SavillsIM Logo
Back to menu

Global Equity

Back to menu

Global Debt

Back to menu

Natural Capital Platform

Important Information

1. IMPORTANT INFORMATION

This website is operated by Savills IM Holdings Ltd and its subsidiary undertakings, including Savills Investment Management LLP, a limited liability partnership authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (“FCA”) (Firm Reference Number: 615368) in the United Kingdom to carry out certain investment and insurance distribution activities and DRC Savills Investment Management LLP, a limited liability partnership authorised and regulated by the FCA (Firm Reference Number: 574874) in the United Kingdom to carry out certain investment distribution activities.  The registered office for both entities is 33 Margaret Street, London W1G 0JD. The information on this website may refer to either or both of these entities along with the wholly owned subsidiaries of each, as listed on the Regulation page of this website, together (“the Savills Investment Management Group”, “we”, “us” and “our”). Property is not a financial Instrument as defined by Directive 2014/65/EU (“EU MiFID II“), and as it forms part of UK law by virtue of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018, (“UK MiFID II“). Consequently, the direct investment into, and management of, property is not regulated by the FCA.

These terms and conditions govern your access and use of this website. By accessing this website, you are indicating that you have read and accepted these terms and conditions, along with any terms expressly incorporated by reference.

2. TARGET AUDIENCE

The content contained within this website has been prepared for institutional investors only, and by having accepted the terms when entering the site, you therefore confirm that you acknowledge this. For persons accessing the website from the EEA, or who are otherwise domiciled or with a registered office in the EEA, this means that you are confirming that you meet the criteria to be a “professional client” in accordance with Article 4(1)(10) of MiFID II. For persons accessing the website from the UK, or who are otherwise domiciled or with a registered office in the UK, this means that you are confirming that you meet the criteria to be a “professional client” in accordance with UK MiFID II, or you are someone who may lawfully access this website.

Information contained within this website should not be forwarded or communicated to any other investor type. The dissemination of the information contained on this website is only intended for institutional investors in countries where Savills Investment Management LLP, DRC Savills Investment Management LLP, or any other relevant Savills undertaking (as appropriate) may make such material available. This information is not intended to be accessed by investors in jurisdictions where there is no such permission to do so. Users in such geographies should not access or act upon information contained on this website.  The information contained here should not be regarded as an offer to purchase investment units.

In the UK, to the extent information contained on this website constitutes a financial or a scheme promotion for the purpose of s. 21 of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (“FSMA“), this website may only be accessed by (i) “investment professionals” falling within Article 14(5) of the FSMA (Promotion of Collective Investment Schemes) (Exemptions) Order 2001 (“PCIS Order“) who have professional experience in matters related to investments; (ii) persons falling within any of the categories (a) to (a) of Article 22(2) of the PCIS Order (broadly, companies with net assets of £5 million sterling or more and trustees of trusts with assets of £10 million sterling or more, or any person acting in the capacity as director, officer or employee of such an entity where that person’s responsibilities when acting in that capacity involve him in the entity’s engaging in investment activity); or (iii) any other person to whom it may otherwise lawfully be communicated.

We reserve the right to prohibit or restrict access to or use of this website by any person or in any jurisdiction.

3. NO OFFER, ADVICE OR RECOMMENDATION

Nothing on the following pages shall be regarded or taken as financial advice. Access to the website is provided on the condition that it is for institutional investors to receive such information only and does not constitute an offer to enter into any contract or agreement, nor is it a solicitation of an offer to buy or sell investments in any jurisdiction.

4. RISK WARNING TO ALL POTENTIAL INVESTORS

Please remember that past performance is not necessarily a guide to future performance, and no representation or warranty is made regarding future performance. The value of an investment and the income from it can fall as well as rise as a result of market and currency fluctuations and investors may not get back the amount originally invested. Tax assumptions may change if the law changes, and independent advice should be sought. Property or, where appropriate, debt secured on Properties can be difficult to sell, and it may be difficult to realise your investment when you want to.

