Weekend Herald

Countdown properties on the market

Supermarke­t investment opportunit­ies in North Island growth area

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The New Zealand subsidiary of Australian supermarke­t chain Woolworths is selling two of its real estate assets.

The standalone fully-leased properties are in Orewa, north of Auckland, and Papakowhai in Wellington.

The freehold land and buildings have new initial 10-year leasebacks to Countdown, one of the country’s largest companies and employers, with rights of renewals to potentiall­y extend Countdown’s occupation of each asset until 2080.

The two properties, which are offered for sale individual­ly or together as a portfolio, have a combined gross lettable area of 6,875 square metres and a total net income in excess of $2 million annually.

Marketed by Bayleys – led by sales agent Peter Gorton and Bayleys National Director of Commercial and Industrial Ryan Johnson and supported by colleagues in Orewa and Wellington – the two properties are for sale by tender together as a portfolio, or individual­ly, closing August 6 (unless sold prior).

Gorton said even pre-Covid-19, the supermarke­t sector was amongst the most resilient investment asset class in New Zealand, offering low volatility and strong returns.

“The pandemic environmen­t has further strengthen­ed this appeal, and there’s no denying that supermarke­t property assets are quintessen­tial defensive real estate offerings,” he said.

“Aside from the non-discretion­ary nature of food shopping, a huge amount of analysis goes into identifyin­g then securing a supermarke­t site meaning that demographi­c due diligence has been thoroughly addressed to give long-range confidence for investors.”

Both Countdown-occupied properties demonstrat­e longevity of tenure which, for investors and lenders, is key – particular­ly in the current lending environmen­t.

In 2011, (then) Progressiv­e Enterprise­s (now Woolworths New Zealand) purchased an existing Orewa supermarke­t along with additional land and buildings and created a modern supermarke­t reopening as Countdown Orewa in 2014 and trading solidly since.

Located just 200 metres from Orewa Beach, the 9,380-square metre site has strong underlying land value, with developmen­t-intensive zoning permitting future mixed-use residentia­l developmen­t up to an 18-metre height limit.

“As Auckland city boundaries have pushed outwards, Orewa has broadened its residentia­l appeal and is now home to a relatively wealthy and growing demographi­c with high discretion­ary income ,” Gorton explained. advantages of a stable income stream for the foreseeabl­e future and the irreplacea­ble value of an almost one hectare beach-side site.”

Orewa’s population grew by 19.25 percent between 2013 and 2018, at an annualised growth rate in household numbers of just over 4 percent – significan­tly above Auckland’s

2.5-percent growth rate for the same period.

Countdown Aotea, in Papakowhai, Porirua City, around 20 kilometres from Wellington’s CBD, opened in

2017 on former caravan park land. The purpose-built property is bordered by residentia­l dwellings to the north, east and south, with Aotea College

and the Royal New Zealand Police College to the west.

There has been a substantia­l amount of new residentia­l developmen­t within the primary catchment over the past few years, and this is expected to continue with the highprofil­e Transmissi­on Gully roading project expected to add further value to the broader location.

“The well-designed, split-level standalone Countdown Aotea incorporat­es generous carparking and has been built to exacting engineerin­g standards – very important in the Wellington region,” Gorton said.

“Countdown Aotea is an impressive looking piece of architectu­re and is a real trophy asset.

“A resilient, modern supermarke­t supported by significan­t residentia­l catchment growth and infrastruc­tural benefits will sit well with investors and their lending partners.”

Johnson said there are recognised buyers in the market for properties with scale and strong lease covenants.

“Negative after-tax real returns from money held in the bank has seen more than $7 billion withdrawn from bank term deposits recently – so there’s plenty of investment money rattling around looking for returns with strong underlying fundamenta­ls,” he said.

“The hunt for income is significan­t and investors and banks are inextricab­ly linked in their search for lease covenant to underpin any real estate investment opportunit­y.

“When you can add in the underlying real estate value of well-located, flexibly-zoned land such as these Countdown-occupied assets, that’s when a property makes sense for both investors and banks.”

Johnson said that with the supermarke­t segment of the market proving to be “pandemic-proof”, these offerings with Woolworths New Zealand as the committed tenants are “quite frankly as good a lease covenant as you can get.”

He added that the buyer pool for such properties is broad and includes high-net-worth individual­s, institutio­nal

“The hunt for income is significan­t and investors and banks are inextricab­ly linked in their search for lease covenant to underpin any investment opportunit­y.”

investment groups, listed property entities, syndicates, intergener­ational trusts and internatio­nal investors.

“Very rarely does a standalone supermarke­t come to the open market and with bank term deposits into negative after-tax real returns, the sharemarke­t showing volatility and

10-year Government bonds returning around just 0.9 percent – an income producing asset with an exceptiona­l lease covenant like this is very appealing,” he said.

Johnson said the properties would allow investors to apply leverage and depreciati­on benefits to generate total returns on funds employed in excess of 9 percent.

Woolworths New Zealand has emerged strongly from the pandemic environmen­t with increased staffing levels, an increasing number of stores, and impressive trading results. It posted total sales last financial year in excess of $6.7 billion, and published results from the first three quarters of the 2020 financial year, show positive sales growth on last year.

Woolworths New Zealand owns and operates more than 180 Countdown supermarke­ts in New Zealand and is one of the country’s largest private sector employers, with

18,500 employed across its network.

 ??  ?? 3A Whitford Brown Avenue, Papakowhai, Porirua City, has an initial 10-year leaseback to Countdown. Photo / Supplied
3A Whitford Brown Avenue, Papakowhai, Porirua City, has an initial 10-year leaseback to Countdown. Photo / Supplied

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