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JONES LANG LASALLE HOTELS - DOCUMENTS |
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Hotel Intelligence Japan 2011 | Jones Lan Lasalle Hotels "Hotel Intelligence Japan 2011" is the annual update of the Japan tourism and hotel trading and focuses on Japan and the three key markets of Tokyo, Osaka, and Okinawa. Now in its 8 year, Hotel Intelligence Japan is part of Jones Lang LaSalle Hotels' annual global country market overviews. This report has been prepared based on the statistics prior to the recent 11 March 2011 earthquake and tsunami events in Japan and as such does not take into account the impact of these events.

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FocusOn | Japan's Hotel Market After The Quake With increasing interest from investors and hotel operators on Japan post the recent earthquake event, “FocusOn: Japan’s Hotel Market After The Quake” examines the impact of the March earthquake on the country’s hotel market and the likely impact on both the hotel trading and investment markets.

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Jones Lang LaSalle Hotels | Hotel Investment Outlook 2010 2010 forecast: looking up | Far harsher than most investors anticipated, 2009 was the year of a new reality. As debt markets remained illiquid and many investors retreated to the sidelines, global hotel transaction volumes sunk to the lowest annual transaction level of the decade. Down a further 64% from 2008, the $9.4 billion in global hotel sales in 2009 likely marks the bottom of the cycle.

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Lower Manhattan Five Years Later: The Impact Of September 11 A new report released by Jones Lang LaSalle demonstrates that five years after the events of Sept. 11, 2001, Lower Manhattan remains the financial capital of the world. A wide variety of data underscores the fact that Downtown New York has achieved a level of performance few expected even nine months ago. In fact, there are so many businesses looking for space in Lower Manhattan that the submarket may soon see its overall availability rate fall below 10 percent for the first time since the second quarter of 2001. There are four large leases, totaling 1.3 million square feet of Downtown office space, nearing completion. If these deals close as expected, Lower Manhattan's overall availability rate will decline to 10.3 percent, putting a single-digit overall availability rate within reach by the end of the year.

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2005 US Hotel Investment Highlights | Jones Lang LaSalle Hotels Jones Lang LaSalle Hotels reported that the transaction volume of hotels grew to more than $21 billion for the full year 2005, reaching a new all-time high, outpacing last year's record-breaking $12.9 billion by 63%. The company reports 218 U.S. hotel transactions with a value of more than $10 million, representing an average price per key of $146,400 in 2005. The figures were compiled from Jones Lang LaSalle Hotels' comprehensive database.

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Focus on Global Hotel Management Agreement Trends | Jones Lang LaSalle Hotels Welcome to Jones Lang LaSalle Hotels’ 2005 global review of recently negotiated hotel management agreements. This edition of FocusOn represents an update of the global survey conducted in 2001. The results presented here are based on an analysis of over 80 hotel management agreements negotiated over the past four years across Asia Pacific, Europe and the Americas.

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Digest Europe 2005 | Jones Lang LaSalle Hotels Welcome to the seventh edition of Jones Lang LaSalle Hotels’ Digest Europe publication, which assists owners, operators, investors and lenders in understanding the market dynamics and potential performance of the European hotel sector in the current environment. Following two years of generally declining hotel operating results in many European cities, the majority of the hotel markets recovered in 2004, with some sparkling room yield performances, including Düsseldorf (+27.5%) and Prague (+18.0%). However, markets, which suffered from oversupply such as Madrid, Barcelona and Warsaw, saw room yield decreases of up to 10%.

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Middle East Capital Flows And The Allure Of Real Estate | Jones Lang Lasalle Hotels Report by Anwar Elgonemy, Vice President, Jones Lang LaSalle Hotels. The continued popularity of real estate as an asset class should continue unabated. However, it remains to be seen if the tide of capital from the Middle East, traditionally from private direct investors and increasingly through the establishment of real estate funds, will continue to flow into overseas markets. Inexperienced buyers could push up prices locally so that more experienced groups would decide to look outside the region, increasing the outward flows of capital.

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