FT: Spain’s Construction Sector Rises From The Ashes

28 September 2017 – Financial Times

When Juan Velayos left his job at the accountancy firm PwC to become chief executive of Spanish housebuilder Neinor Homes two years ago, some people thought he was crazy.

Construction companies in Spain once built more residential homes every year than the rest of western Europe combined, fuelled by cheap debt. But a 35% slump in prices after the 2007 financial crisis left much of the sector bankrupt.

Spain still has half a million new unsold homes, many in surreal empty cities that have become monuments to a speculative property bubble that brought down the country’s banking sector and the wider economy.

“The markets at the time were sceptical about the opportunity [in Spanish house building],” says Mr Velayos. “They were sceptical about the momentum for residential. They were surprised we were buying land so aggressively.”

But Neinor, created by US private equity group Lone Star in 2014, has become a success story, one of the country’s first residential homebuilders able to rise out of the ashes of the ruined sector and build again.

Six months ago Neinor Homes became the first to float on the Madrid stock exchange, with Lone Star selling 60% of the company, which was valued at €1.3bn. Its share price has risen by 13% since then.

“We knew there was an opportunity because the Spanish economy was growing again and for nearly a decade there had been practically no new residential homes built,” says Mr Velayos.

Neinor served as a catalyst for the whole sector, with others entering the market. Companies such as Aedas, Vía Célere, Aelca and Metrovacesa are also building, giving the sector depth for investors.

“Residential construction activity in Spain is finally back,” says Adolfo Ramirez-Escudero, chief executive of the Spanish arm of real estate service firm CBRE. “The demand is there and companies are building again.”

Many of these companies are also now considering initial public offerings. Two people with knowledge of the deal say that Aedas is considering a listing this year. Aedas declined to comment.

This comes as the wider Spanish property market seems to have turned a corner. House prices fell by 35.2% from 2007 to 2015, according to property site Idealista, but are up by 3% this year and rose by 2% last year.

Analysts say this is set to continue as Spain’s economy continues to grow at about 3% a year — one of the strongest in the eurozone.

“The scarcity of new housing in some places and the impulse of demand, supported by employment growth, point to new price increases,” says Jorge Sicilia, the chief economist of BBVA, the Spanish banking group.

Investment into Spain’s property market has come in stages, starting with international funds run by Goldman Sachs, Cerberus Capital Management and Blackstone, which bought bad loans and apartment portfolios as early as 2013.

This was followed by the creation of real estate investment trusts — known in Spain as Socimi — which shortly afterwards started looking at the commercial property and rental markets.

Four big Spanish Socimis — Axiare, Merlin Properties, Hispania and Lar España — are already up and running. Combined profits for the four groups in the first quarter of 2017 were up 50% from the same period last year.

But the return of the residential building sector on top of commercial suggests that the market is maturing and returning to normal after a decade of crisis that saw big players such as Reyal Urbis and Martinsa Fadesa file for bankruptcy.

“In commercial and residential property, everyone has the same thesis,” says Fernando Ramirez, head of investor relations at Merlin. “Spain is recovering and property is still cheap.”

The return of Spanish construction is good for the wider Spanish economy, particularly job creation. The construction sector once employed more than 2.5m people, compared with just 1m after the crash.

A rise in house prices is also positive for the banking sector, which has benefited from the influx of institutional money that has pushed up the prices of their portfolios of distressed property assets and provided a market to sell.

However, the story is not all positive.

Spain’s biggest listed construction groups such as ACS or Ferrovial are unlikely to benefit from higher property prices, as they are focused on large infrastructure projects, which are still in short supply as the government holds back on spending.

The recovery is also concentrated in big cities such as Madrid, Barcelona and Valencia, as well as the tourist hotspots such as Málaga and the Balearic Islands. In much of more rural Spain, the recovery has not happened.