5. OTHER COUNTRIES

The information described within this website is not available in all countries, and nothing contained on this website constitutes an offer or solicitation to anyone in any jurisdiction where such an offer is not lawful or to anyone to whom it is unlawful to make such an offer or solicitation. By using this website you consent to these terms and conditions and confirm that you are aware of the laws in your own jurisdiction relating to the provision and sale of funds and any related financial services products, services or advice.

6. DISCLAIMER

Whilst reasonable care is taken to ensure that information contained on this website is accurate, we do not guarantee its accuracy, adequacy or completeness. We reserve the right to change the information on this website (including these terms and conditions) at any time without notice. You must check these terms and conditions for changes each time you intend to use this website. Your use of this website following such amendments constitutes your acceptance of these terms and conditions as amended.

We provide this website on an “as is” basis and make no representations or warranties of any kind with respect to this website or the content contained on it (including any text, graphics, advertisements, links or other items) and disclaim all such representations and warranties. In addition, neither we nor any other contributor to this website make any representation or give any warranty, condition, undertaking or term either express or implied as to the condition, quality, performance, accuracy, suitability, fitness for purpose, completeness, or freedom from viruses of the content contained on this website or that such content will be accurate, up-to-date, uninterrupted or error free.

7. LIABILITY AND INDEMNITY

YOU ACKNOWLEDGE THAT YOU ARE SOLELY RESPONSIBLE FOR THE USE TO WHICH YOU PUT THIS WEBSITE AND ALL THE RESULTS AND INFORMATION YOU OBTAIN FROM IT AND THAT ALL WARRANTIES, CONDITIONS, UNDERTAKINGS, REPRESENTATIONS AND TERMS WHICH MAY APPLY TO YOU, THIS WEBSITE OR ANY CONTENT ON IT, WHETHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, STATUTORY OR OTHERWISE ARE HEREBY EXCLUDED TO THE FULLEST EXTENT PERMITTED BY LAW.

Nothing in these terms and conditions shall restrict or exclude any liability that we have to any party that cannot be excluded or restricted as a matter of applicable law, including for death or personal injury arising out of our negligence or for fraudulent misrepresentation. We and all contributors to this website hereby disclaim to the fullest extent permitted by law all liability for any loss or damage including any consequential or indirect loss or damage incurred by you, whether arising in tort, contract or otherwise, and arising out of or in relation to or in connection with: (i) your access to or use of or inability to use this website or the content made available on this website; or (ii) use of, or reliance on, any content made available via this website whether or not the circumstances giving rise to such cause may have been within our control, or of any vendor providing software or services support. In particular, we shall not be liable for any indirect, incidental or consequential loss or damage.

You shall indemnify us from and against all actions, claims, proceedings, costs and damages (including any damages or compensation paid by us on the advice of our legal advisors to compromise or settle any claim) and all legal costs or expenses arising out of your use of this website and any breach by you of these terms and conditions.

8. INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS

We are the owner or the licensee of all intellectual property rights in this website and in the material published or otherwise made available on it. These works are protected by intellectual property rights, including copyright laws. All such rights are reserved.

You may not make a permanent copy of or reproduce this website or any of its contents in any form. You may not reproduce or incorporate this website or any of its contents into any other website. You may only print or cache temporary copies of the content for your own personal non-commercial use.

We welcome links to this website from relevant third party websites. However, if requested in writing by us, links must be removed within 24 hours.

“Savills Investment Management” and “DRC Savills Investment Management” and the corresponding logos are trademarks registered in our names in the UK and other parts of the world. Reproduction of these trademarks other than in order to view this website is prohibited. Nothing on this website should be construed as granting any licence or rights to use or distribute any site content without our express written agreement.

9. SITE ACCESS, INTERRUPTIONS AND OMISSIONS IN THIS SERVICE

We reserve the right to suspend, withdraw, restrict or amend all or any part of the service provided by this website at any time without notice or liability to you. We do not accept responsibility as to the operation, functionality or availability of this website, or warrant that the use of this website will be free from delay, interruption, interception or error.

