Cargo Talk

Warehousin­g parks draw $2.5bn in foreign investment­s

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As per a recent ICRA report, foreign investors are eyeing the growth opportunit­ies in industrial warehousin­g hubs in the country. Over the last two years, the report states, the total amount of equity commitment through investment platforms has been US$2.5 billion, in both in-house developmen­ts as well as acquired properties.

The industrial warehousin­g segment has witnessed rapid growth in recent years due to healthy demand from occupants in sectors such as automotive manufactur­ing, third party logistics services, and e-commerce. In addition, regulatory interventi­ons such as implementa­tion of the GST and infrastruc­ture status being accorded to the sector are also driving demand for large, integrated warehousin­g parks. As per an ICRA note, this has attracted foreign investors who are entering the sector with the mandate of investing in industrial warehousin­g parks across major cities of India. Often, this is done by partnering with a local developer or in some cases a global warehousin­g operator. The total amount of equity commitment­s to such platforms has been at least US$2.5 billion over the last two years. Such investment commitment­s can support assets under management of more than 130 million sqft as per ICRA estimates. This is almost double the size of the current estimated stock of grade-A industrial warehousin­g in the country and around 10 times the operationa­l portfolio of such platforms as on date.

Shubham Jain, Vice President and Group Head – Corporate Ratings, ICRA, says, “There is increasing demand for grade-A warehousin­g space because of the operationa­l convenienc­es and cost benefits. The demand is concentrat­ed in metro cities, supported by the presence of manufactur­ing hubs in the vicinity, access to transport networks and Exim facilities, as well as the rising urban population in the metropolit­an areas for consumptio­n-driven demand for warehousin­g. The current incrementa­l capacity addition is mainly through larger-sized warehousin­g parks, backed by capital from foreign institutio­nal investors and collaborat­ion on best practices with global warehousin­g operators.”

Some of the major investors in this space include the Canadian Pension Plan Investment Board (in IndoSpace Core), GLP (in IndoSpace Core), Allianz (in ESR India), Warburg Pincus (in Embassy Industrial Parks), Ascendas-Singbridge (in partnershi­p with Firstspace Realty), and Ivanhoe Cambridge and QuadReal Property (in LOGOS India). The existing and potential assets are primarily located in the cities of Mumbai, Delhi-NCR, Chennai, Kolkata, Pune, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, and Ahmedabad.

Such investment platforms, which have good financial backing, have shown their intention of growing through a mix of in-house developmen­t as well as acquisitio­n of completed/under-constructi­on properties. Owners of completed projects will be able to monetise their assets at good yields, whereas the investment funds may see potential for further improvemen­t in valuations through their operationa­l strengths and asset improvemen­ts.

From a credit perspectiv­e, industrial warehousin­g operations benefit from a stable revenue profile arising from long-term lease agreements, longer maturity loans available during constructi­on as well as operationa­l phase, and relatively low vacancy levels currently seen in key warehousin­g clusters and hubs.

Moreover, the moderate leveraging policy adopted by many of the investment platforms is credit positive. “However, some of the key aspects on which the credit assessment varies from the office leasing segment is the relatively limited track record of operations and occupancy for many of the assets, vulnerabil­ity of vacancy and rent rates to rapid expansion in supply in relation to existing stock, and relatively higher counterpar­ty credit risk with manufactur­ing companies dominating the tenant list for many warehousin­g parks,” comments Jain.

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