Bankia Puts Branch in Barcelona’s Plaza Cataluña Up For Sale for €28M

5 July 2018 – Idealista News

Bankia is replicating in Barcelona what it has already done in Madrid with c/Alcalá 1. The bank has put up for sale the commercial premises in the building that it owns at number 9 Plaza Cataluña, in the centre of Barcelona, for €28 million.

The entity opened the bidding last week and will start to receive offers for the premises, which have a surface area of 1,000 m2, from Friday 6 July onwards. The asset, located between the Apple and Desigual flagship stores, has already attracted several suitors, including retail operators and international investment funds, according to Idealista.

The premises, which Bankia debating whether to put up for sale or lease, was the object of desire of the Japanese fashion giant Uniqlo for its arrival plan in Barcelona. In the end, that firm opened its flagship store close to Plaza Cataluña, at the intersection of Gran Vía and Paseo de Gracia.

This operation follows the deal that Bankia already initiated in March involving c/Alcalá 1 in Madrid, as revealed by Eje Prime. For that central property in the Spanish capital, two real estate funds, Renta Corporación and Arcano, are still the favourites to acquire the asset, which, nevertheless, has not yet been sold for its minimum asking price of €20 million.

Original story: Idealista News

Translation: Carmel Drake

M&G Real Estate Purchases 3 Commercial Premises in Madrid & Granada

29 May 2018 – Eje Prime

M&G Real Estate is continuing its shopping spree in Spain. The real estate division of the British fund M&G Investment has acquired two commercial premises in Madrid and a third in Granada. Moreover, the firm has also added two industrial assets in the Spanish capital to its portfolio.

The commercial premises in Madrid are located at number 68 Gran Vía, whilst the asset acquired in Granada is located on Calle Reyes Católicos, where the Swedish fashion retailer H&M recent opened a store. In the Spanish capital, the tenants of the retail spaces are the restaurant chain Tony Roma’s and the financial entity Banco Sabadell, which will open its flagship branch in the premises soon.

Meanwhile, in the logistics sector, the real estate investment firm has purchased a logistics platform in Corredor del Henares, which is leased to Teka, and an industrial complex in Getafe. In total, those two assets span a surface area of more than 55,000 m2.

Original story: Eje Prime 

Translation: Carmel Drake

M&G Invests €80M to Strengthen its RE Portfolio

29 May 2018 – Expansión

The real estate division of the London-based firm M&G Investment has decided to bet significantly on the Iberian market, where its exposure now exceeds €500 million. “We are partners of institutional investors looking for core properties in the best locations across Europe. We opened our office in Spain in 2016, but we completed our first operations there a year earlier”, explains Federico Bros, Director of Asset Management for Spain and Portugal.

Its first operation involved the purchase of the former headquarters of Telefónica located on Calle Ríos Rosas (Madrid) and leased to the advertising giant WPP. “It is an example of what we look for, well-located assets with long-term contracts, 17 years in this case. Between the renovation and purchase we will invest €175 million in that property”, says Bros.

After that acquisition came others, such as an office building in Barcelona’s 22@ district and, recently, five operations with a very diverse profile. On the one hand, M&G purchased three commercial assets: two in Madrid and one in Granada. “The premise in Granada, measuring 2,500 m2, is located on Reyes Católicos, the best shopping street in the city”, explains Bros. In the case of Madrid, M&G acquired two retail premises on Gran Vía 68. “We closed this operation in May but we have been negotiating it for months, given that the building was being renovated. A few months ago, a large Tony Roma’s restaurant opened there and Sabadell is going to open its flagship branch in the other premise in a matter of days”, he said.

Similarly, the firm acquired two industrial assets in Madrid, specifically a logistics platform, leased to Teka, in the Corredor del Henares, and another complex in Getafe. Those two sites span more than 55,000 m2. In total, the firm has invested €80 million on its latest operations, channelled through two funds: MEP and EuroSPIF.

More opportunities

Following these investments, the manager is still looking for opportunities in the Spanish market.

“We are involved in several processes, both official and off-market, in Madrid, Barcelona and prime locations in other cities. Spain is a priority country for us”, says Bros.

Original story: Expansión (by Rocío Ruiz)

Translation: Carmel Drake

Pontegadea Lets 3,000 m2 of Office Space in Barcelona to Lidl

2 May 2018 – Eje Prime

Pontegadea, the real estate company owned by Amancio Ortega, is continuing to make its investments in Barcelona profitable. The group has just closed the rental of some of its office space, spanning more than 3,000 m2, to the German supermarket giant Lidl, according to market sources speaking to Eje Prime. Pontegadea has rented part of a building that it owns in Plaza Catalunya, in the centre of Barcelona, which it purchased from BBVA in 2013 for more than €100 million.

