Incus Capital Puts 3 Shopping Centres Up For Sale

6 July 2016 – El Confidencial

The retail market is on a roll. Whilst a few weeks ago, it was revealed that the British fund Northwood is looking for a buyer for Diagonal Mar, the second largest shopping centre in Cataluña; now, another investor, Incus Capital, wants to unwind some of its positions and raise funds through the sale of three commercial assets, which it purchased three years ago from Morgan Stanley for €30 million.

The assets for sale, which have been baptised as “the good”, “the bad”, and “the ugly” are: El Mirador de Cuenca (Cuenca), Los Alcores (Alcalá de Guadaíra-Sevilla) and Alzamora (Alcoy-Alicante). Morgan Stanley and Grupo Lar purchased these three centres in 2007 for €116 million just before the real estate bubble burst, and sold them to Incus Capital six years later, at a loss of €80 million.

According to several market sources, these three assets are back on the market once again, although no offers have been received yet, since the sales process is still in its preliminary phase. The sources consulted state that Incus will successfully close the operation before the end of the year with significant profits, in other words, for more than €30 million. CBRE is advising Incus Capital on the sale, but neither of the companies wanted to make any comments about it.

The three assets are on the market together once again. “Investors buzzing over Spain are looking for reasonably-sized transactions, and so it makes more sense to sell these assets together than separately. Investors prefer to make one purchase amounting to €30 million, than three amounting to €10 million each”, said one expert in the sector, who explained that, although these are not prime assets, given that they are located in smaller cities, they are dominant in their respective regions and do not face any competition, which makes them very attractive. In addition, Incus has carried out a very active management (of the assets), which means that they now have higher occupancy rates and are in a better condition than three years ago”.

The shopping centre segment has been particularly dynamic in the last two years and, according to experts in the real estate market, total investment in 2016 may exceed the figures recorded in 2015 (€2,000 million). During the first quarter of this year alone, retail investment amounted to between €750 million and €800 million, with several high profile transactions, including the purchase of the Festival Park shopping centre in Mallorca for €100 million and the fund Invesco’s purchase of a portfolio of Eroski supermarkets for just over €350 million.

Incus Capital was created in 2013 and these three shopping centres became its first portfolio of assets in the Spanish market. The firm was created by Andrew Newton (ex-Lehman Brothers) and Alejandro Moya (ex-Morgan Stanley).

Original story: El Confidencial (by E. Sanz)

Translation: Carmel Drake

Värde Finalises Its Purchase Of Residential Property Developer Aelca

9 May 2016 – El Confidencial

Värde Partners is getting ready to become the largest player in the property development business in Spain. After acquiring 51% of Aliseda, the real estate arm of Banco Popular; having purchased San José Desarrollas, the residential branch of the Galician construction company…and in the middle of negotiations to buy a share of La Finca, the US fund is now one step away from another big trophy.

According to three sources, Värde has made the best offer to acquire Aelca, the property developer that the Avintia Group has put on the market and in which a large group of foreign funds have expressed interest. Amongst them, Castlelake and Värde stand out, although the latter is the only one that has reached an agreement in principle.

With the caution that must be maintained until the operation is definitively closed, which could happen before the end of the month, Värde is taking another step forwards in its strategy to become one of the largest real estate groups in Spain. It has been committed to the market since the darkest days of the crisis, as it demonstrated four years ago, when it joined forces with Anchorage to purchase five premium buildings in Madrid and Barcelona, which previously belonged to Monteverde.

A year later, came the acquisition of Aliseda for €815 million, a deal that allowed it to take over the management of mortgage loans with a net value of €9,350 million and foreclosed assets worth another €6,500 million. In addition, that purchase, which it undertook together with Kennedy Wilson, helped to heal the wound opened with CX Inmobiliaria, the platform owned by Catalunya Caixa, with which it had reached an agreement for almost €30 million, but which broke down at the last minute.

The story goes on, because thanks to the acquisition of San José Desarrollos alone, Värde Partners expects to construct 1,500 homes across Spain in the short term, numbers that will increased even further if it manages to acquire Aelca, a young property developer, which has great appeal thanks to its strong presence in areas where the residential sector is recovering the most in Madrid, such as Aravaca, Boadilla del Monte and the Madrilenian neighbourhood of Las Tablas.

Värde’s commitment to the real estate business has led it to invest more than €1,000 million in the acquisition of Aliseda and San José Desarrollos alone, two sides of the same coin, given that as well as managing and selling the assets of the company that it shares with Popular, the fund is particularly interested in fully benefitting from the expected recovery in the residential market through its own property developer, as it is showing with its frenetic activity in these businesses.

By contrast, Värde is exiting its positions in the shopping centre segment, as it demonstrated in February with the sale of the Mallorcan Festival Park outlet, and in July 2015, with the sale to Lar of three large retail outlets in the Parque Comercial Galeria de Pamplona.

Original story: El Confidencial (by Ruth Ugalde)

Translation: Carmel Drake