Lower fundings costs, firm fundamentals to fuel appetite for Singapore commercial real estate
Lower funding costs, firm fundamentals to fuel appetite for Singapore commercial real estate
Why investors are returning to Singapore commercial assets
Singapore’s commercial real estate market is seeing renewed interest as funding costs ease and occupier fundamentals remain resilient. With interest rates stabilising, capital is gradually rotating back into income-producing assets across office, industrial and retail segments.
Market participants note that while pricing adjustments have already occurred over the past rate cycle, demand for quality assets remains intact — supporting selective transaction activity.
Key drivers supporting market appetite
Investors are increasingly prioritising assets with defensive cash flows, longer lease tenures, and tenants aligned to structural growth sectors.
Which commercial segments stand out
Industrial & logistics
Industrial properties remain a core focus, underpinned by advanced manufacturing, logistics, food production and data-related industries. Limited supply in certain estates continues to support rental performance.
Office
Demand is strongest for modern, well-located office assets with sustainability credentials and efficient layouts. Older buildings face higher leasing pressure unless upgraded.
Retail
Retail performance remains uneven, with well-anchored suburban malls and experience-led concepts outperforming secondary locations.
TopBroker Insight
Lower funding costs alone do not guarantee a market-wide rebound. Investors who perform best in this phase typically focus on:
- Assets with strong tenant demand and renewal prospects
- Industrial properties aligned with long-term economic drivers
- Buildings with manageable capital expenditure requirements
- Realistic pricing rather than peak-cycle valuations
For owner-occupiers and long-term investors, the current environment may present window opportunities before competition intensifies.
Exploring commercial or industrial opportunities?
Understanding how funding costs, occupier demand and zoning rules intersect is critical when evaluating commercial and industrial assets.


