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M&G Real Estate Buys 16 Santander Branches For €56.2M

25 May 2017 – El Economista

The fund manager M&G Real Estate has signed another deal in Spain, this time to become Banco Santander’s new landlord. Specifically, the firm has just signed an agreement with the Socimi Uro Property to acquire 16 of the financial institution’s branches for which it has paid €56.2 million.

The operation, which was closed at a premium with respect to the most recent valuation of the transferred portfolio, also includes the granting of a call option over another branch, which may be executed in the short term.

According to the Socimi, which owns approximately one-third of Banco Santander’s branches, the portfolio that M&G has purchased generates annual rental income of €3.04 million and comprises seven branches from the so-called Blue portfolio and nine from the Green portfolio.

The classification of the branches into these portfolios reflects the maturity dates of the corresponding rental contracts. Thus, in the first case (Blue portfolio), the lease contracts are due to terminate in 2045, 2046 and 2047, and may be extended for another seven years. In the case of the assets included in the Green portfolio, the lease contracts are due to mature between 2036 and 2038.

These terms of 30 and 20 years, respectively, match the British manager’s investment strategy, given that it seeks safe, long-term operations. In this way, the firm’s first operation in Spain was closed in 2015, when it acquired Telefónica’s former headquarters in Madrid, located in the heart of the city on Calle Ríos Rosas. It paid €175 million for that property, which is now the headquarters of WPP.

Following the sale, Uro will continue to own a portfolio of bank branches whose approximate value amounts to €1,893 million. When the Socimi debuted on the stock market, in March 2015, it managed 1,136 Santander branches, nevertheless, in April 2015, it sold a portfolio of 381 branches to Axa Real Estate for €308 million, leaving 755 branches, which cover a surface area of more than 340,000 m2.

Original story: El Economista (by Alba Brualla and Javier Mesones)

Translation: Carmel Drake