While investment in land, offices and hotels account for 90 percent of all Chinese outbound capital in the last three years, the hotel and industrial sectors showed the largest increase in 2016 due to significant transactions in the U.S. in the form of portfolio sales and Chinese appetite for industrial parks.
Hotel activity last year was boosted by the purchase of Strategic Hotels and Resorts by Anbang Insurance for over $6 billion.
China Life Insurance has secured assets across the hotel and office sectors with portfolio purchases from the Starwood Capital Group and an office tower in Manhattan; sovereign wealth fund Chinese Investment Corporation has been active in the office sector in New York as well.
Land acquisitions by Chinese investors made a comeback last year, with a rise of 44 percent following significant transactions in Hong Kong, Australia and Malaysia. We do believe that Chinese investors will continue to be major movers of capital into global real estate for many years to come. "But a similar increase in 2017 may be challenging given the recent discussion about China monitoring its capital outflows.
Overseas investment aside, Chinese investors further deepened their investment domestically. They accounted for more than 86 percent of transactions in China in 2016, up from about 75 percent in the past few years. The tier 1 cities were most attractive to these investors. Total transaction volumes in Shanghai reached $14 billion, accounting for 48 percent of China's total investment volume. Beijing was the runner-up, accounting for 16 percent of all the transaction volume in 2016, while Shenzhen came in third, reaching 10 percent of the total.