Cape Times

Attacq and Hyprop to dispose of the rest of Africa assets

- ROY COKAYNE roy.cokayne@inl.co.za

LISTED property funds Attacq and Hyprop and unlisted Atterbury Property plan to dispose of a portfolio of six operationa­l retail malls in major African cities with a gross asset value of $637.1 million (R9.5 billion).

Growthpoin­t Investec African Properties (Giap), one of the new funds management businesses created by listed Growthpoin­t Properties, has emerged as a potential purchaser of some of the malls, or even the entire portfolio.

The retail assets are largely held in AttAfrica, a Mauritius-based property investment company, and comprise four malls in Ghana and another in Zambia plus the Ikeja City Mall in Lagos, Nigeria, that was jointly owned by Attacq and Hyprop.

Jackie van Niekerk, the chief operating officer of Attacq, confirmed last week that Attacq and its co-shareholde­rs were investigat­ing options to create liquidity in the portfolio.

Van Niekerk subsequent­ly told Business Report that Attacq definitely wanted to exit from the rest of Africa, excluding South Africa, and would not be putting any more funding into building new opportunit­ies on the continent.

Hyprop earlier this year also indicated it wanted to exit from the rest of Africa, because it saw more opportunit­ies for expansion and acquisitio­ns in Eastern Europe.

Van Niekerk was guarded in her response to whether any discussion­s had taken place with Giap about its possible acquisitio­n of the portfolio.

“There are no firm offers or anything like that. It’s a small market and there are not a lot of suitors. They (Giap) are potentiall­y one of the suitors that could potentiall­y take up the assets in future,” she said.

Attempts to obtain comment from Growthpoin­t chief executive Norbert Sasse were unsuccessf­ul.

Peter de Villiers, the chief investment officer at Attacq, said the shareholde­rs in AttAfrica had always planned to monetise the assets in 2020, pay off any debt and go their separate ways.

De Villiers said that from a tax perspectiv­e Attacq knew it could use the funds better for its developmen­t pipeline and to reduce its interest-bearing debt, adding that Giap was new, had its funding secured and had a multi-asset focus.

“We have some quality retail developmen­ts in Africa that could fit nicely in their portfolio,” he said.

Sasse said last month that Growthpoin­t had only closed Giap at the end of March (this) year when it received the final commitment­s. It comprises $212m of commitment­s, including $50m from Growthpoin­t.

Sasse admitted that it was a struggle to find investors prepared to commit to investing in Africa after the demise of many of the economies following the oil and commodity crisis.

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