Investment Approach

Institutional real estate investment Dubai

How Corestone evaluates capital before committing it.

Corestone does not begin with product. We begin with the role a position should play in a portfolio, then test the asset against risk, income, appreciation, liquidity, and exit.

Every opportunity must explain why it deserves capital, how downside is protected, and what a rational buyer would see when it is time to exit.

Discipline is not a constraint; it is the edge.

The market often rewards speed, but private capital needs sequence. Before specific opportunities are discussed, Corestone clarifies mandate, horizon, risk tolerance, market fit, and the evidence required to support a decision.

The framework is deliberately simple: if an asset cannot be understood through downside, yield, appreciation, liquidity, exit, and portfolio role, it is not ready for serious capital.

Structure before persuasion.
Evaluation framework

Six questions, asked in order.

The same analytical sequence is applied across residential, commercial, development, plot, and whole-building opportunities.

01

Downside Protection

What can impair capital, and what protects it: location, entry price, structure, counterparty, legal documentation, and market depth?

02

Yield Strategy

Is income defensive, contractual, growing, or speculative? We separate durable yield from projected yield before comparing returns.

03

Capital Appreciation

What creates value: scarcity, repositioning, rental growth, infrastructure, asset management, or broader market repricing?

04

Liquidity

Who is the natural buyer later, how deep is that pool, and how would liquidity change across market cycles?

05

Exit Logic

What are the credible exit routes, decision points, constraints, and timing assumptions before the investment is made?

06

Portfolio Positioning

Does the asset serve preservation, income, appreciation, diversification, strategic access, or a defined combination of those roles?

Stone and glass architectural detail used as a visual metaphor for Corestone's disciplined investment analysis
Analytical lens
Market

Read the structural context.

Supply, demand, capital flows, tenant depth, regulation, and macro direction define whether the market supports the thesis.

Asset

Define the role of quality.

Product quality, location, scarcity, operational control, and physical durability decide whether an asset can defend its position.

Structure

Align protection and upside.

Entry terms, partner alignment, documentation, payment schedule, and governance shape the real risk before performance begins.

Exit

Underwrite the next owner.

A position is only complete when the future buyer, liquidity path, and holding logic are visible from the beginning.

From thesis to access

Opportunity access follows qualification.

Corestone keeps specific assets private until investor fit, eligibility, and mandate logic are understood. This protects both the investor and the integrity of each opportunity.

Apply for Private Access
01 Mandate

Investor profile, market interest, check range, and horizon.

02 Thesis

Market logic, portfolio role, and risk preference.

03 Diligence

Asset context, downside, documentation, and permitted evidence.

04 Access

Relevant opportunities only where structure and mandate align.