Grupo Baraka Sells a Logistics Warehouse in Murcia to Corum for €14M

11 June 2018 – Expansión

The Baraka Group, controlled by the businessman Trinitario Casanova, has closed an agreement to sell one of the logistics assets owned by its construction company Trabis.

Specifically, Baraka has sold a logistics warehouse, called Trabis II, located in the Murcian town of Yecla, the region where Casanova’s companies are headquartered. The property, which has a constructed surface area of 14,000 m2, has been sold for €14 million through a sale and leaseback contract.

“The advantage is that the buyer is guaranteed an asset in which the tenant will continue to undertake its activity”, explained Pablo Carvajal, Director of Capital Markets at Catella, the consultancy firm that has advised the new owner in the transaction.

The buyer is the French fund manager Corum Asset Management. Created in 2011 and with offices in Paris and Amsterdam, the firm set itself the objective last year of investing €500 million in real estate assets across Europe, with a special focus on Spain. For its investments, whose yields exceed 6%, Corum works with two funds Corum Origin and Corum XL, the latter was launched last year.

This is not the first time that Baraka and Corum have closed an operation together. In July 2016, the French firm paid more than €24.8 million for another logistics building also leased to Trabis.

Corum is one of the international investors that has opted to purchase logistics assets in Spain, a booming market due to its high returns and the increase in the e-commerce business. “The logistics investment market is proving attractive for domestic and international investors alike and increasingly more are investing in this type of asset. Between January and May, €250 million has been invested in these types of properties”, say sources at Catella.

At the overall level, investment during the first half of the year is expected to reach €5 billion. “During 2018, €3 billion has been invested in tertiary (non-residential) assets. Taking into account certain transactions pending completion, we expect to see investment of close to €5 billion during the first half of the year, around €1 billion less than during the same period in 2017”, he predicts.

Casanova

The divestment of this logistics warehouse comes just weeks after Trinitario Casanova entered the Madrid Nuevo Norte real estate project (known as Operación Chamartín). The businessman has committed to pay €400 million to the initial owners for the rights to 1.2 million m2 of land (now in the hands of the Ministry of Development) where the company DCN, controlled by BBVA and SanJosé, is planning to build an urban development with more than 10,500 homes.

In addition, Casanova is working on the marketing of the future shopping arcade in Edificio España, the property that he purchased from Wanda for €172 million to immediately sell it on to the RIU hotel group.

Original story: Expansión (by Rocío Ruiz)

Translation: Carmel Drake

Former Bacardi Factory Plots in Málaga to go up for Sale for €15M

7 June 2018 – La Opinión de Málaga

Yesterday, the consultancy firm Savills Aguirre Newman announced the upcoming sale of almost 75,000 m2 of land on the site of the former Bacardi factory in Málaga, an operation for which it is acting as the broker and which could reach a market value of around €15 million.

The land, which is classified as buildable industrial, could prove very attractive for investors, given the current lack of available spaces of this kind in Málaga on which to locate industrial or logistics facilities. The director of the consultancy in Málaga, José Félix Pérez-Peña, described the land as “one of a kind”, despite the fact that it is located on the Guadalhorce flood plan, and mentioned several high-profile “international funds” as possible interested parties. The consultancy firm, which indicated that the plots will come onto the market “soon” is placing the focus on the use of the site for office buildings.

Another attractive plot that Savills Aguirre Newman is brokering the sale of is the former Salyt brick factory, spanning almost 13,000 m2, although it is still unknown whether that will be allocated to industrial or commercial use. A Dutch group had expressed interest in building a shopping centre on the site although the price being requested by the Town Hall paralysed that operation. There has also been talk recently of the land housing a logistics warehouse. Pérez-Peña said that the final destination of these plots would be revealed over the next few months.

In terms of Astoria, he said that “several international groups are interested”, including one in particular that has properties of this kind in Spain and Europe and which may soon make contact with the Town Hall. In theory, the Town Hall is planning to convene a tender at the end of this year or the beginning of 2019 in which anyone who wants to will be able to participate (…).

