With a raft of marco events and geopolitical tensions still it play, the smart money is one step ahead of the economic pendulum, seeing opportunity in commercial and industrial property while others remain in a holding pattern.
Big players in the property investment market have led the charge for well-located retail assets, and with economic recovery slowly underway, there’s opportunity across the broader New Zealand retail sector.
Commercial property insurance has arguably never been more important and consequently it has never been more expensive. Economic and political upheaval along with increased natural hazards have all fuelled the increase, but relief is in sight.
The smart money knows where value can be found and Bayleys is fielding high levels of enquiry and sealing deals right around the country.
Knight Frank’s 2025 issue of The Wealth Report highlights the increasing presence of private capital in the real estate market across the globe; a trend reflected here in New Zealand.
Auckland’s northwest is maturing as infrastructure initiatives, planning changes, and big investment in new neighbourhoods and commercial and industrial property awaken the region’s sleeping giant.
If you’ve been deep in the rabbit hole of OCR and interest rates trying to pick when the trough will occur, you might be missing the fact that in more ways than one, we’re entering a new real estate season.
Sustainability and automation are high on industrial property wish lists, with long-term sector fundamentals looking positive and ongoing infrastructure developments supporting future expansion.
Auckland’s southern corridor is fast becoming an in-demand office precinct as the flight to quality evolves into a search for value and business owners place greater emphasis on getting the right bang for their buck.
It’s not hope we need but action in 2025 and it’s positioned to be a transformative year for commercial and industrial real estate.
With yields trending towards eight percent, juxtaposed by cost of debt at around five percent, commercial real estate’s positive spread is becoming highly attractive in 2025.
Refusing to be forever defined as the earthquake city, Christchurch is thriving, attracting wide investor interest and outperforming other centres on a number of metrics.
With a raft of marco events and geopolitical tensions still it play, the smart money is one step ahead of the economic pendulum, seeing opportunity in commercial and industrial property while others remain in a holding pattern.
Big players in the property investment market have led the charge for well-located retail assets, and with economic recovery slowly underway, there’s opportunity across the broader New Zealand retail sector.
Commercial property insurance has arguably never been more important and consequently it has never been more expensive. Economic and political upheaval along with increased natural hazards have all fuelled the increase, but relief is in sight.
The smart money knows where value can be found and Bayleys is fielding high levels of enquiry and sealing deals right around the country.
Knight Frank’s 2025 issue of The Wealth Report highlights the increasing presence of private capital in the real estate market across the globe; a trend reflected here in New Zealand.
Auckland’s northwest is maturing as infrastructure initiatives, planning changes, and big investment in new neighbourhoods and commercial and industrial property awaken the region’s sleeping giant.
If you’ve been deep in the rabbit hole of OCR and interest rates trying to pick when the trough will occur, you might be missing the fact that in more ways than one, we’re entering a new real estate season.
Sustainability and automation are high on industrial property wish lists, with long-term sector fundamentals looking positive and ongoing infrastructure developments supporting future expansion.
Auckland’s southern corridor is fast becoming an in-demand office precinct as the flight to quality evolves into a search for value and business owners place greater emphasis on getting the right bang for their buck.
It’s not hope we need but action in 2025 and it’s positioned to be a transformative year for commercial and industrial real estate.
With yields trending towards eight percent, juxtaposed by cost of debt at around five percent, commercial real estate’s positive spread is becoming highly attractive in 2025.
Refusing to be forever defined as the earthquake city, Christchurch is thriving, attracting wide investor interest and outperforming other centres on a number of metrics.
With a raft of marco events and geopolitical tensions still it play, the smart money is one step ahead of the economic pendulum, seeing opportunity in commercial and industrial property while others remain in a holding pattern.
Big players in the property investment market have led the charge for well-located retail assets, and with economic recovery slowly underway, there’s opportunity across the broader New Zealand retail sector.
Commercial property insurance has arguably never been more important and consequently it has never been more expensive. Economic and political upheaval along with increased natural hazards have all fuelled the increase, but relief is in sight.
The smart money knows where value can be found and Bayleys is fielding high levels of enquiry and sealing deals right around the country.
Knight Frank’s 2025 issue of The Wealth Report highlights the increasing presence of private capital in the real estate market across the globe; a trend reflected here in New Zealand.
Auckland’s northwest is maturing as infrastructure initiatives, planning changes, and big investment in new neighbourhoods and commercial and industrial property awaken the region’s sleeping giant.
If you’ve been deep in the rabbit hole of OCR and interest rates trying to pick when the trough will occur, you might be missing the fact that in more ways than one, we’re entering a new real estate season.
Sustainability and automation are high on industrial property wish lists, with long-term sector fundamentals looking positive and ongoing infrastructure developments supporting future expansion.
Auckland’s southern corridor is fast becoming an in-demand office precinct as the flight to quality evolves into a search for value and business owners place greater emphasis on getting the right bang for their buck.
It’s not hope we need but action in 2025 and it’s positioned to be a transformative year for commercial and industrial real estate.
With yields trending towards eight percent, juxtaposed by cost of debt at around five percent, commercial real estate’s positive spread is becoming highly attractive in 2025.
Refusing to be forever defined as the earthquake city, Christchurch is thriving, attracting wide investor interest and outperforming other centres on a number of metrics.