Gulf Capital Eyes US Real Estate Rebound as Local Yields Cool
Gulf Cooperation Council institutional investment in American property has plummeted to a tenth of its 2015 peak, but a tightening gap between domestic and foreign returns is signaling a potential revival. As UAE real estate yields moderate toward 10%, major Gulf allocators are recalibrating their strategy toward direct US market exposure.

A joint analysis from RCLCO Fund Advisors and Soling Partners suggests that the era of passive, pooled fund subscriptions is fading in favor of bespoke investment structures. With UAE domestic annual returns slipping from 18% to 9.8%, the relative appeal of US assets is sharpening. Analysts project between $15 billion and $20 billion in GCC capital could flow into American real estate through 2027, provided investors can secure the direct control they now demand.
This capital shift is heavily concentrated in residential sectors, specifically multifamily and single-family rentals. These assets meet the Gulf preference for long-duration, income-generating investments denominated in US dollars. Soling Partners’ Richard Banks notes that institutional appetite remains high, though managers must abandon traditional fund models to accommodate demands for asset-level transparency and liquidity control. RCLCO CEO Taylor Mammen adds that the underlying demographic trends, particularly the acceleration of renter household growth, align closely with these specific investment mandates.
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