Whilst we take every care to ensure that the standard of this website remains high and to maintain the continuity of it, the internet is not always a stable medium and errors, omissions, interruptions of service and delays may occur at any time, often due to factors outside of our control. As a result, we do not accept any ongoing obligation or responsibility to operate this website (or any particular part of it).

You must not violate the security of this website or attempt to do so. You must not attempt to gain unauthorised access to this website, the server on which this website is stored or any server, computer or database connected to this website.

You may not do anything that could interfere with the functioning of this website, restrict or inhibit others from accessing or using it, or result in the transmission of a denial-of-service attack, distributed denial-of-service attack, virus, worm, time bomb, logic bomb, Trojan horse or other harmful material.

You must not use this website in any way that causes, or may cause damage to us, this website or this website’s availability or accessibility. In addition, you must not use this website in any way which is unlawful, illegal, fraudulent or harmful or in connection with any unlawful, illegal, fraudulent or harmful purpose or activity or to transmit or send unsolicited commercial communications.

We will take reasonable precautions to ensure the security of this website. However, please note that the transmission of information via the internet is not completely secure.

We will not be liable for any loss or damage caused by a denial-of-service attack, viruses or other technologically harmful material that may infect your computer equipment, computer programs, data or other material due to your use of this website or to your downloading of any material posted on it, or on any website linked to it. 

10. TERMINATION

We have the right to terminate your access to this website at any time and in any event if you commit any breach of these terms and conditions. We shall have no liability to you for such termination. In the event that your access to this website is terminated, the remaining provisions of these terms and conditions will continue to apply.

11. INVALIDITY

If any part of our terms and conditions is found invalid or unenforceable (including any provision in which we exclude our liability to you), that provision shall be enforced to the maximum extent possible and the enforceability of any other part of these terms and conditions will not be affected.

12. LINKS

This website may contain links to third party websites over which we have no control.  We assume no responsibility for the content of third-party websites or resources and accept no responsibility  for any losses which may arise to you from your use of them. The presence of a link to a third party does not necessarily mean that we endorse that site or have any association with the proprietor of that website. These third-party websites will have their own terms and conditions of use, and your use of them and your relationship with their owners and/or operators will be governed by such terms and conditions.

13. GOVERNING LAW AND JURISDICTION

The terms and conditions  and all matters arising in connection therewith shall be governed exclusively by English law except for the information provided by: (i) Savills Investment Management SGR S.p.A. which is governed by Italian law; and (ii) Savills Investment Management Asia Ltd (Japan branch) which is governed by Japanese law.

The English courts will have the exclusive jurisdiction over any matters arising from or related to these terms and conditions and this website except that: [All disputes relevant to the  information provided by Savills Investment Management Asia Ltd (Japan branch)  shall be subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of Tokyo District Court as court of first instance.]

14. DATA PROTECTION

These terms and conditions should be read in conjunction with our Privacy and Cookies Policy, which provides details of the basis upon which we process any personal data that we collect from you, or that you provide to us, including via this website.

 

Accept Accept
Article

Understanding Cap Rate Sensitivity to Interest Rates in Japan

Published 29th September 2025

Authors:

Shaowei Toh & Hannah Cho

Shaowei Toh & Hannah Cho

Savills IM

Share this article

Summary

  • The Bank of Japan began to step back from its ultra-accommodative policies in 2024, which has placed the spotlight on how interest rates may affect the country’s property market.
  • Our baseline view is that policy normalisation is likely to continue, but at a measured pace. Inflation is converging toward target, currency dynamics should ease near-term price pressures, and the scale of Japan’s debt makes aggressive tightening difficult to sustain.
  • Conventional wisdom informs that higher risk-free rates translate directly into higher cap rates and, consequently, lower property values. In practice, however, this neat linkage has proven somewhat unreliable.
  • Japan, while arguably in the initial phase of the rate normalisation cycle, has seen a far slower adjustment. Even as borrowing costs edge up, the durability of cashflow provides a counterweight that limits upward pressure on cap rates.
  • As interest rates have begun to rise in Japan, we posit that investors have allowed the risk spread to compress rather than demand a full repricing of property yields. The result has been a degree of stickiness in Japanese cap rates.
  • Our practical takeaway is that Japanese real estate can be relatively resilient in a lift-off from ultra-low rates, provided rate increases are gradual and accompanied by improving fundamentals.

