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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.
Despite strong investor backing, the New York-based firm's co-founder said some institutions 'have a hard time determining which bucket to place us in.'
The unprecedented events of the past year have spurred greater interest in listed real estate. Arshiya Khullar explores how that could change the composition for institutional real estate portfolios.
The firm has raised $8.4bn so far for its long-term perpetual capital core-plus real estate fund focused on a life sciences strategy.
The higher returning strategy raised only $35.4bn, but the average fund size hit an all-time high, according to PERE data.
It has long been believed what happens in real estate happens first in the US. That assumption could change with key Asian economies projected to rebound faster from the covid-19 crisis.
Market disruption caused by the pandemic will create value-add and opportunistic investment opportunities in the two sectors, according to the Swiss investment bank.
Three institutional investors, including two sovereign wealth funds, committed nearly all of the capital for Logistics Property Company’s maiden develop-to-core fund.
Robert Stuckey believes an investing thesis centered on underwriting real estate via demographic and technological trends has kept Carlyle's business insulated from the current pandemic-induced crisis.
Since the pandemic began, vast amounts of capital have been raised by mega-managers to jump on distress investment opportunities. Their time to deploy that capital is near.
Two industry veterans have launched AneVista Group to invest in small format, last-mile retail investments, despite waning institutional investor appetite and growing headwinds facing the sector.
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