This is partly due to the overhang of half a million unsold new houses in parts of Spain. “In Madrid and Barcelona, there is nowhere near enough houses and demand is outstripping supply,” says Fernando Encinar, the chief executive of Idealista.

“If you drive 40km from Madrid through to Valdeluz there are still thousands of empty properties and that market is a long way from recovering,” he says.

Mr Velayos adds that while the market is coming back, the country is a long way from the pre-financial crisis boom — adding that the frothy exuberance of those years is unlikely to return.

In effect, the market is developing on a different model from before the financial crisis, with building financed by equity rather than debt. “The days where the builder and the buyer were both 100% debt financed are long gone,” he says.

Original story: Financial Times

Apollo, Bain & Oaktree Compete To Acquire Habitat

25 September 2017 – El Confidencial

A new large real estate operation is on the horizon. The process to sell Habitat Inmobiliaria has entered the home stretch, after the Catalan company selected a shortlist of three candidates to submit their bids.

The three finalists are the international funds Apollo, Bain and Oaktree, whose binding offers are expected to be received by the beginning of October, according to several sources familiar with the operation. The bids are expected to amount to between €200 million – €250 million and the intention is to announce the winner before the end of the year.

Habitat is the heir of the former Ferrovial Inmobiliaria, the subsidiary that the Del Pino family’s group sold to the Catalan property developer, controlled at the time by Bruno Figueras, for €2,200 million at the end of 2006. That deal was signed just before the outbreak of the crisis and it converted the Catalan company into the fifth largest property developer in the country. Nevertheless, that glory was short-lived.

Just two years after that Pharaonic purchase, Habitat filed for the fourth largest creditor bankruptcy in history, by declaring itself in ‘suspension of payments’ with debt amounting to €2,800 million, exceeded only by Abengoa, Martinsa-Fadesa and Reyal-Urbis.

From there, it began a titanic fight to survive, which included a preliminary agreement in the spring of 2010, which saw it emerge from bankruptcy and then, a modification to that agreement, five years later, which gave control of the company to its creditor funds.

In 2015, firms such as Capstone, Goldman Sachs, Bank of America, Värde and Marathon acquired 70% of the company’s capital, by converting the bulk of its debt into shares, and they ordered a return to house construction, to take advantage of the recovery in the sector.

Moreover, those firms continued as the group’s main financiers, with a participation loan of €70 million and another senior loan of €80 million, they took over the management, and they gradually sidelined Bruno Figueras; he currently holds the role of Vice-President.

At the time, the company analysed the option of organising a sales process, but that never ended up happening. The same idea was revived during the first half of this year when Habitat engaged Irea to organise a sale, merger or the entry of a new shareholder into the company.

After almost 11 years (since the purchase of Ferrovial Inmobiliaria), the Catalan property developer is barely a shadow of its former self, but it still holds a juicy portfolio of buildable land – currently, the most sought-after asset by international funds – concentrated in Madrid, Cataluña, Andalucía and Valencia, plus the company also has a presence in Aragón, Portugal and Hungary.

The three finalists in the bid for Habitat have competed in the past for some of the most important real estate operations of recent times, such as the purchase of Vía Célere by Värde, which Bain analysed, and the acquisition of the €30,000 million in real estate assets from Santander-Popular by Blackstone, which Apollo bid for.

Whoever ends up taking control of Habitat will have the perfect platform to create its own group and to start to compete with other investment giants who have already trodden this path, such as Lone Star, the owner of Neinor Homes; Castlelake, owner of Aedas; and Värde, the primary shareholder of Vía Célere and Aelca.

Original story: El Confidencial (by Ruth Ugalde)

Translation: Carmel Drake

Who Is Leading The New Generation Of Property Developers?

7 September 2017 – Expansión

The real estate sector wants to leave behind its shady image and to that end, has committed itself to a more professional style of management going forward. In this sense, the new generation of property developers, controlled by investment funds and banks, are combining the experience of professionals with extensive local knowledge and the financial vision of the providers of capital.