Japan’s interest rate normalisation: Gradual and measured

The Bank of Japan began to step back from its ultra-accommodative policies in 2024, which has placed the spotlight on how interest rates may affect the country’s property market. At the September 2025 meeting, the central bank kept the short-term policy rate at 0.5%. We do not expect the Bank of Japan to shift to a strongly hawkish stance. The path ahead is likely to be gradual and guided by data.

One reason is the inflation outlook. Price growth is expected to ease below target, and the Bank of Japan’s own projections reinforce the case for patience. In its July forecast, the central bank estimated core CPI would remain in a range of 1.5% to 2.0% in fiscal 2026 and hover near 2% in fiscal 2027. That outlook does not justify rapid tightening and instead points to a slow process of normalisation that supports growth while anchoring expectations.

External dynamics also influence the outlook. The Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank are expected to adopt a more aggressive easing stance over the coming year. As rate differentials narrow, the yen should strengthen against the dollar and the euro. A stronger currency reduces imported inflationary pressures and lessens the urgency for the Bank of Japan to accelerate policy normalisation.

Fiscal constraints add another layer. The Ministry of Finance has estimated that every one percentage point rise in interest rates increases annual debt service by about 3.7 trillion yen (approximately USD 25 billion) within three years. With public debt exceeding 250% of GDP, even small increases in borrowing costs can worsen the fiscal burden. This reality makes it difficult to justify a rapid and large increase in policy rates, as the government needs to maintain market confidence while limiting fiscal strain.

Taken together, these considerations suggest a clear baseline scenario. Policy normalisation is likely to continue, but at a measured pace. Inflation is converging toward target, currency dynamics should ease near-term price pressures, and the scale of Japan’s debt makes aggressive tightening difficult to sustain. For real estate markets, this implies that upward pressure on discount rates will remain moderate compared with shifts in long-term Japanese government bond yields. Cap rates are still expected to move higher over time, but the adjustment should be limited given resilient income profiles across key property sectors.

Complex relationship between rates and property pricing

Conventional wisdom informs that higher risk-free rates translate directly into higher cap rates and, consequently, lower property values. In practice, however, this neat linkage has proven somewhat unreliable. Historical data across markets show periods where bond yields and cap rates rise together, but also long stretches where they move independently, and at times even in opposite directions. The relationship is indeed much more complex.

One important reason lies in the distinction between real and nominal interest rates. When inflation pushes nominal yields higher, it often supports rental growth and property income at the same time. The increase in cash flows offsets the effect of higher discount rates, leaving cap rates broadly unchanged. Growth expectations add yet another dimension. If investors believe property income will grow, they are more willing to accept tighter yields, rationalising that future cash flow will compensate for a lower entry return. Conversely, when growth prospects weaken, cap rates widen regardless of whether the cost of capital is rising.

To add, appraisal-based valuation methods and the illiquidity of direct property transactions can create a natural lag between movements in financial markets and adjustments in property pricing. Beyond these valuation mechanics, broader capital market conditions exert considerable influence. The trajectory of cap rates often reflects shifts in credit availability, investor risk appetite, and the flow of capital into real estate. When liquidity is strong and investors are confident, yields can stay tight even as borrowing costs rise. Conversely, when risk tolerance diminishes or lenders tighten their covenants, cap rates may expand even if government bond yields are inching down.

Japan property market displaying inertia

The rise in government bond yields has passed quickly through to higher cap rates in many markets post-pandemic.

