Room to grow in overseas hotel sector
Updated: 2015-08-12 07:44
By Wang Wen(China Daily)
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Outside the Waldorf Astoria, the landmark hotel, in New York. The property was sold to the Beijing-based Anbang Insurance Group for $1.95 billion. The Park Avenue hotel opened on October 1, 1931, and claimed to be the biggest hotel in the world at the time, attracting movie stars, politicians and the super rich. [Spencer Platt / Getty Images] |
Chinese companies are expanding into the global hotel market with a raft of plans to buy or build luxury properties after a series of high-profile acquisitions.
Earlier this year, Anbang Insurance Group paid $1.95 billion for the iconic Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York’s swanky Manhattan, while the Sunshine Insurance Group snapped up the Baccart Hotel in the same upmarket district for $230 million.
Dalian Wanda Group Corp Ltd, the massive Chinese conglomerate, is another key player and has announced plans to open up to 10 major hotels in Europe and the United States in the next five years.
“Investment into overseas hotel properties by Chinese companies will be much more this year,” Xia Yangyang, director of international capital at global property agents Jones Lang LaSalle in China, said. “And that investment will continue to grow in the future.”
Statistics from a report released by Jones Lang LaSalle showed that Chinese companies last year pumped $16.5 billion into overseas real estate markets, with the hotel sector accounting for 6 percent.
Europe, Australia and the US were the main destinations for investment, the report said. “One of the biggest trends of 2015 is the surge in Chinese investment into hotels globally. This is despite some underlying concerns across the globe, such as the Greek debt crisis and the recent fluctuations in the Chinese stock market,” Mark Wynne Smith, who leads the global hotels and hospitality team at Jones Lang LaSalle, told traveldailymedia.com .
The latest Chinese company to enter the overseas hotel industry is Ctrip.com International Ltd. The country’s largest online travel agency has launched Xieling, an Internet fund management platform, with Singapore-based F&H Fund Management and Huiyu Asset Management in China.
Ctrip and its partners hope to raise 2.5 billion yuan ($403 million) in the first phase with the fund being used for overseas hotel projects.
“About 90 percent will be raised among Chinese institutional investors with the company picking up the rest,” a source close to Ctrip said.
“The investment focus will be on hotel projects in Europe, where many high quality properties are professionally managed but undervalued,” he added.
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