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Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailAI will double data center capacity in the next few years, CapitaLand Investment saysMichelle Lee, managing director of private funds (data center) at CapitaLand Investment, says power sourcing will be "as important, if not more important, than land sourcing."
Persons: Michelle Lee Organizations: CapitaLand, CapitaLand Investment
Real estate companies around the world are eyeing one area right now: data centers, according to Citi. Citi noted the push toward data centers is being driven by major themes such as artificial intelligence and nearshoring. More industrial companies are looking to convert warehouses into data centers, Citi noted. Stocks to benefit The bank named three "direct beneficiaries" of rising data center demand: U.S.- listed real estate investment trust Digital Realty Trust , data center firm Equinix and Australia-listed NextDC . Paul Hanna | Bloomberg | Getty ImagesReal estate companies around the world are eyeing one area right now: data centers, according to Citi.
Persons: Stocks, There's, Keppel DC REIT, Paul Hanna Organizations: Citi, Digital Realty Trust, Digital Realty, Equinix, Nvidia, Keppel DC, Industrial Trust, Inc, Talavera de la Reina, Bloomberg, Getty Locations: datacenters, Equinix, Australia, Singapore, India, Talavera de, Spain
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailCapitaLand Investments sinks into the red: CFO discusses earnings and outlookPaul Tham, group CFO of the real estate investment manager, discusses the company's earnings decline, restructuring, and navigating China's property sector.
Persons: Paul Tham
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailCapitaLand Investment says its lodging business is doing particularly wellPaul Tham, group chief financial officer of CapitaLand Investment, attributes the segment's "outstanding" performance to good global recovery not just in Singapore, but also in Europe and Japan.
Persons: Paul Tham Organizations: CapitaLand Investment Locations: Singapore, Europe, Japan
SINGAPORE/HANOI, March 29 (Reuters) - Vietnam's largest conglomerate, Vingroup (VIC.HM), is in discussions to sell a stake in its shopping mall arm as it seeks to bring in strategic investors, five sources told Reuters on Wednesday. Vincom Retail (VRE.HM), Vietnam's biggest shopping mall operator, which is nearly 60% controlled by Vingroup, commands a market value of $2.8 billion. The sources said Thailand's biggest retailer Central Group and other companies are in negotiations to buy a stake in Vincom Retail. Vincom Retail owns 83 shopping malls in Vietnam - a country that grew at 8% last year and emerged as Asia's fastest growing economy. Vincom Retail, which was spun off from Vingroup, listed on the local stock exchange in 2017.
SINGAPORE/HANOI, March 17 (Reuters) - Asian real estate giant CapitaLand Group is in talks to acquire assets worth roughly $1.5 billion from Vietnam's biggest listed property firm Vinhomes JSC (VHM.HM), two sources familiar with the matter told Reuters. A deal of that size would mark one of the largest real estate transactions in Southeast Asia in the last few years. The talks come as Vietnam's property sector is struggling with a cash crunch following an anti-graft campaign launched by the government last year. Vinhomes, Vietnam's biggest real estate developer by market capitalization, is part of Vingroup (VIC.HM), the country's largest conglomerate. Shares of Vinhomes have lost 10% so far this year, after tumbling 40% in 2022 as the property crisis deepened.
Bond yields are surging , as markets get jittery on reignited fears that the U.S. Federal Reserve will keep interest rates higher for longer. It drove stocks lower and bond yields higher (yields rise as prices fall). As rates surge, it becomes harder to find stocks that can compete on a yield basis — but some do exist. CNBC Pro used FactSet to screen for global stocks on the MSCI World index with yields above 5%. Engie had a buy rating from 73% of analysts, while SITC got 85% — the highest buy rating among the screened stocks.
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailPeople will still want to travel in the long term, says CapitaLand InvestmentBeh Siew Kim, CEO of the real estate investment management company, discusses the outlook for the hospitality business and the changing habits of corporate travelers
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailPeople will still want to travel in the long term: CapitaLand Investment's lodging divisionBeh Siew Kim, chief financial and sustainability officer of the real estate investment management company, discusses the outlook for the hospitality business and the changing habits of corporate travelers
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailReal estate prices in Singapore will take some time to 'level out': CapitaLand InvestmentAndrew Lim of the real estate investment management company says Singapore's policy responses are meant to "tame an engine that is showing signs of overheating."
China's unwinding of its strict Covid-19 controls has got analysts scrambling to identify reopening beneficiaries in the stock market. But there could be another way to play the reopening, with Bank of America and UBS having identified a raft of less obvious beneficiaries outside of China. UBS' stock picks Thai hospitality group Minor International is one of UBS' top picks. Within Thailand, UBS also named rail transit operator BTS Group, expressway and metro operator Bangkok Expressway & Metro, as well as Bangkok Bank as reopening beneficiaries. Student placement provider IDP Education, as well as property groups Lendlease Group and Mirvac Group also made the UBS list.
SINGAPORE, Nov 28 (Reuters) - Link Real Estate Investment Trust (0823.HK), Asia's biggest REIT, has emerged as the frontrunner to buy a portfolio of assets from Singapore shopping mall owner NTUC Enterprise Co-operative Ltd, multiple sources told Reuters on Monday. If Link REIT does buy, the assets will be its first in Singapore. Mercatus and Hong Kong-listed Link REIT declined to comment on the matter. Nearly three-quarters of its portfolio value is in Hong Kong. Link REIT has been on the prowl for assets in Singapore and other countries to diversify its portfolio.
Total: 12