Lidl is going to occupy four floors in the building, which together span a total surface area of 3,155 m2. Currently, the building, which was originally intended to house the corporate headquarters of a large group, is being marketed on a floor by floor basis. On the lower storeys, the property is home to one of the flagship stores that Zara has in the centre of the Catalan capital.

Following this rental operation, which has been brokered by the real estate consultancy firms JLL and Forcadell, Lidl is going to sublet the space from BBVA (given that, for the time being, the rental contract is in the name of the banking entity) in order to locate its offices in the centre of the city. The property is going to house the e-commerce and CRM teams, which will serve the group’s business throughout Europe. Although the most iconic part of the building is located in Plaza Catalunya, the building’s entrance is located at number 13 Calle Bergara.

In this way, Lidl is continuing to generate work for the real estate sector in Spain. As Eje Prime revealed, the German supermarket chain has recently put up for sale its portfolio of real estate assets in the country. More than 109,000 m2 of retail space, industrial assets and land, which the German giant has acquired since it first arrived in Spain in 1994 form part of the package put up for sale by the company.

To carry out this operation in Spain, where the company is also purchasing new land, Lidl attended the Barcelona Meeting Point real estate fair in October, where it had one of the largest stands in the room, which it used to explore real estate agreements, including the sale of part of its property portfolio (…).

Lidl has been operating in Spain for more than 22 years, during which time it has invested almost €2.6 billion in the purchase of land, retail premises and store openings. Now, the company has initiated a new phase of expansion and so it is looking for properties, including both industrial and commercial land (…).

The office business is growing in Barcelona 

Leasing of office space grew by 20% in Barcelona during the first quarter of 2018 with respect to the same period in 2017, and forecasts indicate that this business is going to continue to grow over the coming months. The city recorded a leasing volume that was 17% higher than the quarterly average for the last five years, whereby confirming the strong demand.

Of the 125 operations signed during the first few months of the year, 7% corresponded to contracts for spaces spanning more than 2,000 m2. Most of the space leased (47%) was signed in New Business Areas, with the leasing of new space by companies such as PepsiCo and Securitas, which moved into a stock that today has an occupancy rate of 93%, as revealed by Eje Prime.

Meanwhile, the Paseo de Gracia-Diagonal area and city centre closed the quarter with a joint market share of 37% of the total space leased. The remaining 16% opted for projects located on the outskirts of the city (…).

Original story: Eje Prime (by Custodio Pareja)

Translation: Carmel Drake

Jale Group Owner Acquitted Of Fraud In Incosol Case

27 July 2016 – Expansión

The former owners, the Basque García-Egocheaga family, had accused López Esteras of swindling them during his purchase of the prestigious medical-hotel complex.

The Provincial Court of Vizcaya has acquitted the businessman José Antonio López Esteras, founder of the Jale Group, of crimes involving fraud, continued fraud and concealment of assets, of which he was accused following the sale of Incosol, formerly one of the most prestigious medical-hotel complexes in Europe, located in Marbella.

In addition, his son José Antonio López Esteras Camacho and son-in-law, Alfred Fischbac, have also gone free. They are the former directors of the Cádiz-based holding company, which has now filed for liquidation but which was one of the largest companies in Andalucía in its hey-day, with real estate, construction and hotel businesses.

The case dates back to 2007, when Jale acquired Incosol from the Basque García-Egocheaga family – which also used to own the Hotel Los Monteros – for €50 million through a complex financial and corporate operation. Less than fourteen months later, they filed a lawsuit against the three executives mentioned above, asking for 24 years in prison and compensation amounting to €3.6 million on the basis that they had made payment guarantees and commitments assumed by the Andalucían group somehow disappear.

Those obligations were guaranteed through the constitution of a pledge over 100% of the shares in the company Hotel Monasterio San Miguel, S.A., whose main asset was the hotel of the same name – located in El Puerto de San María – one of the most reputable in Andalucía and the flagship of its hotel division.

Shortly thereafter, Jale filed for voluntary creditor bankruptcy, but before doing so, it reached an agreement with BBVA to transfer ownership of the property to the bank for €24 million, in a sale & leaseback operation.

The plaintiffs consider that, with this manoeuvre, the executives made “the guarantees that secured the fulfilment of its obligations disappear in a fraudulent way”.

Now, however, the Provincial Court of Vizcaya has acquitted them on the basis that “the evidence provided is not sufficient to conclude that the intention behind establishing the pledge over the shares of Hotel Monasterio was to deceive García Egocheaga, or hide from them the fact that the guarantee was going to disappear”.

In addition, the court said that the former owners of Incosol were offered other guarantees in real estate assets worth more than €30 million.

Original story: Expansión (by Simón Onrubia)

Translation: Carmel Drake