One of the property developers with the most ambitious forecasts is Metrovacesa, which, following a non-monetary capital increase in July, now owns assets worth more than €2,600 million and a portfolio of land spanning more than 6 million m2, ready for the construction of more than 40,000 homes. To lead the project, the real estate company, which is controlled by Santander and BBVA, has recruited Jorge Pérez de Leza (pictured above), who worked for 12 years as the CEO at Grupo Lar.

Neinor, which is controlled by Lone Star, was the first company to try its luck on the stock market, when it debuts on the main exchange in March. The firm is led by Juan Velayos, who was responsible for founding the Real Estate team at PwC and who has led the property developer since the end of 2014.

Värde has placed its trust in the founder of its property developers to lead the project into this new phase. In this way, Juan Antonio Gómez-Pintado – a stalwart of the sector – is captaining Vía Célere, whilst the management team of Aelca comprises Javier Gómez and José Juan Martín Montes.

Meanwhile, Castlelake has chosen David Martínez to lead Aedas. He was responsible for the Cuatro Torres and Valdebebas urban planning projects, amongst others.

Others

Besides these real estate companies, there are several others that survived the crisis, such as Quabit, led and controlled by Félix Abánades, and Realia, owned by the Mexican magnate Carlos Slim, who has put one of his most trusted men, Gerardo Kuri Faufmann, at the helm of that company.

Original story: Expansión (by Rebeca Arroyo)

Translation: Carmel Drake

Ranking of the 20 Developers With the Largest Pipelines for Delivery over the Next Three Years

 

22 July 2017

The reawakening of the residential housing sector in Spain has brought with it a large group of developers that promise to build thousands of homes in the next three years. It is sometimes difficult to discover details, to find out which developer is behind each new project.

This analysis lists what the Spanish Coordinating Institute for Governance and Applied Economics, an independent research centre, has identified as the top 20 of the country’s largest real estate companies, ranked by the number of homes they will develop by 2020.

At the top of the list is Metrovacesa, a developer controlled by Santander, BBVA and Banco Popular, which in the next three years will bring 12,600 homes to the market and, considering Neinor, Aedas, Via Célere, Corp and Pryconsa, is the only company that already owns in its portfolio all the land needed to build the new homes.

In addition, the company headed by Jorge Pérez de Leza, controlled by three Spanish banking groups, is a break from the leadership of large international funds, which are behind the bulk of the companies that make up the top 20, and which are negotiating with local companies to purchase land together to meet their housing development projections.

To reach the tally of 80,000 houses in these companies’ development plans, the institute counted both current developments and those that can be developed in accordance with the available land and projected purchases of new land. The institute’s studies drew upon various sectoral sources.

Neinor Homes (Lone Star), expects to deliver 10,250 homes; Aedas Homes (Castlelake), 9,850; Via Célere (Värde), 6,200; and AELCA (Värde) forecasts 5,750 residential dwellings, complete the top five positions in a ranking where only two companies linked to the large listed construction groups appear: Acciona Real Estate with 4,500 dwellings and Realia (FCC) with 1,650.

Another company stands apart is the Catalan Corp, which is the only member of the ranking with no national presence and that focuses all its interests in its autonomous community, where it plans to develop 3,000 homes.

Among the new phenomena of the real estate development sector that stand out, in addition to the hegemony of large funds, is the family structure of many of the Spanish developers (Amenabar, Quabit, Pryconsa, Lar, Ibosa…); bank’s greater requirements for granting mortgage financing to local investors, with requirements such as down payments of more than 50%; and a focus on the customer.

An increase is expected in the number of developers that will be listed on the stock market, where in the short term there will be between eight and ten companies

“It is clear that the Spanish real estate development sector has learned from the crisis and now operates with completely different criteria. A key factor is a focus on the client, which for the first time in a long time has become an essential part of the real estate business. Developers who know how to connect with what the customer needs will be assured of survival in the market, and whoever does not will disappear, “says Jesus Sánchez Lambás, executive vice president of the Institute.

