INREV Business Plan 2020 - 2022
Last updated on 15 Jan 2020
Last updated on 15 Jan 2020
Last updated on 03 Apr 2020
Renaud Breyer, Partner at EY and Constantin Sorlescu, Director Professional Standards at INREV provide insights into current market practices in investor reporting and discuss the main findings of the Trends in Investor Reporting Study 2019.
Note: due to technical difficulties full recording is not available.
Last updated on 23 Dec 2021
Richard Buytendijk, Senior Research and Analytics Manager at INREV, together with Herman Kok, Head of Research at Meyer Bergman, and Karen Martinus, Global Research Associate at USAA discuss investors changing real estate allocations, which non-listed vehicles they intend to invest in and how fund managers will respond to that demand.
Last updated on 13 Jan 2020
Last updated on 02 Nov 2022
Download EIOPA consultation paper on the opinion of the 2020 review of Solvency II.
Last updated on 14 Jan 2020
Trends in Investor Reporting aims to provide insight into current market practices in investor reporting across non-listed real estate vehicles investing in Europe, and specifically the extent to which reporting complies with the requirements and recommendations of the INREV Guidelines.
Last updated on 13 Dec 2023
Brenna O'Roarty, Executive Director at RHL Strategic Solutions and Maarten Jennen, Senior Director - Strategist Private Real Estate at PGGM, discuss the The Coming of Age: the rebirth and renewal of the non-listed real estate industry 2019 paper.
Note: due to technical difficulties full recording is not available.
Last updated on 03 Dec 2019
This paper summarises the main accounting NAV differences across regional industry practices and looks at whether the development of a global NAV would facilitate strategic decision-making for global investors.
Last updated on 02 Nov 2022
On 2 December, INREV filed its response to the OECD’s Global Base Erosion proposal – Pillar Two. The proposal had important implications for real estate fund structures that INREV highlighted.
Last updated on 02 Jun 2020
A report released in 2019 by Urban Land Institute and Heitman details the potential risks and implications of climate change on the real estate sector. Furthermore, the report makes a call to investors and investment managers to come into action and work towards better solutions in the future, for which the report presents a number of thinking paths.
Firstly, the report aims to give property investors a better understanding of climate risk and its real estate investment implications. As such, types of climate risk and their potential impact on real estate are explained.
Secondly, the research addresses the state of current practice for assessing and mitigating climate risk in real estate as well as highlighting best practices across the industry. From the examples it becomes clear that, nowadays, climate risk insurance is used as the main protection for asset value.
Finally, it is acknowledged that climate risk insurance alone is insufficient to mitigate the risk of devaluation in the future. As such, investors and investment managers need to find effective solutions. The report touches upon a number of potential solutions:
Summarised by Barbara Maltha-Koppelman, ESG Committee member