The market value of branded residential projects in Asia reached $26.6 billion across 68,000 units, according to C9 Hotelworks, marking the sector's transition from hotel-adjacent amenity play to standalone real estate asset class. The figure represents inventory already built or under construction, not pipeline speculation.
C9's count includes traditional hospitality operators—Four Seasons, Aman, Rosewood—alongside a newer cohort: Bulgari, Armani, and Fendi, none of which operated hotels in Asia before launching residence projects. The shift matters because fashion houses bring different economics than hotel groups. They license brand equity without operational obligations, collecting front-end premiums rather than recurring management fees. Perennial Holdings sold the first Aman-branded unit at Singapore's The Skywaters for $6,501 per square foot in recent weeks, 22% above the previous luxury residential record in the city. The Aman Group completed its first standalone residence tower in Tokyo's Azabudai Hills in November 2023, occupying eleven floors with no hotel component below. Buyers paid land-equivalent premiums for Aman's name on the deed.
The $26.6 billion figure understates velocity. It counts completed stock, not the 47 new projects C9 tracked entering predevelopment across Manila, Bangkok, Jakarta, and secondary Chinese cities in the past eighteen months. Family offices and sovereign wealth funds are modeling these as brand-arbitrage trades: acquire development sites in markets with weak luxury retail, attach a European heritage name, and extract 18-28% price premiums versus unbranded towers next door. The math works until it saturates. Singapore now has fourteen branded residence projects live or selling, in a market of six million people. Tokyo has nine. The question is not whether the category works—it does—but how many Armani addresses a city can clear before the brand stops pulling premiums.
Operators and allocators should watch three developments over the next six to nine months. First, how many of the 47 pipeline projects actually break ground versus stalling in presale. Developers are testing whether brand premiums hold in softer markets; abandoned projects will signal valuation compression. Second, resale velocity on early-vintage branded units. Tokyo's Aman Residences will start trading secondhand by late 2025; if resale prices hold acquisition premiums, the asset class gains liquidity credibility. Third, whether any fashion house pulls its name from a failed project. Brands have termination clauses if presales miss thresholds. The first public termination will reprice risk across the category.
C9 Hotelworks is scheduling its next Asia-Pacific branded residence inventory update for Q2 2025, with preliminary pipeline counts suggesting the sector will add another $8-12 billion in market value by year-end if current projects proceed.