Among those that will survive, many will do so by listing on the stock market, where Neinor and Quabit can already found.  Aedas, Via Célere and Metrovacesa are expected to join them in the short term. Even more should soon join them in the near future. The institute forecasts that eight to ten companies should be listed on the stock market in the short term.

Original Story: El Confidencial – R. Ugalde

Translation: Richard Turner

The Coordenadas Institute Ranks Spain’s Top 20 Property Developers

24 July 2017 – El Confidencial

The awakening of the residential sector in Spain has brought with it a large number of property developers, who are promising to construct thousands of homes over the next three years. The problem is in the detail, understanding who is going to promote each one of those homes.

That analysis is what the Coordenadas Institute of Governance and Applied Economics, an independent study centre, has just developed. It has identified the Top 20 largest companies in the country, ranked according to the number of homes that they are planning to construct between now and 2020.

At the top of the list is Metrovacesa, the property developer controlled by Santander, BBVA and Banco Popular, which is planning to bring 12,600 homes onto the market over the next three years and which, together with Neinor, Aedas, Vía Célere, Corp and Pryconsa are the only ones that already own all of the land they need to build these homes.

Moreover, the company led by Jorge Pérez de Leza and controlled by three Spanish entities, breaks the leadership ranks of the large international funds, which are behind the bulk of the companies that comprise this Top 20 and are already negotiating with local companies to tackle the purchase of land to allow them to achieve the current housing forecasts.

In order to complete the 80,000 homes that these companies plan to develop together, the Coordenadas Institute has taken into account both developments in progress, as well as those that may be developed on the available land and forecast new land purchases, which have been extracted from various sectoral sources.

Neinor Homes (Lone Star), with 10,250 homes; Aedas Homes (Castlelake), with 9,850; Vía Célere (Värde), with 6,200; and Aelca (Värde) with 5,750 homes, complete the first five positions in the ranking which contains just two companies linked to the large listed construction groups: Acciona Inmobiliaria, with 4,500 homes; and Realia (FCC) with 1,650.

Another company with a differential sign is the Catalan firm Corp, since it is the only member of the ranking that does not have a national presence, rather it focuses all of its efforts on its own autonomous region, where it plans to construct 3,000 homes.

Some of the main innovations in this new property developer sector, besides the hegemony of the large funds, are: the family structure of the bulk of the domestic property developers (Amenábar, Quabit, Pryconsa, Lar, Ibosa…); the greater demands on the banks to grant mortgage financing to local investors, with requirements such as having pre-sales of more than 50%; and the focus on the client.

“It is clear that the Spanish property development sector has learned some important lessons from the crisis and now operates with completely different criteria. A key factor is the focus on the client, which for the first time in a long time has become an essential piece of the real estate business. Property developers that know how to connect with what the client needs are going to be assured survival in the market; those who don’t know, will disappear”, said Jesús Sánchez Lambás, Executive Vice-President of the Coordenadas Institute.

Of those that survive, many will do so by making the leap onto the stock market, where Neinor and Quabit are already listed; they will soon be joined by Aedas, Vía Célere and Metrovacesa. Nevertheless, many more will follow in their footsteps, given that the institute forecasts that between eight and ten companies will be listed on the stock market within the short term.

Original story: El Confidencial (by Ruth Ugalde)

Translation: Carmel Drake

Vía Célere Boosts Its Land Portfolio Ahead Of Stock Market Debut

18 July 2017 – Expansión

The property developer Vía Célere is advancing with its growth plans ahead of its stock market debut. The Madrilenian real estate company was acquired in February by six funds led by Värde Partners, which owns 51% of its share capital. Following the operation, for which they disbursed €90 million, the company has been working on increasing its size and will debut on the stock market at the beginning of 2018, with a market capitalisation of more than €1,000 million.

