Việt Nam is front-and-centre within the global hospitality investment conversation and two landmark transactions underscore the country''s emergence as a major player in the regional hospitality investment market, experts said.
With an average price jump of US$200-250 per square metre within one year for metro-adjacent real estate, the Transit-Oriented Development (TOD) model has emerged as one of the most important urban planning trends of the 21st century, a report from JLL said.
JLL Vietnam, a property market researcher, has recently increased its 2025 forecast for Vietnamese hotel investment volume from US$100 million to $125 million, reflecting a strong belief in the market''s growth prospects and rising attractiveness to both domestic and foreign...
Việt Nam''s hotel market will attract over US$125 million in cumulative investments in 2025 as the country’s tourism market eclipses pre-Covid levels, according to data and analysis by JLL Vietnam, a professional services firm specialising in real estate and investment management.
In the face of escalating global economic volatility, particularly following the reciprocal tariffs imbroglio, the ready-built warehouse market in the south, including HCM City, is seeing a lull pending the outcome of trade negotiations.
Việt Nam jumped four places to rank 56th globally, according to the Global Real Estate Transparency Index by JLL and LaSalle Investment Management, amid improving building standards across Asia.
The supply of industrial property in the South is expected to rise further in the next five years to capitalise on the increasing demand in the region, and further strengthen its leading position in terms of supply,.
Việt Nam’s logistics industry has grown tremendously alongside with the upsurge in the demand of home delivery in 2020 despite impact of COVID-19 pandemic including social distancing and lockdown, participants heard at a forum on January 5.
The prices of properties with land in HCM City increased by 15 per cent in the third quarter from the same period of last year due to lack of new supply, according to a report by property consultancy JLL.