Another one of the projects that is being “followed very closely” by Savills Aguirre Newman is that of Martiricos, where two residential towers are going to be built, plus an office building measuring 7,000 m2 and another commercial building measuring 3,000 m2. The consultancy firm classified it as one of the “star projects” in Málaga, which “is going to change” the city.

Pérez-Peña also summarised other matters such as the future of Pier 4, which has a surface area of 26,500 m2 and which, in his opinion, could become a great space for offices or homes. He also said that Repsol, spanning 117,000 m2, could be a wonderful enclave for making a city of offices, although that would be up to the Town Hall and Sareb to decide. And he also alluded to the potential of the Correos building (3,352 m2) as an office block, although he admitted that it would generate higher yields if it was allocated for residential or hotel use.

Original story: La Opinión del Málaga (by José Vicente Rodríguez)

Translation: Carmel Drake

Mazabi’s Socimi Silicius Acquires an Office Building on c/Velázquez (Madrid)

21 May 2018 – Press Release

Silicius Inmuebles en Rentabilidad, the Socimi managed by Mazabi, has purchased an office building in the heart of Madrid’s CBD, on Calle Velázquez, 123.

The property, which has been renovated recently, meets the requirements of the investment policy established by the shareholders and represents another step in the Socimi’s growth phase, ahead of its debut on the stock market. The acquisition has been conducted entirely using own funds.

In the heart of Madrid’s CBD, the property has an above ground gross leasable area (GLA) of 2,346 m2 (offices and a commercial premise) plus 30 parking spaces. Currently, the 1st, 2nd and 3rd floors are available for rent; they are completely open plan and have a surface area of 300 m2 each. This is a highly visible property thanks to its location at the junctions of Calles Velázquez and María de Molina, and the floors enjoy lots of light (with 15 windows per floor). The property is currently in the pre-certification phase of obtaining a sustainability stamp.

This is a firm step forward for the Socimi as it advances its growth phase. The company, which specialises in long-term rental assets, is continuing its growth phase with the acquisition and contribution of new assets to its existing portfolio, following its policy to invest in diversified assets that generate stable rental income.

The Director-General of Silicius, Juan Diaz de Bustamante, said that “the purchase of this asset is a good example of the ideal asset for our portfolio, given that it meets the necessary requirements set out in our principles: to back conservative investments over the long term, as well as to ensure diversification and asset liquidity in order to pay an annual dividend to shareholders”.

With a very defined investment policy, Silicius is currently evaluating the purchase or contribution of properties worth approximately €500 million (commercial premises, out-of-town stores, shopping centres, office and hotels in Spain). The volume of investment/contribution per property amounts to between €5 million and €30 million.

Currently, Silicus owns assets worth €120 million, which generate annual rental income of approximately €6 million. The company’s assets include several commercial premises in “prime” locations with long-term tenants (Paseo de la Castellana, Velázquez, Blanca de Navarra and Paseo de Yeserías), a multi-tenant office building on c/Virgen de los Peligros (in the historical centre of Madrid), an office building on Calle Obenque, 4 in Madrid (with a façade overlooking the A-2) and a hotel with a long-term lease in Conil de la Frontera (Cádiz).

Silicius is a Socimi, managed by Mazabi, specialising in the purchase and active management of profitable assets that generate stable rental income over the long term for investors, providing them with an annual dividend (…).

Original story: Press Release

Translation: Carmel Drake

GreenOak to Debut Second Socimi, Go Madrid Benz, on the MAB

15 May 2018 – Eje Prime

GreenOak is going to ring the bell again on the Alternative Investment Market (MAB). And this time it will do so with Go Madrid Benz, its second Spanish Socimi after Gore Spain, which made its stock market debut in January 2017. The US fund has already filed a request with Spain’s National Securities and Exchange Commission (CNMV) to incorporate the company on to the stock market; its main asset is the Las Mercedes Business Park. GreenOak’s intention is for the shares in this company to be listed before the summer.