The first step in this process was the integration of DosPuntos, the real estate company that Värde and its partners (the funds Attestor and Marathon, as the second and third largest shareholders, respectively, as well as Barclays and Bank of America) had created from the former subsidiary of San José (Parquesol). The operation saw the incorporation of 800,000 m2 of land into Vía Célere’s portfolio (meaning that the firm will be able to build around 7,000 extra homes).

Having closed that merger in record time (less than a month) Vía Célere, led by its former owner and CEO, Juan Antonio Gómez Pintado, has since launched several land purchase operations with the aim of increasing its real estate portfolio.

New portfolio

In total, Vía Célere has invested almost €100 million in nine plots of land through three operations. The land, located in several different provinces, will allow the property developer to increase its buildability by 212,016 m2 and construct 1,907 new homes (…).

Following the contribution of funds from the new shareholders, Vía Célere set itself the goal of investing between €200 million and €250 million per year between now and 2023 in order to maintain a construction rate of around 3,000 homes per year. This year, it plans to start building around 1,800 units: “Our intention is to continue identifying new opportunities and to expand our portfolio of land and projects over the next few months”.

Before these purchases, the property developer’s real estate portfolio contained land covering 1 million m2, making it one of the largest land owners in the country, exceeded only by Metrovacesa, which, following the contribution of €1,108 million from its shareholder banks, now owns land spanning 6 million m2; Neinor Homes, which, following investment of €147 million this year now owns 1.2 million m2 of land on which to build homes; Aedas, the property developer backed by Castlelake, which owns 1.35 million m2 of land.

In total, Vía Célere’s assets are worth €704 million and it currently has 10,054 homes in progress or under construction. Before the integration with DosPuntos, the property developer recorded revenues of €75.4 million in its most recent full year.

Stock market

The property developer led by Värde Partners plans to debut on the stock market next year. In this way, Vía Célere will follow in the footsteps of Neinor Homes, the first real estate developer to debut on the stock market in almost a decade, with a value of €1,340 million. The market capitalisation of that firm currently amounts to around €1,498 million.

Aedas, the company backed by the fund Castlelake, is another of the property developers that has set its sights on the stock market; it plans to make its debut before the end of the year.

Meanwhile, the new Metrovacesa, led by Santander and BBVA, has already met with several investment banks to manage its return to the stock market, which it exited in 2013 after 72 years of trading (….).

Original story: Expansión (by Rocío Ruiz)

Translation: Carmel Drake

Large Funds Are Reactivating The Market For Land

22 June 2017 – Expansión

The momentum in the residential housing segment is also being reflected in the demand for land on which to build homes. The funds, which were responsible for the first land acquisitions in Spain in 2013, have strengthened their positions in recent years and become one of the main players in this market, even though for the time being, their commitment focuses on buildable land, with the aim of limiting their exposure and avoiding political and structural risks.

According to a report by the consultancy firm CBRE, the number of operations involving the sale of land by companies rose by 13% last year.

In this sense, traditional players such as Realia, Acciona and Metrovacesa Suelo y Promociones, were joined by a new wave of property developers, owned by large funds, such as Neinor Homes (controlled by Lone Star), Aedas (Castlelake) and Vía Célere and Aelca (both controlled by Värde).

Debuts on the stock market

In order to purchase land, these companies are resorting to alternative formulas besides bank credit, such as joint ventures with corporate contributions or searching for new capital in the market through debuts on the stock market.

In this way, Neinor Homes, which debuted on the stock exchange in March, will be joined over the next few months by Aedas, Vía Célere, Testa – a vehicle in which Santander, BBVA and Merlin all hold stakes – and the new Socimi owned by Renta Corporación and the Dutch fund APG, plus the vehicle being prepared for launch by Sareb.

The search for alternative financial resources to bank credit has led to a decrease in the number of mortgages granted to buy land, which fell from 55,000 in 2006 to 6,700 in 2016. That means that just 39% of the urban land transactions completed last year were financed through mortgages.

