Deccan Chronicle

Abu Dhabi’s Adia eyes affordable housing

Sovereign wealth fund also keen on warehouses, tech hubs

- DINESH NAIR, JACK SIDDERS & NICOLAS PARASIE

The Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, one of the world's biggest property investors, is considerin­g changes to its real estate strategy after some of its major holdings suffered during the coronaviru­s pandemic, people with knowledge of the matter said.

The sovereign wealth fund is reviewing the performanc­e of its property assets following weakness in a number of the shopping malls and office buildings in its portfolio, according to the people, who asked not to be identified because the informatio­n is private. Adia may consider cutting its exposure to some troubled investment­s, the people said.

Adia has shifted in recent years to making more direct property investment­s and relying less on external managers. The stateowned investor has amassed just under $700 billion in assets, according to estimates from data provider Global SWF, and Adia has said real estate traditiona­lly accounts for about 5 to 10 per cent of that overall portfolio.

While Adia will continue to be a major player in property, it could shift its focus for future deals and increase exposure to areas like warehouses, life sciences properties, technology hubs and affordable housing, one of the people said.

Its investment­s in logistics sites in China through a partnershi­p with industrial real estate investor Prologis Inc are among those that performed well through the downturn, the person said. Adia bet on the UK affordable housing market in 2014 through an investment in Fizzy Living Ltd.

The fund has also been putting more resources into private equity investment­s, which have outperform­ed during the pandemic, the people said. The review is ongoing, and Adia hasn't made any final decisions on the changes it will make, the people said.

A representa­tive for Adia declined to comment.

Adia remains in search of new in-house expertise, including a global head of real estate, following a wave of senior departures.

Last year Tom Arnold, a former Cerberus Capital Management executive, left after more than a decade with the sovereign wealth fund.

Pascal Duhamel, the head of European real estate investment­s, and Anthony Bertoldi, acting head of real estate in Asia, also left the firm in the second half of 2020. Travel restrictio­ns have slowed Adia's efforts to recruit replacemen­ts for some positions, according to the people.

Pandemic shutdowns have hurt investors in the commercial real estate market since early 2020. Stay-at-home orders left shops empty and hit the payment of rents to owners of such properties. Offices have also lain dormant, with many companies now reassessin­g their real estate requiremen­ts in the light of work-from-home trend.

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