Singapore's GLP eyes 30-50% logistics rent surge in China

Singapore-headquartered GLP expects logistics rents in China to rise 30-50% as market supply stabilises toward pre-Covid-19 levels. GLP China CEO Zhao told the South China Morning Post the firm will expand in logistics, data centres and renewable energy amid Beijing's push for domestic demand. The company operates extensively in China with significant property and energy assets.

Singapore-headquartered GLP anticipates significant growth in China's logistics sector. GLP China CEO Zhao told the South China Morning Post: “In logistics, as market supply stabilises, we expect rents to trend towards pre-Covid-19 levels, which reflect a 30 to 50 per cent upside from where we are today.” He added: “In data centres and new energy, we believe we are in the early stages of a generational growth cycle and just scratching the surface in terms of demand.” GLP develops and operates more than 420 logistics and business parks across 70 Chinese cities, managing 40 million square metres of properties in the world's second-largest economy. Its China operations own 2.7 gigawatts (GW) of renewable energy generating capacity, with 1.5GW already connected to power grids. One GW can supply about 750,000 households for a year. The company is reportedly planning an initial public offering in Hong Kong with a targeted valuation of about US$20 billion, according to a source familiar with the matter. Zhao declined to comment on the fundraising issue. These expectations align with Beijing's push to boost domestic consumption under the 15th five-year plan, focusing on logistics, business parks, data centres and renewable energies.

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Realistic illustration of China's 2026 Two Sessions press conference highlighting GDP growth targets and leaders including Premier Li Qiang and Xi Jinping.
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Economy press conference highlights from China's 2026 Two Sessions

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Following Premier Li Qiang's government work report setting a 2026 GDP growth target of 4.5-5%, Zheng Shanjie of the National Development and Reform Commission projected over 6 trillion yuan GDP growth this year at the NPC economy press conference. The service sector is expected to exceed 100 trillion yuan during the 15th Five-Year Plan (2026-2030). Leaders including Xi Jinping emphasized high-quality development amid the sessions.

Logistics giant DHL expects revenues to soar by 2030, driven largely by Chinese companies' global ambitions, even amid disruptions from the US-Israel war on Iran and unpredictable tariffs. Oscar de Bok, CEO of its global forwarding and freight business, highlighted China's crucial supply chain role in a Shanghai interview.

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Prologis delivered record results for the first quarter of 2026, exceeding occupancy expectations and raising its full-year guidance. The company secured a 5.6 GW data center pipeline and expanded joint ventures. However, analysts note decelerating rent growth and a high valuation.

China's State Council unveiled a blueprint on Tuesday aiming to grow its service sector to 100 trillion yuan (US$14.7 trillion) by 2030, fusing software and steel to modernise advanced manufacturing and avert deindustrialisation. The plan spotlights 'producer services' such as specialised logistics, information technology and advanced research. Analysts say it will cultivate world-class Chinese brands and shore up the industrial backbone.

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Premier Li Qiang delivered the government work report to China's National People's Congress on March 5, 2026, setting a 2026 GDP growth target of 4.5-5% and outlining priorities for the 15th Five-Year Plan (2026-2030), including technological innovation, economic security, public well-being, energy production and decarbonisation. The report announced 20 growth targets across economy, technology, healthcare and more, plus 109 major projects in six areas—up from 102 previously—to support doubling 2020 per capita GDP by 2035.

Shanghai certified 30 new regional headquarters of multinational corporations and 15 research and development centres funded by overseas entities on Wednesday, a sign of continued interest in the Chinese financial hub despite an overall decline in the country’s foreign direct investment. The ceremony was hosted by the city’s mayor, Gong Zheng, with eight companies on the Fortune 500 list.

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Hong Kong's initial public offering market has raised more than HK$140 billion (US$17.9 billion) as of April, maintaining its global lead, Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po said, while indicating a renewed push for gold trading amid rising demand for risk diversification. Chan stated on Sunday that the city remains the world's top IPO fundraising hub.

 

 

 

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