In addition to the property developers, the other major landowners include the financial institutions and Sareb. Specifically, the banks owned a portfolio of land worth €31,500 million at the end of 2016, whilst the volume of land owned by Sareb amounted to €4,200 million.

In the case of the banks and Sareb, most of their portfolios comprise assets that are under development, which is unlike the case of the new property developers.

Forecasts

According to forecasts, demand for buildable land will continue to rise over the next few months, above all in those regions where there is greater activity in the construction sector.

According to CBRE’s analysts, over the medium term, the dynamics of the land market are going to depend to a large extent on the speed with which the banks and Sareb are able to manage their asset portfolios.

In terms of prices, the higher demand in certain local markets has led to a recovery due to the scarcity of buildable land and the expectations regarding demand for housing. Nevertheless, at the national level, no significant effect on prices is expected, given that the volume of supply is still relatively large.

Moreover, the report says that the recent regulation of real estate assets on the balance sheet of banks may lead to the release onto the market of a significant volume of products over the coming months, which could soften any price tensions.

Original story: Expansión (by Rebeca Arroyo)

Translation: Carmel Drake

Spain’s RE Sector Gets Ready For A Wave Of Mergers & Sales

5 June 2017 – El Confidencial

(…). The race has begun to become the largest real estate company in Spain and Merlin is leading the ranking with a clear advantage over the second-placed contender, Colonial. Its purchase of Testa, for €1,800 million, and the subsequent merger of the Socimi led by Ismael Clemente with Metrovacesa, accelerated a consolidation process that wasn’t expected to happen until this year (but which was instead closed in 2016).

That unchecked move by Merlin forced Colonial to play its own hand, which, in turn, revolutionised the entire second tier of Socimis, which saw the Catalan group aiming directly at them with its purchase of 15% of Axiare, an operation that Colonial justified as a financial investment, but which the whole market, including the affected company itself, interpreted as the first step in a larger operation.

To defend itself, the Socimi led by Luis López de Herrera-Oria decided to call in the classic army of investment bankers and lawyers, with whom it has started to analyse all available options, including the possibility of buying up more assets to grow in size and somewhat complicate a hostile operation by Colonial. It is even entertaining entering into another type of corporate deal with a new, trustworthy, high-profile investor.

And it is here that the market has now started to place its bets, aware that the process of concentration amongst the players has started. “An agreement with Hispania, for example, would be a game changer. As would the acquisition of a significant logistics portfolio, because that would be a type of asset that would discourage Colonial from proceeding. Axiare could also consider acquiring one of the Socimis on the MAB created by funds that have already completed their investment cycle in Spain and that are interested in started to sell”, said sources at a corporate operations firm that asked to remain anonymous. (…).

“The catalysts that are defining the consolidation process are size and specialisation. There are going to be a lot of corporate operations, everyone is talking to everyone, but the basis on which moves are going to be made are: what type of Socimi does each vehicle want to be and their need to gain in size”, said Antonio Sánchez-Recio, Partner and Head of the Real Estate Sector at PwC. (…).

What’s more, in the midst of this consolidation process, the market is going to start to enjoy more freedom to sell assets. From now onwards, the three years that the Socimi framework stipulates that the vehicles must hold onto the assets for to safeguard their tax benefits, start to come to an end, and so, a torrent of asset rotations is expected to begin, which will also help each vehicle to specialise further in what it wants to be.

For example, at its recent Investor Day, Lar España Real Estate revealed that it plans to start to sell assets and, specifically, it is looking to put its logistics properties up for sale, as it wants to continue specialising in shopping centres.

Although the Socimis have been the ones to fire the starting gun on the concentration process, the M&A wave is going to affect the entire real estate sector, in other words, significant movements are also expected between property developers and servicers. (…).

