expect the Bank of Korea (BOK) to deliver two more rate cuts to reach a terminal policy rate of 2% by early-2026. While the BOK is keen to support the economy, Seoul’s elevated house prices are limiting the extent to which policy may be eased.

Real GDP growth (%)


2024 2025 2026 2027
-China 4.9 4.8 4.0 4.2
-Japan 0.1 1.1 0.1 0.6
-India 6.7 7.2 6.0 6.1

CPI (average; %)


2024 2025 2026 2027
-China 0.1 0.0 1.0 1.3
-Japan 2.8 2.9 1.6 2.0
-India 4.9 2.5 4.2 4.7

Policy rate (YE; %)


2024 2025 2026 2027
-China 1.5 1.3 1.1 1.0
-Japan 0.3 0.5 0.8 1.0
-India 6.5 5.5 5.8 6.0

Source: Aberdeen Investments Global Macro Research; September 2025 
Forecasts are a guide only and actual outcomes could be significantly different.

 

APAC real estate market overview 

There was a rebound in occupier performance during the second quarter of 2025, following some softening in the first quarter. On a RevPAM (revenue per available sqm = rent x occupancy) basis, two-thirds of the APAC CRE markets/sectors we track registered YoY growth in the second quarter, up from 60% in the first quarter. Offices were among the quarter’s top occupier performers, especially those in Australia (Sydney/Brisbane), Japan (Tokyo/Osaka), and Indian tier-one cities (Delhi’s National Capital Region/Bengaluru/Mumbai)[2].  

With investors increasingly pricing-in lower borrowing costs, the investment market outperformed the occupier market in the second quarter. APAC’s total CRE transaction volumes had their seventh quarter of YoY increases, and 72% of the markets/sectors we track achieved YoY capital value growth (from 64% in the first quarter). Offices, especially those in Japan and Korea, led the region’s CRE investment activity during the 12 months to June 2025, with a market share of 35%[3].      

Excluding Japan, almost all markets/sectors had higher yield gaps in the first half of 2025, as borrowing costs tracked lower. Importantly, over 50% are now above their historical 10-year averages. The occupier outlook, however, remains bifurcated. We expect investors to remain selective, with a bias towards markets/sectors with prospective positive real rental growth. 
We expect institutional investors based in the US and Europe to increase diversification into APAC CRE. Meanwhile, increased refinancing needs and unlisted fund expiries could present opportunities for capital deployment, including general partner-led opportunities like recapitalisation/continuation vehicles. In APAC, these opportunities have mostly been found in Australia, but other markets may now be playing catch-up. The fund that holds the Yeouido International Financial Centre offices and retail mall in Seoul, for instance, is reportedly looking to raise KRW800 billion (USD576 million) in new capital to replace the existing limited partners. 

For markets/sectors where repricing has been more limited, but where occupier fundamentals remain solid, we think the investment case for Japanese multifamily properties remains robust. Vacancy rates in Tokyo and Osaka are still relatively tight. The trends underpinning residential leasing demand – such as net migration, improved wage growth, and increased female labour participation/dual-income households – will likely endure, despite the potential of an economic slowdown and some concerns over rent affordability.

Outlook for risk and performance 

Slower economic growth could threaten occupier demand. The potential impact on jobs of adopting generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) is also a longer-term threat. Some studies [5] show GenAI is already affecting employment for early-career workers in sectors like software/code development and customer service. We believe technological advances will affect how and where people work, but it’s more likely that space needs will evolve, rather than be eliminated. Desk space could potentially give way to more collaborative and flexible space.

Elevated development costs in many markets are likely to constrain new office supply, which could also help to mitigate longer-term vacancy risk (see Seoul’s CBD). 
Despite the prospect of slower economic growth, we have raised our total return forecasts for APAC CRE over the next three-to-five years. This reflects an improved outlook for occupier performance for selected markets/sectors, like prime-grade offices in Sydney’s core CBD and Tokyo’s central five wards. We have also adopted a more sanguine outlook on property yields, given better rental growth expectations, a more dovish outlook on borrowing costs in markets like Australia, and more capital inflow seeking diversification into the region.

Major European banks have recently left the Net-Zero Banking Alliance. Along with the earlier disbanding of the Net-Zero Insurance Alliance, this could reduce the urgency for alignment to decarbonisation pathways, but it’s unlikely to eliminate it. This is because many institutional asset owners remain committed to their decarbonisation objectives and are increasingly focused on real-world decarbonisation progress.    

APAC total returns from September 2025

  1. Aberdeen Global Macro Research commentary, unless otherwise stated 
  2. Jones Lang LaSalle, unless otherwise stated
  3. MSCI-RCA
  4. CBRE
  5. Artificial Intelligence Index Report 2025, Stanford University    

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