A new property index, the MSCI/APREA Pan-Asia Quarterly Property Fund Index (APPI), has been launched to improve the transparency of Asia-Pacific鈥檚 unlisted property sector.

In collaboration with the Asia-Pacific Real Assets Association (APREA), MSCI has begun to benchmark the performance of pan-Asia Pacific core property funds, which currently have a total net asset value of up to US$16bn (鈧13.5bn).

Varun Malik, head of APAC real estate client coverage with MSCI, told 91传媒在线: 鈥淲e felt the market had come of age with an increasing flow of capital into private real estate in this region.鈥

Malik said investors looking to diversify globally were turning to pan-regional investment vehicles, which gave them instant diversified international exposure through pan-regional core funds.

The development of a core fund market in Asia-Pacific, which had been slower than in North America and Europe, was partly due to lack of market transparency, he said. MSCI research had shown that 鈥渢ransparency drives more capital flow鈥.

Sigrid Zialcita, CEO of APREA, said investors in the US or Europe had a plethora of indices to measure the performance of funds in their markets.

鈥淭his is why we are partnering MSCI to produce this index,鈥 she said. 鈥淚nvestors are increasing allocations to Asia-Pacific, and, to make sure that these inflows continue, it is imperative that information on the market is available through indices.鈥

In Asia, assets revaluation took place annually, and the time gap was seen as too long for some investors, Malik said. The index overcame this problem by publishing quarterly valuations of fund assets.

鈥淭he new index covers 60% of the addressable market,鈥 said Malik. MSCI was currently in 鈥渁dvanced conversations with other constituents in the market鈥 to jointly augment the benchmarking process.

Eventually, MSCI and APREA would also address climate change, Malik said.

To read the digital edition of the latest 91传媒在线 magazine click here.