Lone Star would have preferred to wait (…), but in the end decided to bring forward Neinor’s debut on the stock market to March 2017. Castlelake may well take a similar step with Aedas, the real estate company that it created from the ashes of Vallehermoso, as it shares with its competitor the fact that it has been able to buy up land during the hard years of the crisis.

“All of the real estate companies that have funds as their controlling shareholders, which invested during the period 2011 to 2013, as well as those that are owned by the banks, are the first in line to be sold, merged or listed on the stock market”, said Francisco López, Partner at Lift Global Value Fund.

Heriberto Teruel, National Director of Corporate Operations at CBRE, shares this view. He talks of the concentration process happening in three areas: “Firstly, we have the corporate operations between the Socimis; secondly, and in parallel, we are seeing the debuts on the stock market and the mergers of the property developers; and thirdly, the servicers, where we will see both concentrations (Lindorff already purchased Aktua from Centerbridge) and repurchases of these vehicles by the banks to create their own real estate companies, in line with the move that Popular is trying to undertake”. (…).

The banks are also behind Metrovacesa Suelo y Promoción, Testa and URO, three companies that still expected to generate more news in terms of corporate operations. (…). In the same way, the funds that backed Spain when all of the other investors were fleeing the country, such as Blackstone and Autonomy, are also going to try to take advantage of the context to generate returns from their Socimis (…).

The show has only just begun.

Original story: El Confidencial (by Ruth Ugalde)

Translation: Carmel Drake

Sareb Sold 900 Plots Of Land In YTD Apr17

30 May 2017 – El Español

Sareb (…) has started its fifth year of life in a rather surprising way, by doubling its overall sales between January and April, and by tripling its land sales.

The upwards trend has been on the cards for a couple of years, with the emergence of property developers, such as Neinor, Aedas, Aelca and Kronos. These new stars of the real estate market, which are mainly financed by large investment funds and managed by Spanish professionals, have had to buy up land to support their business plans.

Improvement following the migration of assets to the servicers.

In addition to this overall improvement in the real estate environment, sources at the bad bank also defend the role played by the servicers engaged by Sareb (Altamira, Haya, Servihabitat and Solvia) in this exponential increase in sales. “Last year, not all of the assets had been migrated to their respective platforms, but this year, now that the migration has been completed, the results have improved significantly”, say the sources.

(…) The 3,260 properties sold by Sareb between January and April represent an increase of 87% compared to the same period a year ago. In the case of land, the number of plots sold has tripled, in such a way that the bad bank has managed to divest almost 900 plots of land during the first four months of the year, which is the same number that it sold during the whole of 2016.

Nevertheless, the increases in sales do not correspond to a similar increase in revenues, another trend that has also been seen over the last two years.

Twice as many sales, at half the price

In 2015, Sareb sold 421 plots of land for €335 million, i.e. an average plot price of €800,000. Last year, that average decreased to €400,000. It is true that the number of plots sold increased by 220%, to 927, but the corresponding revenues only grew by 9%, to €366 million.

Sources at the bad bank chaired by Jaime Echegoyen justify this gap by explaining that “increasingly smaller plots of land are being sold now. Moreover, the geographic spectrum has been expanded (…)”.

Call for caution

If the trend recorded until April continues, Sareb should be able to shed around 1,500 plots during 2017, which, at the average price of last year, would allow it to generate revenues of around €600 million. Nevertheless, sources at the bad bank prefer to be prudent. (…).

Unsustainable increase in land prices

The increases in house and land prices, which are being seen in certain areas of Madrid, Barcelona and the Mediterranean Coast, were one of the most talked about phenomena amongst professionals in the real estate sector last week, when they met at SIMA, the Real Estate Conference in Madrid.

In this context, the President of Spanish Property Developers, Juan Antonio Gómez-Pintado, called for caution. He is not talking openly about the existence of a new bubble and maintains that the increases are still technically a rebound after almost a decade of near paralysis in this market, but he did admit that “the increases that are being seen are not sustainable”. He believes that there isn’t sufficient housing demand to sustain the amount of land that has been acquired over the last year.