With a surface area for offices and other administrative buildings spanning 80,000 m2, Las Mercedes is the jewel in the crown of Go Madrid Benz. The fund, which is led in Spain by Javier Zarragoitia, wants to assert its control over the 46% share capital that it owns in the Socimi to debut it on the stock market. The objective of the company is to achieve gross annual rental income of €7.65 million, with a yield of 6.5%, according to El Confidencial.

The sole shareholder of what will be the newest listed Socimi on the insatiable MAB, which is also home to more than fifty companies, is Go Benz Sarl, one of GreenOak’s investment vehicles. The fund has owned Las Mercedes since 2016 when it paid Standard Life €130 million for the business complex located in the northeast of Madrid.

The Las Mercedes Business Park comprises nine office buildings, situated around the A-2 motorway, an attractive area for companies, which has undergone significant development in recent years. Indeed, just a few weeks ago, GreenOak raised €95 million to refinance this asset through a long-term loan signed with PBB Deutsche Pfandbriefbank.

Original story: Eje Prime

Translation: Carmel Drake

Spain’s Student Halls are the Most Profitable in Europe with Yields of 5.5%

14 May 2018 – Eje Prime

As well as being the largest recipient of Erasmus students, Spain is now also one of the most attractive countries for funds and operators specialising in halls of residence. The high demand and shortage of existing supply multiplied the investment in this alternative market ten-fold in 2017, increasing from just over €50 million to €600 million in one year. One of the keys to this growth lies in the profitability of the segment: with a yield (…) of 5.5%, Spain offers the best returns on the whole continent, for nations with more than 1 million students, according to a report from the consultancy firm Cushman&Wakefield.

In this hall of residence boom, which has allowed investments in the segment to grow by 29% across Europe, Spain also led the ranking of the largest operations in 2017. The transaction involving Resa’s portfolio, which was sold by Azora to the funds Axa Real Assets and CBRE GI for €400 million was the largest deal closed on the whole continent last year. Moreover, Operation Rio, which involved the sale of Oaktree’s Spanish portfolio to GSA for €180 million, also ranked in the top 3, a podium that was completed by another deal involving GSA, in that case together with GIC, which acquired thousands of beds from LJ Capital in Germany for €250 million.

The increase in investment will be accompanied in 2018 by a greater number of projects under development. As Reno Cardiff, Director of Capital Markets Business Space at Cushman&Wakefield in Spain explained recently in an interview with Eje Prime, “there is a great appetite for this kind of asset, but there is a shortage of supply”.

Due to the lack of stock right across the continent, consultancy firms and real estate experts are promoting the construction of new halls of residence to receive students over the coming years. Moreover, Cushman&Wakefield highlights another change: interest has increased from institutions looking to construct properties to house students, a cohort that was traditionally forced to rent homes from owners who, in many cases, set abusive prices.

Nevertheless, the growing appetite from funds for halls of residence is not driven by social reasons, but rather as the coming together of a sea of opportunities. In addition, the yields, despite having fallen in the last year, are still higher than those of other segments, such as traditional residential, offices and commercial. Only the logistics market offers yields in line with those of university halls of residence (…).

Original story: Eje Prime (by J. Izquierdo)

Translation: Carmel Drake

Mapfre Divested Non-Strategic Assets Worth €130M in 2017

7 May 2018 – Eje Prime

The insurance company Mapfre is still interested in the Spanish real estate sector, but it is divesting certain assets that it considers to be non-strategic in the country. The company sold properties worth €130 million in the Spanish market last year, according to information presented in the group’s annual report for 2017. The most high profile sales were carried out in Madrid and included the Luchana building, amongst others.

During the year, divestments amounting to around €130 million were carried out in Spain and Portugal. Highlights include the sale of a plot of land in Valdemarín (Madrid) for €5.5 million and two plots in Palma de Mallorca for €22.5 million, plus a series of other smaller assets for €24.5 million in total.