In the United States, the sharp rise in Treasury yields since 2022 fed quickly into higher discount rates, with values repricing rapidly in a deep and liquid market. Europe followed a similar path, with cap rates in the UK, Germany and France rising broadly in line with bond yields, while some Southern European markets saw income growth soften the adjustment. Australia real estate also repriced fairly quickly, as higher bond yields and tighter credit conditions pushed office and retail cap rates upward.

Japan, while arguably in the initial phase of the rate normalisation cycle, has seen a far slower adjustment. For example, in the multifamily sector, structural demographic patterns, urban concentration, and preferences for rental housing underpin steady occupancy and income visibility. Even as borrowing costs edge up, the durability of cashflow provides a counterweight that limits upward pressure on cap rates.

We also observe the persistence of wide yield spreads relative to government bonds in Japan. This buffer provides room for interest rates to normalise somewhat without forcing a knee-jerk repricing of real estate assets. Investors remain willing to accept lower spreads in exchange for stability and predictable income, particularly in a low-volatility market like Japan.

The funding environment also contributes to this stickiness in property pricing. Japanese lenders have remained broadly accommodative, with credit availability preserved despite higher policy rates. This stands in contrast to other regions, where tightening bank lending standards typically compound the effect of rising rates on property values.

This divergence underscores the need for a more structured framework to explain what drives cap rates beyond the risk-free rate alone. It is useful to move beyond anecdotes and apply the lens of financial theory. In this paper, we turn to a fundamental valuation model in finance that helps decompose the drivers of cap rates.

The financial theory perspective

The Gordon Growth Model1, also known as the dividend discount model, provides a simple but powerful framework for valuing income-generating assets. It rests on the principle that the value of an asset equals the present value of its future cash flows, assuming those flows grow at a constant rate into perpetuity. When investment professionals say that real estate must trade at a spread over bonds, they are really pointing back to the intuition at the heart of the Gordon Growth Model.

The basic Gordon Growth Model applied to real estate is:

Where:

  • p = property value
  • NOI = net operating income
  • r = required rate of return (essentially the discount rate)
  • g = expected long term NOI growth rate

Now, the required rate of return represents the minimum return an investor demands for holding an asset. The starting point is the risk-free rate, which is the baseline return that any rational investor would demand. Real estate, however, carries risks that go beyond those embedded in a plain vanilla government bond. To be compensated for these uncertainties, investors require an additional return above the risk-free rate. This additional margin is the risk premium.

As such,

Where:

  • rf = risk-free rate
  • RP = risk premium (the extra return above the risk-free rate that investors demand for real estate’s risk)

Within this framework, three factors determine the level of a cap rate: the risk-free rate, the risk premium associated with real estate, and the expected growth of net operating income. If both the risk premium and growth assumptions are held constant, an increase in the risk-free rate feeds directly into a one-for-one rise in the cap rate. This is the assumption often made in practice. When bond yields rise, property yields are expected to follow by roughly the same margin to preserve the spread.

The Gordon Growth Model, however, makes clear that the adjustment is not always mechanical. Cap rates may remain steady, or even compress, when investors are prepared to accept a narrower premium or when they anticipate stronger income growth. In Japan, this nuance has been especially evident. For much of the past fifteen years, ultra-low bond yields left real estate trading at historically wide spreads. As interest rates have begun to rise, we posit that investors have allowed the risk spread to compress rather than demand a full repricing of property yields. The result has been a degree of stickiness in Japanese cap rates, as the starting risk premium buffer has absorbed much of the recent upward pressure from higher government bond yields.

Extending the Gordon Growth Model: Endogenous risk premium

Investors do not set their return targets in a vacuum. Market realities such as investor preferences, capital structures and availability of assets shape how much excess return investors require. When rates rise, investors could accept a smaller risk premium if they still feel confident about the income and the asset’s quality. But this willingness has limits. The premium cannot shrink to nothing, and if bond yields were to rise substantially, investors would eventually require compensation.

