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Arshiya Khullar

Arshiya Khullar is a senior Asia reporter for PERE. Based in Hong Kong, Arshiya covers news and trends in the private real estate markets across Asia-Pacific. In 2016, Arshiya was awarded the prestigious State Street Institutional Press Award for the best newcomer financial journalist in the region for an investigative story on how Anbang Insurance's failed pursuit of Starwood Hotels & Resorts worsened the reputation of the whole Chinese investor community in the global marketplace. In the past, Arshiya's bylines have also appeared on CNN.com, Quartz, Eurogamer, Lloyd's List and StartupsHK.
The Canadian pension fund is doubling down on the logistics sector in Japan instead, as indicated by its recent commitment to GLP’s $2.2bn Japan industrial fund.
CapitaLand’s acquisition of Singaporean property group Ascendas-Singbridge from state investor Temasek has vaulted the firm into the $85bn AUM club.
Record prime office yields in Sydney and Melbourne is making the sector relatively unappealing for foreign investors like the German insurer.
The Asia-Pacific chief executive of the insurer's real estate business says there is still a yield arbitrage between China and India logistics.
The Singapore-based investment manager funded its initial foray into the world’s largest property market with balance sheet money rather than institutional capital.
From capital controls and CFIUS to the intensifying trade war, Chinese investors trying to invest in the US are encountering many hurdles. David Blumenfeld and Paul Guan of the law firm Paul Hastings discuss these hurdles with PERE's Arshiya Khullar.
Including a cornerstone investment from APG, UBS Asset Management is planning to raise $330m in total equity for a residential club vehicle.
Rising hedging costs have diminished appetite for American real estate in favor of European.
In a late-cycle environment with growing uncertainty surrounding macro events like the US-China trade war, real estate managers are thinking about how to make their strategies resilient ahead of a potential downturn
New risk-based capital rules for Korean insurers, set to come into effect by 2022, are prompting investors to revise their real estate allocations for the next few years.
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