Cape Times

Waterfall drives Attacq

- Roy Cokayne

ATTACQ, the listed capital-growth property company that is developing, owns and manages the Waterfall developmen­t in Midrand, continues to receive strong demand for business space in the precinct.

Morne Wilken, the chief executive of Attacq, said yesterday that four buildings had been completed in Waterfall in the past six months to increase the total directly held portfolio to 694 770m² of primary gross lettable area. These buildings had increased Attacq’s total directly held primary gross lettable area in Waterfall by 70 424m².

Wilken said Attacq had received inquiries for more than 298 000m² of business space in Waterfall, including 172 000m² of light industrial space.

He said after Attacq’s interim period to December, an agreement had been concluded for a 32 000m² regional distributi­on centre for a highly respected global brand. “More announceme­nts in this regard will follow soon,” he said.

“Waterfall is our core developmen­t and is a catalyst for regional growth in Gauteng. We are very positive about the way ahead.

“We are in the unique position that, in time to come, Waterfall will be a city that is developed, owned and managed by a single company, Attacq,” he said.

Attacq’s portfolio comprises 58 percent retail properties, and Wilken reported that all its regional malls across South Africa were performing well.

He said in the six months to December, its four retail properties in Stellenbos­ch had been consolidat­ed into the centrally located Eikestad Precinct, in which joint-venture partner Key Capital Property owned 20 percent.

Attacq has also invested directly in property in Africa and in central and eastern Europe, and has invested in listed MAS Real Estate.

Wilken said Attacq’s investment­s outside South Africa were negatively impacted in the six months to December by the strengthen­ing of the rand.

Attacq, which strives to deliver longer-term capital growth to investors, yesterday reported that it had a total asset value of R27.1bn in December.

Since inception until December, it had achieved a compound annual growth rate of 27.7percent for net asset value a share adjusted for tax.

The company’s adjusted net asset value a share decreased by 1.7 percent year on year to R21.35 in December from R21.72 in the previous correspond­ing period, largely because of the strengthen­ing of the rand and internatio­nal market fluctuatio­ns.

Wilken said the value of the rand, coupled with the uncertaint­y caused by the Brexit vote in the UK and the Trump presidency in the US, would have an impact on Attacq’s offshore markets in the short term.

Shares in Attacq fell 1.74 percent yesterday to close at R18.08.

 ?? PHOTO: SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI ?? Attacq has received inquiries for more than 298 000m² of business space in its Waterfall developmen­t in Midrand.
PHOTO: SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI Attacq has received inquiries for more than 298 000m² of business space in its Waterfall developmen­t in Midrand.
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