Kronos & King Street Buy Land in Madrid from Sareb

27 December 2017 – El Confidencial

The scarcity of land that is starting to be seen in cities such as Madrid and Barcelona, and the increase in property prices there, is forcing property developers to sign partnerships with international funds and expand their areas of operation outside of the large capitals, towards peripheral towns and dormitory cities.

One example of this growing trend is the recent deal signed by Kronos Homes, a high standing real estate company that has just joined forces with King Street to buy two important blocks of land from Sareb in the belt around Madrid. Specifically, they have acquired 128,000 m2 of land in Colmenar Viejo, a town located 30km to the north of the capital, where it plans to build 200 homes, according to a statement issued by the property developer.

Moreover, according to sources consulted by El Confidencial, it has also agreed to acquire 230,000 m2 of land in Torrejón, which is located 20km to the northeast of the capital. Both of these operations have been advised by Cuatrecasas and Almar Consulting.

Given their location, these acquisitions contrast with the steps that Kronos has taken in Madrid to date, where it has limited its activity to the centre of the capital. Moreover, they represent the first sales of land under management, for development over five or six years, that Sareb has made to a fund like King Street, according to the same sources.

A property developer born out of the recovery

Kronos Homes is a property developer created at the beginning of this real estate cycle to focus on exclusive homes, many of them accompanied by the stamp of famous architects such as Rafael de la Hoz and Joaquín Torres.

The latter has put his signature on the development of 82 homes that the property developer is currently building in the exclusive Madrilenian district of Puerta de Hierro, whose prices range between €488,000 and €1.4 million. Meanwhile, Kronos is working on a less elitist development in Cuatro Vientos, to the south of the capital, where it plans to build 2-, 3- and 4-bedroom homes.

With the acquisitions in Colmenar and Torrejón de Ardoz, Kronos is pushing ahead with its objective of acquiring a land portfolio for the construction of 4,500 homes over three years. Last March, the company said it already owned land worth €200 million, with capacity for the construction of 3,000 homes, and that it planned to invest another €100 million acquiring more plots.

Since it started operations in 2014, the company has closed several operations both with Sareb, as well as with financial institutions and has participated in the acquisition of non-performing loans backed by residential assets of interest.

Meanwhile, King Street is an international investment giant, which, in Spain, has been behind important debt operations, such as the one linked to Realia and the deal involving the radial highways. Currently, it is a shareholder of Neinor, in which it owns a 3.5% stake.

Original story: El Confidencial (by R. Ugalde & C. Hernanz)

Translation: Carmel Drake

Land Shortages Curb Investors’ Return To RE Development

2 March 2016 – Expansión

CBRE, the Urban Land Institute and Esade gathered together representatives from several real estate groups yesterday in Barcelona; they all agreed about the lack of assets for sale in the market. Benson Elliot, Colonial, Merlin Properties, Vía Célere and Unibail Rodamco have suffered in the last two years from the avalanche of investors that have set their sights on Spanish real estate and have exacerbated the lack of assets on the market. The CEO of Unibail Rodamco in Spain, Simon Orchard, said that “we are forced to develop, because the type of product that is in demand does not exist”. The Director of Merlin Properties, Luis Lázaro agreed with him, “no warehouses have been constructed in Madrid for ten years, but the demand is there, which is leading us to construct turn-key projects”.

The CEO of Colonial, Carmina Ganyet, added that “the lack of quality products does not only relate to the location of buildings, it also manifests itself in terms of their features”, and as such, the group allocates around 20% of its investment to new construction projects, which also offer much higher returns, of 10% and 15%. The Head of Benson Elliott in Spain, Gregg Gilbert, said that his fund is looking for “this kind of return on all of its projects”. And the founder of Vía Célere, Juan Antonio Gómez Pintado, added that the biggest problem is the lack of land and “the government is lagging behind in this regard”.

Original story: Expansión (by M. A.)

Translation: Carmel Drake