We postulate that the risk premium should be treated as endogenous, responding to changes in the risk-free rate rather than standing as an exogenous factor. Cap rates are most sensitive when spreads are compressed, but additional widening has diminishing marginal impact. At higher bond yields beyond a certain point, the spread is narrow, and investors will demand that property yields adjust with government bonds. This creates what we refer to as “diminishing flexibility” in required risk premiums. The dynamic is captured more realistically with an exponential form rather than a linear one.

We model the risk premium as an exponential decay function of the risk-free rate.

Where:

  • ϕ = the asymptotic floor that investors require minimally
  • A = the headroom available to compress when rates are low,
  • λ = the compressibility factor, or the headroom can be used up

Essentially, as the risk-free rate (rf) goes up, the compressible portion (Ae-λrf) shrinks, and the risk premium gets smaller and moves toward the floor ϕ.

We make this compressibility explicit and test the model on the Tokyo office and multifamily sectors. The dataset spans the last fifteen years with a quarterly frequency. For each market segment we carry a single consistent cap rate series and match it to the local ten-year government bond yield in each period. NOI growth information is retained for robustness. Cap rates and risk-free rates were aligned by lagging cap rates one quarter relative to the 10-year government bond yield. This reflects the reality that value adjustments typically occur with a delay.

The regression outputs are as below:

Pass through into cap rate for every 100bps increase in risk-free rate at different risk-free levels:

Risk-free rate 0.5% 1.0% 1.5% 2.0% 2.5% 3.0% 3.5% 4.0%
Tokyo Multifamily -12.7 22.6 46.8 63.4 74.9 82.7 88.1 91.9
Tokyo Office -14.2 12.8 33.4 49.2 61.2 70.4 77.4 82.7

Analysis and interpretation of outputs for the multifamily sector:

The pass-through profile for Tokyo multifamily shows a clear transition from cushioning at very low interest rates to meaningful rate sensitivity as the risk-free rate rises. At a 0.5% starting point for instance, a 100 bp increase in the risk-free rate is associated with a tightening in the modelled cap rate. This counter-intuitive result reflects how much “excess” spread is embedded when rates are near zero for a long time. Investors are willing to give up on the risk premium quickly as policy normalises at very low levels, and the compression in the spread more than offsets the rise in the base rate. As the risk-free rate moves into the 2.0% zone, that cushion thins out and the pass-through climbs to the 20bps to 60bps range.

The economic rationale is straightforward for Japan’s institutional rental housing. Income streams are granular and resilient, vacancy volatility is low, and long-horizon capital continues to anchor asset demand. In the Japan multifamily sector, risk-free rates will have to rise to around 3.8% before the sector exhibits a close to one-for-one movement in cap rates.

Analysis and interpretation of outputs for the office sector:

The Tokyo office exhibits the same pattern but with its own nuances. At low levels of risk-free rates, the pass-through of a rate increase is similar to the multifamily segment, in which investors surrender the initial spread. The combination of limited prime CBD stock, leases with strong tenant covenants, and a deep domestic core buyer base allows early rate moves to be absorbed by spread compression. As the risk-free rate moves toward 2.0%, pass-through remains modest (about 49 bps per 100 bps increase in bond yields), then rises steadily into a materially rate-sensitive range at 3.0% to 4.0%. Once the easiest spread compression is used up, cap rates share more of the subsequent rate moves.

The consequence of strong corporate performance and resilient labour market is the increased demand for and support on occupier performance in the office sector. Indeed, occupier sentiments are improving across the real estate markets. For instance, Tokyo’s office rents appear to have found the floor in 2023, seeing a positive rental growth recorded in 2024 and into 2025. Vacancy rate also dropped to a three-year low to 3.4% as at June 2025. In our model, risk-free rates will have to rise to around 5.0% before the office sector exhibits a close to one-for-one movement in cap rates.

Conclusion

In summary, the practical takeaway is that Japanese real estate can be relatively resilient in a lift-off from ultra-low rates, provided rate increases are gradual and accompanied by improving fundamentals.

