GLS, commercial deals lift 2025 property investments to $40b
- January 12, 2026
- Straits Times
- 6 mins read
GLS & Commercial Deals Lift 2025 Property Investment to $40B
Investment sales rebounded to an eight-year high as interest rates eased and buyers re-priced risk. Robust Government Land Sales (GLS) participation and big-ticket commercial transactions led the charge.
What’s behind the $40B surge?
2025’s rebound wasn’t “one big trade” — it was a broad-based re-awakening across land, income assets and select repositioning plays, helped by easing rates and Singapore’s defensive appeal in a choppy macro backdrop.
GLS returned as a volume engine. Residential public land sales were a major contributor in Q4, with GLS tenders adding meaningful transactional momentum as developers competed for launch-ready sites. The takeaway: when demand visibility improves, GLS becomes a reliable barometer of sentiment and pricing power.
TopBroker lens: In rate-turning cycles, developers and institutions often “move first” — land and core commercial deals tend to price in the next 12–24 months before the wider market feels it.
Commercial stole the spotlight. Big, strategically located and well-occupied assets drew capital as investors leaned into durable cash flow and tenant stickiness. Several headline transactions (office towers and retail) helped push commercial volumes sharply higher year-on-year.
Residential stayed resilient. The residential slice grew steadily on improved buyer sentiment and more stable borrowing costs. Importantly, the market is still selective — well-located, well-designed projects with clearer absorption tend to outperform.
Industrial cooled slightly in late 2025 versus the prior year, but remained a sizeable chunk of activity overall. For buyers, the playbook stays the same: prioritise specs, loading/access, power capacity, and usage compliance — “functional real estate” wins in tight labour and logistics environments.
Watch-list for 2026: If supply rises and occupiers become choosier, assets that need heavy capex (M&E, loading efficiency, façade, ESG upgrades) will face a wider pricing spread versus modern stock.
TopBroker quick takeaways (how to use this)
For occupiers: Use the “flight to quality” trend to negotiate beyond rent — reinstatement, fit-out support, loading/access, power, and downtime risk matter more as buildings polarise.
For investors: Prioritise institutional-grade specs + tenant stickiness. Be cautious on assets needing heavy upgrades without clear payback or a fast repositioning path.
For landlords: Targeted capex (M&E, ESG, access/loading) protects leasing velocity when supply rises. The market is rewarding operational efficiency and modern layouts.
For developers: GLS competitiveness can re-accelerate quickly in improving rate environments — but underwriting must assume wider take-up dispersion between “A sites” and everything else.


