Asian buyers check in to Australian hotel sector with $8.2bn in deals

Asian buyers check in to Australian hotel sector with $8.2bn in deals
Staff reporterDecember 7, 2020

Asian investors have spent $8.2 billion on Australian hotel acquisitions over the past eight years.

They have been stealing the march on their domestic rivals according to CBRE Hotels’ research that shows that domestic purchasers spent just $3.2 billion on Australian hotel property over the same period.

The data is highlighted in CBRE’s latest Australian Hotels MarketView, which points to a substantial increase in transaction volumes in Q3 2016 after a subdued first half.

CBRE Hotels national director Wayne Bunz said over $600 million in hotels had transacted in Q3 with all but $50 million having been acquired by Asian buyers.

“For the ninth year in a row, Asian investors are set to be the dominant players in the Australian hotel market,” Bunz said.

“Multi-disciplined Asian capital has long been drawn to Australia’s attractive yields, steady growth, transparent political/legal framework and liquidity and that interest shows no signs of abating, with Australia increasingly viewed as a safe haven for Asia Pacific capital.”

CBRE’s MarketView highlights that the majority of transactions in Q3 took placed in regional locations, with tropical North Queensland seeing the most activity.

This includes notable transactions such as the Novotel Oasis in Cairns, which sold to Shakespeare Property Group for $48 million, and the Rydges Esplanade Cairns, which sold for $40 million to Mulpha Group.

Bunz said the high level of buyer activity had led to a noticeable change in the yield spread for regional hotels.

“Owners are now able to receive a premium from potential buyers who wish to break into these markets,” he said, adding that high construction costs meant buying was the most financially viable option for entering regional locations.

Nationally, CBRE Hotel has a further $200 million in assets in due diligence, with the majority of the deals involving offshore buyers.

CBRE Hotels Research Manager, Benjamin Martin-Henry, said a key attraction for offshore investors was the current strength in the Australian hotel market, with occupancy rates, average daily rates and revenue per available room having all increased in the year September 2016 according to the latest figures from STR.

“The leisure markets continue to be the best performing cities across the country, with Cairns, the Gold Coast and Hobart posting strong performance growth over the past year,” Martin-Henry said.

“Sydney has also showed strong growth across all indicators and continues to be the strongest ‘non-leisure’ market.”

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