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Mori Bets on Luxury Condo Demand in Tokyo With Toranomon Project

Mori Bets on Luxury Condo Demand in Tokyo With Toranomon Project

(Bloomberg) -- Mori Building Co. has started work on a luxury residential development in Tokyo that will include units priced from 1 billion yen ($9 million), betting there is untapped demand for the most upscale apartments in the city.

Japan’s biggest privately owned developer is constructing three buildings at a cost of about 400 billion yen in the central district of Toranomon, home to many of the capital’s office towers and embassies, Executive Managing Officer Hideto Oba said in an interview. The development, which includes a 54-level structure, is scheduled for completion in about 2020, he said. 

“We see expansion in the market for residences that will satisfy the needs of wealthy individuals from Japan and overseas,” said Oba. “The stock of the kind of homes that rich people want to purchase is limited in Tokyo.”

Mori Building’s competitors Nomura Real Estate Holdings Inc. and Mitsui Fudosan Co. are also developing high-end apartments as foreign interest in Japanese property rises. Tokyo’s market for luxury residences lags behind other major global centers by both supply and price, although that’s beginning to change, according to consultancy Jones Lang LaSalle Inc.

“In terms of pricing, Tokyo is finally catching up to London,” said Koji Naito, a director for Japan capital markets research at Jones Lang LaSalle in Tokyo. “Luxury condo prices have arguably been appreciating in the past several years and it is expected that the current trend will continue.”

Mori Bets on Luxury Condo Demand in Tokyo With Toranomon Project

Mori Building will supply 550 units, 160 of which it will market as fully furnished serviced apartments and the rest for sale or rent. Oba said the luxury units will sell from 1 billion yen and rent for more than 1 million yen a month. A “considerable number” will be priced at this level, he said, declining to provide a specific figure.

Oba said the Toranomon property will be more upscale than Roppongi Hills, the Tokyo complex completed by Mori in 2003.

Foreigners may drive demand for the apartments, said Megan Walters, head of Asia-Pacific research at Jones Lang LaSalle. “With the Tokyo Olympics coming up and just the rise in Tokyo and inbound tourism, there’s every potential that the units could get absorbed simply because of the demand from overseas buyers,” she said.

Nomura Real Estate began selling a luxury complex in Roppongi in June last year, and one apartment sold for 1.4 billion yen, the company’s most expensive since 2002, spokesman Yujiro Onuma said. Mitsui Fudosan began selling 1.5 billion yen units in upmarket Aoyama in October 2016 and 800 million yen apartments in Yokohama last month.

To contact the reporters on this story: Katsuyo Kuwako in Tokyo at kkuwako@bloomberg.net, Gareth Allan in Tokyo at gallan11@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Marcus Wright at mwright115@bloomberg.net, Russell Ward, Sree Vidya Bhaktavatsalam

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