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User, investor demand for Life Sciences Space in Asia Pacific Markets Spiking

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According to a new CBRE Research report, occupier and investor demand for specialised life sciences real estate in Asia Pacific is surging as key macro trends propel the industry into a fresh phase of expansion.

CBRE reports Asia’s life sciences industry, includes the pharmaceutical, biotechnology, medical equipment, food science and healthcare sectors, has gigantic growth potential due to factors such as the region’s large – and in some markets, ageing – population, low health expenditure per capita (representing circa 6% of Asia Pacific GDP versus 17% in the U.S.), and a rise in pharmaceutical research & development (R&D).

Asian region including its larger markets like India are some of the fastest growing areas in the Commonwealth and there are potential investors in the Commonwealth who are interesting in making substantial investments in the sector.   

This potential is already being demonstrated, with organic expansion and flight-to-quality relocations underpinning 17.4% y-o-y growth in the volume of life sciences office leasing in Asia Pacific in 2020, led by markets such as Shanghai, Beijing, Tokyo, Bangalore and Hyderabad, compared with a 25% decline in the overall Asia Pacific leasing market.

The report also ranks the competitiveness of the region’s top life sciences hubs and observes a rapid increase in investor interest in the sector, underpinned by a strengthening focus on R&D since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. This is anticipated to drive a growing number of sale-and-leaseback transactions, public-private sector partnerships to drive development opportunities and a repositioning of ageing light industrial facilities into laboratories or cold storage use.

The introduction of supportive policies in several Asia Pacific markets is assisting to facilitate the development of the life sciences sector – aiding the growth of domestic pharmaceutical companies and supporting the expansion of international pharmaceutical firms that seek to establish regional headquarters.

Government support for homegrown companies and the ownership of core technologies is also aiding the region catch up with the U.S. and Europe in terms of R&D capabilities.

On the real estate front, the report highlights that the real estate portfolios of life sciences companies typically consist of four major components, namely corporate offices, logistics facilities (including cold storage), R&D laboratories and manufacturing facilities.

In addition to the rise in corporate office leasing activity, demand for specialized R&D facilities across the region is being supported by preferential policies, including incentives to support new R&D set-ups in key industrial parks.

There is also increasing demand for high-specification logistics facilities, including cold storage, partly due to specialized storage requirements for mRNA COVID-19 vaccines, although the total quantum of demand remains limited. Pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities are typically located in India, China and Japan, where most sites are self-owned.

“The huge growth potential of the life sciences industry, government policy support and expanding R&D capabilities bode well for future real estate demand,” said Ada Choi, APAC Head of Occupier Research and Data Intelligence and Management, for CBRE.

“Occupiers seeking corporate office space are advised to capitalize on the current market weakness to optimize portfolios ahead of a full market recovery, while those companies adding to their R&D footprint should leverage government incentives. In the pharmaceutical logistics segment, CBRE recommends occupiers secure suitable facilities or collaborate with landlords for asset enhancement, while the focus on the manufacturing side should be on reviewing facility networks and scaling up capacity,” Ms. Choi added.

The report uses 12 criteria based on four major categories – manufacturing, R&D, pharmaceutical logistics and sales – to rank the competitiveness of major Asia Pacific life sciences markets.

In Greater China, Shanghai and Beijing stand out owing to their advanced manufacturing and R&D capabilities and large domestic market. Shanghai’s port enables it to outperform from a supply chain perspective, while Beijing is reliant upon neighboring cities for exports.

Tokyo and Singapore also rank among the top life sciences markets, due to their sophisticated infrastructure, talent pool and protection of intellectual property, while Melbourne rounds out the overall top 5 Asia Pacific hubs due to its advanced and innovative manufacturing of pharmaceutical and medical technology products, university-backed research capabilities and strong logistics networks.

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