Real estate industry disruption leading to innovation and transparency

(Image credit: JLL

Real estate industry disruption leading to innovation and driving transparency

Real estate industry disruption
Image credit: JLL

The real estate industry is undergoing a transformation as the growing adoption of proptech platforms, digital tools and ‘big data’ techniques rapidly increase the volume of data available.

Asia Pacific’s emerging markets have made the most significant gains in improving real estate transparency, led by a greater emphasis on corporate social responsibility and wider adoption of new technologies. According to JLL’s biennial Global Real Estate Transparency Index, Southeast Asian countries like Thailand, Vietnam, Philippines and Indonesia are among the global top 10 improvers, while Singapore continues to feature prominently as a transparent market.

The 2020 Index is launched at a time of massive economic and societal disruption where the need for transparent processes, accurate and timely data and high ethical standards are in closer focus. The backdrop of COVID-19 is also ensuring that transparency within Asia Pacific’s real estate legal and regulatory systems is more important than ever to global investors, as they look to deploy approximately $40 billion* in dry powder capital into the region.

Real estate industry disruption being accelerated

While real estate has been slower to embrace new technologies than other industries, this is changing – in the two years since the last Transparency Index, nearly 1,400 private tech start-ups focused on real estate have been founded and US$16.9 billion in funding raised.

JLL’s survey reveals that the highest level of proptech adoption is unsurprisingly in the ‘Highly Transparent’ markets – such as France, the Netherlands, Australia, the UK, Canada and the U.S., as well as high-income Asia Pacific markets like South Korea, Singapore and Hong Kong SAR. Several larger emerging markets also stand out on proptech adoption – including India, South Africa, Brazil and China – indicating the increased appeal of proptech solutions in markets where traditional data sources or transaction processes are less established.

Real estate industry disruption leading to innovation

The COVID-19 pandemic is fast-tracking digitization and stimulating innovation in the use of technology due to the need for accurate and just-in-time data to keep track of activity – especially relating to health, mobility and space usage.

Real estate industry disruption leading to higher frequency of data collection and dissemination

The pandemic is leading to an acceleration in new types of non-standard and high-frequency data being collected and disseminated, which is taking transparency to new levels due to its near-real-time nature:

In the U.S. for example, organizations like the National Multifamily Housing Council (NMHC) and NAREIT pooled data on rent payments from software firms and property owners within a few weeks of the crisis escalating and have maintained this data with subsequent updates. This has provided visibility into a previously opaque indicator and informed both policymakers and business through the crisis.

Real estate industry disruption leading to greater transparency

Individual companies are also contributing to greater transparency, with Placer.ai, for example, making its retail footfall data publicly available since the onset of the pandemic.

The current real estate industry disruption may well force the pace of change. Looking ahead, JLL expects the widespread adoption of technology, together with advancement in data availability and sensor technology, to play a key role in helping to boost real estate transparency.

According to JLL, pressure exists from investors, businesses and consumers to further improve real estate transparency to compete with other asset classes and meet heightened expectations about the industry’s role in providing a sustainable and resilient built environment in the age of COVID-19. Furthermore, innovative new property technology (proptech) is changing how real estate data is gathered and analyzed and influencing industry transparency at a regulatory level.

“While investment into commercial real estate has inevitably paused during the pandemic, the overarching trend toward rising allocations to this asset class will continue. As investors look to allocate more capital into real estate in this region, transparency becomes even more important, as will the enforcement of robust regulatory frameworks,” says Regina Lim, Head of Capital Markets Research, Asia Pacific, JLL.

Emerging markets have once again shown the greatest advancement in the Index, with six Asia Pacific markets – Mainland China (32nd), Thailand (33rd), India (34th), Indonesia (40th), Philippines (44th) and Vietnam (56th) – among the top 10 biggest improvers globally. Progress in Thailand’s and Vietnam’s main cities, Bangkok and Ho Chi Minh City, has pushed each into a higher tier – ‘Transparent’ and ‘Semi-Transparent’ respectively. Singapore (14th) sits near the cusp of the ‘Highly Transparent’ tier as it has risen one spot from number 15 in 2018.

Singapore among top ten in Asia Pacific real estate transparency

“Singapore has come in within the top 10 for the quality and depth of its market data, reflecting the maturity of its real estate sector,” says Chris Fossick, CEO, JLL Southeast Asia. “Singapore has consistently ranked well on the transparency tier among Asia’s mature economies and it has made great progress over the past couple of years due to its strengths as a regional hub for proptech companies and government leadership on sustainability initiatives.”

In both Asia Pacific and outside of the region, JLL’s research concludes that sustainability commitments have become the biggest single driver of real estate transparency globally since 2018. An increased focus on corporate social responsibility and acknowledgement of the need to create sustainable buildings bring environment, social and governance (ESG) considerations into the mainstream. Additionally, green building certification systems and energy efficiency standards are widespread in the region’s most transparent markets and the most improved national real estate sectors.

Another key driver of transparency is the volume of real estate market data now available due to the growing adoption of Proptech platforms, digital tools and “big data” techniques. Although real estate markets have historically faced challenges when implementing new technology, the COVID-19 pandemic is leading to an acceleration in new types of non-standard and high-frequency data – especially relating to health, mobility and space usage – being collected and disseminated in near-real-time.

“As the adoption of proptech and sustainability commitments continue to garner steam, greater transparency gains will be driven by both an evolving regulatory landscape and the collective actions by national real estate industries. With the outbreak of COVID-19, it will become even more crucial for the real estate industry to work collaboratively with local governments to achieve greater transparency and meet the changing expectations of investors as their appetites shift in accordance to the investment outlook over the next 12 to 18 months,” adds Fossick.

JLL and LaSalle have been tracking real estate transparency and championing higher standards since 1999.  This 11th edition of the Global Real Estate Transparency Index (GRETI) covers 99 countries and territories, and 163 city regions. This latest survey has been extended to quantify 210 separate elements of transparency, with additional coverage on sustainability and resilience, health and wellness, proptech and alternatives sectors.

Written by Ravi Chandran

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