One of Mapfre’s main divestment operations last year was the sale of the Luchana building to GMP for €72 million. It is an exempt asset, dating back to the beginning of the 1980s, located just six minutes from Paseo de la Castellana by foot.

GMP is currently renovating that property, which spans a gross leasable area of 14,424 m2, spread over eleven above ground floors in total, ten office floors and one commercial-use floor at street level. Its main tenant is Mapfre, which houses the headquarters of its General Regional Management team for Madrid and Verti in this building.

In total, all of the operations signed in the Iberian Peninsula generated gains of more than €65 million for Mapfre, according to the annual report.

Investment in its asset stock in Spain 

But Mapfre has not only been selling assets in Spain, it has also been feeding its portfolio by investing in the renovation of its properties. The insurance group has undertaken improvement work on its portfolio in Madrid, where it has finished work on an asset it owns on Calle Sor Ángela de la Cruz amounting to €8 million, where the General Regional team for Madrid is located; and work on Plaza de la Independencia amounting to €7.39 million. That building has already been leased out for the most part (70% of the leasable surface area).

In addition, Mapfre has started refurbishment work on the facilities of its property on Calle Mateo Inurria, a building that has been leased in its entirety to the Ministry of Finance for a rental cost of €5.04 million per year. Improvement work on its offices on Calle General Perón is still underway with an investment of €5.81 million in 2017. Work is also still underway on the tower in Barcelona amounting to €22 million in 2017, which is expected to be completed during the first half of 2018.

At the end of 2017, the market value of Mapfre’s real estate investments in Spain amounted to €2.945 billion, “with latent capital gains of more than €750 million”, explains the group. Of the total, approximately 58% corresponds to properties for own use, and the remaining 42% relates to properties that are rented out to third parties or are on the market for sale. The occupancy ratio of the rental properties amounts to 83%, considering that at the moment, more than 7,500 m2 of its space is being renovated for repositioning on the market from 2018 onwards.

Commitment to Europe 

In March, the insurance group announced its partnership with GLL to launch a fund to invest up to €300 million in the purchase of prime offices in Europe over a two to three year period.

The new vehicle launched by Mapfre and GLL aims to enter large capitals cities across the continent (Germany, France, Italy, the Netherlands and Belgium) with the aim of achieving returns of between 4% and 6% per year and diversifying its portfolio against other types of financial assets (…).

Original story: Eje Prime

Translation: Carmel Drake

Carrefour’s RE Subsidary Acquires 6 Shopping Centres for €182M

4 May 2018 – El Economista

Carmila, the real estate subsidiary of Carrefour, has acquired six shopping centres next to its hypermarkets in Spain from the fund Pradera European Retail, for a total consideration of €182 million and with an average yield of 6.3%, according to a statement issued by the French company on Friday.

Through these new acquisitions, the group plans to renew these spaces with the aim of revitalising them towards a family concept to optimise occupancy rates and strengthen their activity with the deployment of digital marketing tools, such as websites, databases and service kiosks.

The company’s new assets, which have been financed through bond debt amounting to €350 million issued in February, are located in Córdoba, Cádiz, Sevilla, Alicante and in Barcelona, where it has acquired two shopping centres.

At the end of last year, Carmila’s total portfolio comprised 206 shopping centres, located in France, Spain and Italy, worth €5.8 billion in total. The company, which is listed on the Euronext stock exchange in Paris, will hold its General Shareholders’ Meeting on 16 May and will present its half-year results on 27 July.

Original story: El Economista

Translation: Carmel Drake

Investors Increase their Commitment to Rental Housing

3 May 2018 – Expansión

The boom in the residential market, the changing habits in society, the difficulties involved in accessing housing and the increase in mobility have all led to a rebound in the residential rental market in Spain. According to the latest data from Eurostat, more than 22% of Spanish households live in rented properties, although that figure is still well behind the average for the European Union (34%).

