Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Capitaland, Xander vie for IT parks

- Reghu Balakrishn­an reghu.b@livemint.com

MUMBAI: Singapore-based leading real estate company Capitaland Ltd and global investment firm The Xander Group Inc. are the front runners to acquire Punebased IT Parks, which is owned by US fund The Blackstone Group, said two people aware of the developmen­t.

Blackstone has put its BlueRidge special economic zone (SEZ) and another IT SEZ in Hinjewadi area of Pune on sale, and hired Morgan Stanley to find a buyer. The deal will be in the range of Rs2,000 crore, said the first person. Others who have joined in the race include Shapoorji Pallonji-allianz and Singapore-based investor-developer Ascendas-singbridge. The 1.5-million-sq. ft Blueridge special economic zone (SEZ) was acquired from private equity fund manager IDFC Alternativ­es in 2014, while the other SEZ— jointly developed by DLF and Hubtown (erstwhile Ackruti City)—was acquired by Blackstone for Rs810 crore in 2011.

Capitaland, one of Asia’s largest real estate companies, owns and managed a global portfolio worth more than S$88 billion ($67 billion) as of 31 December 2017, comprising integrated developmen­ts, shopping malls, serviced residences, offices, homes, real estate investment trusts (REITS) and funds, according to the company website.

In India, Capitaland operates seven serviced residence properties in Bengaluru, Gurugram, Chennai and Ahmedabad while it owns two malls in Jalandhar and Nagpur.

In January, Capitaland had sold its stake in six malls across India to Bengaluru based developer Prestige Group for Rs324 crore. Prestige Group had acquired Capitaland’s stake in special purpose vehicles (SPVS) it had formed between two parties.

Similarly, global investment firm Xander Group Inc., which has invested around $2 billion in India’s real estate sector, has made multiple buyouts recently as part of expanding its commercial office portfolio in the country.

It had bought an office building of around 250,000 sq. ft at Embassy Golf Links Business Park in Bengaluru for Rs350 crore last month. In 2017, Xander group and Dutch pension fund asset manager APG Asset Management NV bought an informatio­n technology SEZ in south Chennai for around $350 million (Rs2,250 crore) from Shriram Properties. B. V. Bharadwaja, Group country head, India, Capitaland Internatio­nal said, “We are constantly on the lookout for opportunit­ies to expand our presence in India and will not comment on speculatio­n in the market.” Spokespers­ons at Black- stone, Morgan Stanley declined to comment while mails sent to Xander went unanswered. Though investors are keeping away from residentia­l real estate, offices remains a hot real estate investment destinatio­n in India.

In 2016, Canada-based Brookfield Asset Management Inc. had acquired 5 million sq ft of commercial property from the Hiranandan­i group for $1 billion (Rs6,500 crore), in one of the largest buyouts in commercial realty space. With the demand for office space increasing, the average office space to be absorbed in top Indian cities is expected to be at 40-45 million sq. ft per year until 2020, according to a Cushman & Wakefield 2017 report.

“Commercial office real estate is expected to see greater participat­ion of foreign institutio­nal investors as they continue to pick up leased and under-constructi­on assets in India,” said the report - Commercial Office Real Estate: Positive Disruption­s- Beacons of Change.

The investment scenario is now marked by a combinatio­n of sovereign/pension funds with a long-term investment focus, along with private equity funds that have a typical 7-8 years investment horizon. This is leading to a marked shift in ownership pattern with institutio­nal investors now being amongst some of the largest owners of office assets, it added.

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