New Delhi: Institutional investments in Indian real estate rose 70 per cent year-on-year to USD 2.9 billion in the second quarter of calendar year 2026 (Q2 CY2026), driven by strong domestic and foreign investor participation, with Chennai and Bengaluru contributing around 27 per cent of inflows, according to a report by Colliers.The report said domestic investments more than doubled to USD 1.33 billion during the quarter, accounting for 46 per cent of the total inflows. Foreign investments stood at USD 1.54 billion, contributing 54 per cent of the total despite global trade and capital deployment uncertainties arising from the West Asia crisis. The inflows were supported by select large transactions.According to the report, Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (ADIA) recorded the largest deal of the quarter by investing USD 675 million in Kotak Alternate Asset Managers' mixed-use assets across multiple cities.Read More: Max Estates Q1 sales bookings jump five-fold to Rs 1,100 cr on strong housing demandCanada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB) followed with a USD 440 million investment in CtrlS in the alternatives segment.The report said capital inflows into Indian real estate touched a six-year high during the first half of 2026, supported by rising confidence among domestic investors, continued foreign capital deployment and increased investments in alternative and mixed-use assets.It added that institutional investors continue to remain positive on India's long-term growth prospects, with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) recently raising its GDP growth forecast for FY2027 by 10 basis points to 6.5 per cent.City-wise, Chennai and Bengaluru together attracted about USD 1.2 billion in investments during January-June 2026, accounting for around 27 per cent of the total inflows. The office segment dominated investments in both cities, with a share of around 85-95 per cent.Read More: Retail leasing jumps 18% YoY in Q2 despite supply crunch: Cushman & WakefieldThe report also noted increased capital deployment in Tier II and III cities, particularly in the hospitality, industrial and warehousing, and residential segments. Cities such as Coorg, Hosur, Coimbatore, Kochi and Ujjain witnessed significant investments during the first half of 2026.Overall, the office segment remained the largest investment destination, attracting around USD 1.9 billion and accounting for more than 40 per cent of total inflows during H1 CY2026.However, investments in the residential segment declined 43 per cent year-on-year to USD 0.5 billion during January-June 2026, the report said.