In addition, the State Housing Plan, which seeks to encourage rental amongst the younger generation, and the greater professionalisation of the sector, is going to serve to further boost the rental market in Spain.

The change in trend, as well as the increase in residential rental yields, has compelled investors to analyse this business as an alternative to other real estate assets such as offices, shopping centres and hotels.

To lead this market, certain players have redoubled their commitment to rental housing, such as the case of Testa Residencial – the Socimi in which Santander, BBVA, Acciona and Merlin hold stakes – which owns almost 9,300 residential rental properties, with a gross value of €2.275 billion and annual rental income of €72.2 million.

Stock market debuts

That Socimi is preparing its leap onto the market, which will be carried out through an offer of its existing shares (OPV) and an issue of new shares (OPS) aimed exclusively at qualified investors.

One of the first players to back this business was Blackstone, which purchased 18 residential developments, containing 1,860 homes in total, in the Madrilenian neighbourhoods of Carabanchel, Centro, Villa de Vallecas and Villaverde from the Municipal Housing and Land Company of Madrid (EMVS) in July 2013. In 2015, the fund debuted its Socimi Fidere on the MAB (Alternative Investment Market) with 2,688 social housing properties, including those acquired from the EMVS two years earlier. Currently, Fidere owns around 6,400 homes for rent.

The fund also debuted Albirana on the MAB in March 2017 with a portfolio of 5,000 rental homes proceeding from Catalunya Banc loans. Another star of the real estate sector that has detected an opportunity in the rental sector to offload its assets is the Company for the Management of Assets proceeding from the Restructuring of the Banking System (Sareb) with Témpore Properties. That Socimi debuted on the MAB in April with a portfolio of 1,553 residential units, which have a gross value of €175 million.

Another player is Vivenio Residencial, the investment vehicle created by the Dutch pension fund APG together with Renta Corporación. Vivenio has invested around €200 million in the purchase of properties and now owns more than 1,000 rental homes. The Socimi plans to debut on the stock market in 2019.

According to data from Armabex, in 2017, five new Socimis debuted on the stock market with residential assets in their portfolio. In total, at the end of last year, 16 Socimis held rental homes in their portfolios, including, in addition to Fidere and Albirana, Vitruvio, VBare, Colón Vivienda and Domo.

In addition to the listed Socimis, other players in the sector include the real estate managers. One of the largest by volume of assets under management is Anticipa Real Estate, owned by Blackstone. Anticipa currently manages 12,000 homes proceeding from banks acquired by the fund during the crisis. Anticipa manages Albirana’s homes, amongst others.

Another star in the rental home manager sector in Spain is Azzam Vivienda – a subsidiary of Azora – which has more than 11,000 homes under management distributed across 140 buildings.

Azora, which will make its debut on the Madrid stock market on 11 May, plans to raise up to €500 million from its stock market debut to co-invest with its partners in various assets, including in the residential sector.

New players

The company founded by Concha Osácar and Fernando Gumuzio in 2003, was managing €1.5 billion in residential assets at the end of last year, which represented 33.4% of its total portfolio. It plans to increase its footprint in the sector to have between €1.3 billion and €1.6 billion under management by 2022 in homes, accommodation for the elderly and assets relating to healthcare.

Despite the increasing prominence of the rental sector, the business is still very fragmented and one of the challenges for the sector is to gain scale in order to compete. Juan Manuel Acosta, CEO of Greystar in Spain, said in an interview with Expansión in February that the US real estate investment firm is looking for opportunities to become one of the largest operators in the residential rental market in Spain.

Original story: Expansión (by Rebeca Arroyo)

Translation: Carmel Drake

A Family Office Buys a Mixed-Use Building in Centre of Barcelona for €7M

19 April 2018 – Mis Locales

The real estate consultancy firm Laborde Marcet has brokered the sale of a building for more than €7 million in the heart of the El Raval neighbourhood, in the district of Ciutat Vella. The property, located at number 18 Carrer Sant Rafael, has been purchased by a local family office.

