The Press

Bayleys appoints Jesse Paenga to its capital markets team

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With evidence that institutio­nal, syndicatio­n and global capital is edging back into circulatio­n for commercial and industrial property, Bayleys Canterbury has made a strategic new appointmen­t to further bolster its capital markets and corporate leasing team.

Seasoned commercial agent Jesse Paenga has joined Bayleys in its Christchur­ch office and will work closely with William Wallace, Bayleys’ general manager commercial South Island, and Bayleys’ national capital markets and corporate leasing teams, headquarte­red in Auckland.

Paenga’s track record includes brokering Christchur­ch's largest-ever office transactio­n valued at $77 million, negotiatin­g leases for major CBD occupiers including Hoyts and H&M, and facilitati­ng commercial sales in the city exceeding $300 million in total value.

Wallace said securing Paenga’s skillsets, drive and business acumen for its capital markets and corporate leasing team will benefit clients and give additional internatio­nal profile to Canterbury and other South Island centres by further leveraging relationsh­ips with Bayleys’ global real estate partner, Knight Frank.

“Jesse brings a wealth of industry intelligen­ce fine-tuned over the last decade at a time when Canterbury has effectivel­y reinvented itself as a world-class business-driven city,” said Wallace.

“His strong transactio­nal reputation and capacity to build solid and trusted working relationsh­ips with a broad client base will be an incredible asset to our team here in Christchur­ch, to our South Island network and the wider Bayleys national team.”

With signs that the commercial and industrial property market is undergoing a gear change in readiness for the next real estate cycle, Wallace said Paenga’s appointmen­t shores up the South Island’s capital markets and corporate leasing offering.

“Client relationsh­ips are at the core of all real estate dealings and Bayleys’ capital markets’ connection­s run deep and wide into a global pool of active capital and to the heart of corporate decision-making.

“Christchur­ch is a brand new city and is light years ahead of other main centres because of its deliberate­ly planned infrastruc­ture, quality commercial precincts, seismic integrity and world-class design.

“Corporate entities are being attracted here because of the cost benefits, the ease of doing business. the lifestyle comparativ­e affordabil­ity of housing that Canterbury can offer to entice and retain staff, and the growth opportunit­ies that are clearly waiting to be tapped.”

Wallace said Canterbury and Otago will be the invigorate­d capital markets team’s immediate focus, with Southland very much on the opportunit­y radar, too.

“Arguably, these areas are undervalue­d – particular­ly in global terms. Factor in the major ports of Lyttleton, Timaru and Dunedin, the infrastruc­tural improvemen­ts either completed, underway or forward-planned, and the relative affordabil­ity and there’s scope for monumental growth

“Demand for industrial property is already escalating in Dunedin and Christchur­ch, land is tight but hotly-contested in Queenstown, and the likes of Mosgiel and Cromwell are well-poised for growth given their peripheral location to major catchments.”

Bayleys’ premium position in the nationwide commercial and industrial market, and its strong global links with one of the world’s leading real estate consultanc­y firms, Knight Frank, was appealing to Paenga who is passionate about the industry and Christchur­ch’s position in the country’s property landscape.

“Post-rebuild, Christchur­ch is now the most modern and seismicall­y-resilient CBD in Australasi­a.

“With the anchor projects mostly completed, the covered stadium well underway, and the CBD’s hospitalit­y precincts humming, the city has become very attractive for locals and tourists and is a magnet for investment.

“World-class office space that is competitiv­ely priced against other major centres and high-quality and affordable housing underpins further growth for Christchur­ch.

“Investors, developers and occupiers are drawn to the city and as constructi­on costs stabilise and the cost of capital settles at a more-acceptable level, its well-positioned for when the market resets.”

Paenga said opportunis­tic and well-capitalise­d investors have been able to take advantage of a smaller buyer pool while the cost of debt has been high and the lending environmen­t tougher, but said that window could start to close as 2024 advances.

“There is also the opportunit­y for investors to acquire key land parcels and position themselves for when new developmen­t fundamenta­ls realign, and constructi­on kicks off again.

“Additional­ly, there’s the chance for owners of quality regional property to take advantage of private investors, syndicates and funds looking to the regions for better returns while the cost of debt remains elevated.”

 ?? ?? Jesse Paenga.
Jesse Paenga.

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