Original story: El Español (by Juan Carlos Martínez)

Translation: Carmel Drake

Spain’s RE Boom Drives New Avalanche Of IPOs

30 May 2017 – Expansión

Almost ten years after the burst of the real estate bubble, which destroyed the industry and brought many of the property giants to their knees, some of Spain’s new property developers and real estate investment vehicles, which have emerged since the crisis, are now looking to secure their place on the Spanish stock market.

Aedas, Vía Célere, HI Partners (the hotel management and investment arm of Sabadell), Rembrandt (a Socimi in which the Dutch pension fund APG and Renta Corporación hold stakes) and Testa Residencial (controlled by Santander, BBVA, Merlin and Popular) have fired the starting gun for their respective debuts on the stock market, which will happen gradually over the course of the remainder of this year and the next two years. Together, the companies have a combined valuation that could reach €6,400 million. In addition, Sareb plans to create a subsidiary of its own, with the aim of placing it on the market before the end of the year.

The real estate sector is enjoying a sweet moment, in the midst of a bullish cycle, supported by an improvement in the macroeconomic environment, forecasts for GDP and employment growth and an increase in consumer confidence. Both the residential sector and tertiary segment (offices, shopping centres, hotels and logistics) have become objects of desire for investors, who are looking for alternatives in the face of the low returns on bonds. (…).

First movers

The first company to try its luck on the stock market was Neinor. The real estate developer backed by Lone Star made its debut on the stock market on 29 March 2017, at a price of €16.46 and with a market capitalisation of €1,300 million. In just two months, that firm’s share price has risen by almost 9%. (…).

Over the next few months, Neinor will be followed by Aedas and Vía Célere. The first, controlled by the fund Castlelake and with assets worth €1,100 million, has engaged Goldman Sachs and Linklaters to prepare its stock market debut. Market sources indicate that its IPO could happen in October.

In the same way, Vía Célere, the property developer chaired by Juan Antonio Gómez-Pintado and controlled by Värde, will follow in the footsteps of its rivals and join the IPO wave in 2018. The company, which has assets worth €700 million, wants to grow in size before debuting on the stock market. It plans to list in the spring of 2018 with an asset portfolio worth between €1,000 million and €1,200 million.

Residential rental segment

In addition to the property developers controlled by funds, the Socimis will be some of the other players to undertake their IPOs over the coming months.

In this sense, one of the most awaited debuts is that of Testa Residencial, owned by the banks (Santander, BBVA and Popular) and Merlin. Testa Residencial, which was constituted as a Socimi in October 2016, following the merger of Merlin and Metrovacesa, currently has more than 8,000 homes in its portfolio, worth around €1,750 million.

The firm led by Miguel Oñate will start the administrative procedures (for its stock market debut) at the end of this year (…).

Renta Corporación also wants to benefit from the current strong investor appetite to launch a vehicle specialising in residential assets. The real estate group has created the Socimi Rembrandt, together with the Dutch fund APG, which will be the majority shareholder with a stake of 95%. The objective of the new Socimi is to accumulate assets worth €1,000 million, which will be concentrated in Madrid, Barcelona and other major Spanish cities.

Another entity that plans to resort to the stock market is Sareb. (…). The entity plans to create a Socimi that would complete its IPO before the end of the year. (…).

Other assets

And it is not only the residential sector that is in fashion. (…). Other assets, such as hotels are also piquing investor interest. In this context, Banco Sabadell is analysing the IPO of HI Partners, the hotel management and investment company that it created in 2015. (…) The bank has engaged Citi, JP Morgan and Credit Suisse to analyse the feasibility of listing its portfolio comprising 31 hotels and more than 3,500 rooms. (…).

Original story: Expansión (by Rebeca Arroyo)

Translation: Carmel Drake