Completely renovated, the building comprises five commercial premises and homes spanning around 70 m2 each, most of which are furnished. The average price per square metre exceeds €3,300/m2 and the yield amounts to 3.5%.

Gerard Marcet, founding partner at Laborde Marcet, says that “these types of buildings enjoy the locations, yields and prices that fit perfectly with the objectives of many investors. They are safe assets and so they are not associated with property speculation or very high returns and risk, but rather they are suited to investors who want good stable properties that will generate fixed returns and protect their wealth against future inflation rises, given that the rents are linked to variations in CPI”.

Ciutat Vella, a district that forms part of El Raval, attracts many operations for both the purchase of buildings and the purchase and rental of commercial premises. In fact, a vast proportion of the operations brokered by the Retail team at Laborde Marcet are located in that area of the city. In this way, over the last year, the consultancy firm has advised large brands from the beauty, fashion and restaurant sectors, such as Primor, Visionario, Toni Pons, Aragaza, Celeste, Change Group, ARTEspañol and The Ranch SmokeHouse for the rental of premises in strategic areas of Ciutat Vella.

Original story: Mis Locales

Translation: Carmel Drake

Lennar’s Socimi Al Breck Sells 14 More Assets for €11M

19 April 2018 – Eje Prime

Whilst last year was marked by investments on the part of the Socimis, this year is being marked by divestments. Lennar Corporation is divesting in Spain again and has closed fourteen operations to sell properties through one of its Spanish Socimis, Al Breck, for €11 million, according to a statement from the company.

The company has carried out the transactions through the company Rialto Capital Management, an investment vehicle headquartered in Luxembourg, which Lennar uses to carry out its real estate operations in Europe and the only one that has a stable structure in Spain.

The company divested the properties between 16 February and 12 April, generating a gain for the company of €5 million. This divestment follows another carried out in January when it sold four assets for €3.5 million.

Lennar Corporation made its debut on the Alternative Investment Market (MAB) with Al Breck at the end of November 2016 (although it commenced activity in Spain in December 2014), with a stock of around 639 rental homes located in the centre of Madrid. The Socimi created its asset portfolio through the purchase of a portfolio from Segurfondo Investion in December 2014.

Specifically, the Socimi’s assets are located in the centre of the Spanish capital (in the Centro, Salamanca, Chamberí and Chueca districts), as well as in La Moraleja and in towns close to Alcobendas and Torrejón de Ardoz. The portfolio also contains retail premises and offices. According to the IPO prospectus, the market value of the asset portfolio at the time of its stock market debut was €110.52 million.

The Socimi made its stock market debut with a business plan that involved generating value from its portfolio, in other words, selling all of its homes within a 5-year period, ending in December 2020. The company has now initiated this divestment process with the sale of these first assets.

Al Breck’s strategy

Specifically, the company’s plan involves investing in improvements in homes “to increase their yields and increase their occupancy rates to stable levels, and then implementing an aggressive rental strategy that includes, where necessary, reducing the rents and making concessions to tenants to improve the cash flow conditions”.

Subsequently, according to the group’s IPO prospectus, “after improving the occupancy rate, the objective is to keep it stable and start to progressively increase the rents in accordance with the improvements made to the properties and market prices”.

Finally, the Socimi plans “to optimise the value of its portfolio by selling assets individually or in batches, when the demand and price so dictate, and once the minimum ownership term of three years has passed in each case”, according to the firm in its brochure.

In addition, the company launched a second Socimi, Ceres Real Estate Socimi, at the end of last year. Although for the time being, that entity’s activity has been very limited (it does not hold any assets in its portfolio), the sole administrator of the company is Rialto Capital.

This new Socimi is, in turn, the heir of Clearfield Invest, a firm constituted just over two months ago and whose administrators form part of the TMF Group’s team in Spain, a company specialising in the provision of services for all kinds of companies.

Original story: Eje Prime (by C. Pareja)

Translation: Carmel Drake