Amongst foreign investors, European were the most represented (41%) with a volume of € 45.8bn, quite fairly split between Eurozone (51%) and non-Eurozone investors (49%).
American investors plunged 37% reaching almost € 26bn in 2016. They represent only 24% of the total foreign investment volume in Europe (vs. 31% a year ago). Sharp pricing and uncertainties have driven the investors on CEE countries, which stay up while it was halved in Europe top 3 markets.
Besides a 12% decrease in volume invested into European real estate, the Asian share of cross-border investment total rose to 11%. They became the main foreign investors in the UK, before the Americans.
“Besides drops in volume, there was no change in the relative ranking of the destinations of foreign capital” said Céline Cotasson-Fauvet head of Pan-European Research at BNP Paribas Real Estate. “Indeed, the UK remains #1 destination of foreign investment in Europe, but dropped 30% in volume due to the wait-and-see attitude of most investors. Germany suffered from an on-going shortage of supply which has held total turnover back; international investment volume was 20% down on 2015. Whereas, France, albeit dropping 19% of foreign investment, still represent 9% of their European allocations. The main gainers were Ireland, The Netherlands and Central & Eastern Europe.”