Globalization of REIT investment strategies and the resulting talent gaps
Real estate investment trusts (REITs) are undergoing a significant shift as global investment strategies become more prominent. Institutional capital is increasingly crossing borders, and REITs are expanding into new regions and asset classes. This globalization is creating acute talent gaps across legal, finance, and investor relations functions as organizations adapt to more complex international operating environments.
A global shift in capital allocation
Recent global investor outlooks show a meaningful transition toward diversified, cross-border real estate strategies. Europe and Asia Pacific are capturing a growing share of capital, and nearly 30% of global fundraising now comes from multiregional strategies. This reflects increasing investor selectivity and a stronger emphasis on diversification and active investment approaches.
For REITs, this means navigating new regulatory frameworks, understanding multiple market dynamics, and communicating with a broader investor base. As investors channel more funds into industrial, multifamily, data center, and retail assets globally, REITs must build internal capabilities that can support global deal execution, compliance, and analysis. These shifts place considerable pressure on internal teams as talent needs to rapidly evolve.
Legal complexity demands new skill sets
Legal teams face some of the steepest challenges in responding to REIT globalization. As organizations enter new geographic markets, they must contend with varying regulatory systems governing securities, taxation, property law, ESG disclosure, and corporate governance.
Investors are shifting toward more direct and active strategies, such as separate accounts and property-owning operating businesses, introducing additional layers of regulatory oversight and structural complexity that legal teams must manage.
As a result, REITs increasingly require legal professionals with:
- Multijurisdictional regulatory experience
- Expertise in cross border M&A, joint ventures, and fund structures
- Familiarity with regional REIT codes, especially across Europe and Asia
- Strong understanding of evolving ESG regulatory frameworks
The shortage of lawyers with deep cross border real estate and capital market experience has become one of the most pressing talent gaps for internationally expanding REITs.
Finance teams face new analytical and operational demands
As global diversification accelerates, finance teams must build the capability to analyze and manage assets across multiple regions, each with its own valuation norms, tax regimes, and economic cycles. Industrial, multifamily, and retail assets remain resilient across several global regions, while data centers continue to see strong capital inflows. Offices are also rebounding in some markets due to return to office trends.
These dynamics require finance professionals who can:
- Perform cross border financial modeling incorporating currency impacts and varying interstate environments
- Interpret diverse valuation methodologies and cap rate expectations
- Manage global capital flows and fund structures
- Conduct risk adjusted return analyses across markets
The challenge is that talent with strong financial skills and international real estate experience is limited, creating a mismatch between demand and available expertise.
Investor relations must communicate across markets and cultures
The globalization of REIT strategies also raises expectations for investor relations (IR) functions. Institutional capital is reentering markets, and investor confidence is improving, but investors are more discerning, with increasing interest in diversified global opportunities. IR professionals must communicate more nuanced stories that reflect geographic strategies, local market conditions, and global competitive positioning.
Modern IR teams need to be able to:
- Explain complex international strategies clearly and confidently
- Address local and regional investor concerns
- Develop relationships across multiple time zones and cultural contexts
- Demonstrate expertise in global economic trends and sector specific performance
The result is a growing shortage of IR leaders who combine financial acumen, communication expertise, and cross-cultural fluency.
The resulting talent gaps
The shift toward global strategies has created three structural talent gaps:
1. Legal professionals with international regulatory expertise
Global M&A, cross border compliance, ESG requirements, and complex deal structures require highly specialized legal talent that is in short supply.
2. Finance professionals capable of global modeling and valuation
Few analysts possess experience across multiple geographies, making global portfolio analysis difficult to scale.
3. Investor relations leaders with global communication skills
IR teams must operate across continents and markets, but professionals with both technical and cross-cultural capabilities are limited.
What REITs must do next
To respond to these talent challenges, REITs can consider several strategic actions:
- Upskilling current teams to build international competencies
- Recruiting from adjacent globalized sectors like private equity or infrastructure
- Training teams in ESG trends, regulatory developments, and global valuation practices
- Building geographically diverse teams that mirror their own investment footprints
As REITs continue expanding internationally, addressing these talent gaps will be essential. Organizations that invest in global legal, financial, and IR expertise will be best positioned to thrive in a real estate landscape that is increasingly international, competitive, and complex.