Japanese institutional portfolios have long been calibrated to thin returns. A modest rise in government bond yields is unlikely to reset required returns overnight, especially while other asset classes remain relatively low yielding. Many investors have liability-matching mandates and long investment horizons, so they continue to favour stable, income-producing real estate even as spreads compress. In addition, structural features of Japan’s property market, including a limited supply of tradeable core assets, deep domestic demand, and relatively low volatility, support a persistently lower risk premium than in more cyclical real estate markets globally.

Our theoretical extension of the risk premium compressing as rates rise has been borne out by the market’s behaviour so far. Fears of a sudden crash in Japan’s property prices due to the BoJ tightening are overblown. Instead, what we are seeing (and expect to continue seeing) is a measured adjustment. Government bond yields will move up slowly and very marginally while spreads narrow with cap rates inching only slightly. Indeed, property values in Japan have continued to hold firm in the past year, reflecting confidence in Japan’s long-term real estate outlook and structural demand drivers.

Japan’s case illustrates that interest rate sensitivity in real estate is very much about investor psychology and market structure. We have argued and shown that investors adjust their return expectations in ways that buffer the Japan real estate market from rate shocks. This does not mean cap rates are completely divorced from interest rates. Indeed, over a longer horizon, cap rates must eventually reflect higher base rates, but the journey is slow and nonlinear.

As Japan enters a new chapter of slightly higher interest rates, the real estate sector appears poised to navigate it without severe dislocation. Barring an unforeseen shock, we expect that interest rates will likely normalise gradually and minimally, and the real estate sector has the tools (and the investor mindset) to adapt. For current and prospective investors, understanding this dynamic provides confidence that Japan can remain a solid income play and portfolio diversifier.

Appendix: Assumptions and limitations

While our analysis provides a coherent framework for understanding cap rate sensitivity in Japan, it is a simplified representation of a complex market.

It is important to acknowledge assumptions and limitations in this framework. These caveats do not undermine the usefulness of the findings, but they do underscore the need for caution in extrapolating them beyond the specific data and contexts examined.

Reliance on the Gordon Growth Model: We relied heavily on the Gordon Growth Model. In practice, cap rates are shaped by a much wider set of factors, including rental growth expectations, liquidity conditions, the availability and cost of credit, and investor sentiment. Also, the growth rate can vary with macroeconomic conditions, asset-specific factors, and inflation. For Japan, we assumed low and stable long-term growth, which is a reasonable simplification. Future research should model time-varying growth expectations and consider how other drivers feed through to cap rates.

Simplified risk premium function: We proposed an exponential function for the risk premium as a function of rf. This was a theoretical construct to illustrate variable sensitivity. For researchers with sufficient historical data on cap rates and bond yields, it would be worthwhile fitting a nonlinear model to determine if indeed an exponential (or other functional form) describes Japan’s spread behaviour.

No explicit role for credit conditions: Credit availability and market liquidity can influence cap rates, and we did not include them in the model. In Japan, lending attitudes among major city banks and regional banks can potentially affect pricing. If banks tighten credit because of regulatory guidance or market stress, investors may demand higher cap rates regardless of Bank of Japan policy, since both the cost of capital and refinancing risk rise. If policy changes are paired with measures that keep credit flowing, for example through BoJ liquidity facilities, cap rates can remain lower than fundamentals based on rates alone would suggest.

Behavioural factors: Our model treats investors as largely homogeneous and fully rational. In practice, behavioural biases matter. One common bias is anchoring to nominal yield levels. For instance, Japanese investors may view a 3% cap rate as the norm and adjust only slowly when conditions change. Herding can also play a role. If large players such as J-REITs keep transacting at low cap rates, others may follow, which sustains pricing. These effects are difficult to measure.

 

1-Gordon Growth Model

Where

  • P0 = current stock price
  • D1 = dividend expected to be paid in the next period
  • r = required rate of return
  • g = dividend’s constant growth rate