Private investors competing for commercial realty in India
India’s services-led economy, which is the fastest growing in the world, has created a steady market for income-generating commercial real estate, giving private investors a chance to list these assets through real estate investment trusts (REITs). These trusts are listed entities holding income-generating real estate assets from which earnings are distributed to shareholders.
To help real estate and infrastructure developers list their rent-yielding assets as well as provide large and small stock market investors with an inflation-indexed product, the Stock Exchange Board of India, Sebi also came out with REIT guidelines two years ago. In order To further enhance the optimism in the commercial real estate market, The Union government has also recently given tax clarity in setting up REITs, as sought by global investors.
Bulge-bracket investors like Blackstone, Qatar Investment Authority, Goldman Sachs and GIC of Singapore are some of the institutional investors who have been increasing the volume of their Indian office space portfolio in recent years.
Brookfield Asset Management, one of the world’s largest property and infrastructure investors, is just a few days away from owning the commercial real estate assets of Hiranandani Developers in Powai near Mumbai for approximately Rs 6,700 crore). In the transaction, the company will buy the 4.5 million-sq-ft business park, making it the single largest commercial property acquisition in the country.
This deal would outdo Qatar-backed RMZ Corp’s recent acquisition of Equinox Business Park from Essar for Rs 2,400 crore in Bandra-Kurla Complex as the largest MA in the country’s commercial real estate market. Brookfield’s acquisition of the AIM-listed Unitech Corporate Parks for over Rs 2,000 crore in 2014 was another big transaction. The Hiranandani deal would see Brookfield competing with Blackstone Group, the most aggressive buyer of Indian office properties until now, for a bigger share of the 400 million sqft grade-An office space in India.
After acquiring Unitech Corporate Parks and Gammon’s road and power assets, Brookfield pipped other potential suitors (Canadian Pension Plan Investment Board and Blackstone) with an aggressive offer to chase down its third Indian buyout deal with the Hiranandani transaction.
With Unitech Corporate Parks 11million sq ft of leased office space and a potential to develop 6 million sq ft more, The Hiranandani deal will take Brookfield’s portfolio to over 21 million sqft. Blackstone, through joint ventures and fully owned subsidiaries, already has a 50 million sqft portfolio of office space in the country.
No Responses