The National - News

THAI DEVELOPER SINGHA ESTATE HAS PLANS FOR GCC

▶ Company also signed a deal with UAE’s Jalboot to manage a luxury marina at a project in the Maldives

- SARAH TOWNSEND

A Bangkok real estate holding company, Singha Estate, plans to enter the Middle East over the next three to five years, particular­ly targeting the fast-growing tourism and hospitalit­y sector in the Arabian Gulf region, a company official said.

Singha Estate, which listed on the Stock Exchange of Thailand four years ago, has around 40 billion Thai baht (Dh4.43bn) of real estate assets across Thailand, the Maldives, Mauritius and the United Kingdom.

Its domestic portfolio comprises hotels, luxury residentia­l and commercial real estate, but its internatio­nal property is purely hospitalit­y related.

Singha’s global portfolio includes 26 Mercure-branded hotels across the UK, acquired in a joint venture with Fico Group for £155 million (Dh752.4m) in 2015, and six hotels in Thai- land, Mauritius, the Maldives and Fiji, acquired for $310m from Hawaii’s Outrigger Group last month.

“We see a lot of opportunit­ies for investment­s in the region, either through asset acquisitio­ns or joint ventures,” said Thiti Thongbenja­mas, the chief operating officer at the Maldives-based mixed-used project Crossroads that Singha Estate is jointly building with UAE conglomera­te Jalboot Holdings.

“Thailand and the UAE in particular have a lot of ties between them, in terms of trade links, direct flights and other synergies,” he told

The National this week. Singha Estate plans to double the size of its portfolio by 2022, Mr Thongbenja­mas said.

As part of its strategy, it intends to spin-off its hotel assets into a new hospitalit­y company next year and list that in Thailand to fund internatio­nal expansion plans, including in the Middle East.

Hospitalit­y is “the only sector we go outside our own country for” and the Middle East would be no different, Mr Thongbenja­mas, who was formerly the chief investment officer at Singha Estate, said.

He said the UAE as well as Bahrain and Oman, were his preferred destinatio­ns for investment in the GCC.

Hotels made up about 18 per cent of Singha’s total revenue of 5.86bn baht in 2017, the company said earlier this year.

Singha, in the meantime, is looking for Middle East partners to help it develop projects in the markets in which it already operates.

On Tuesday, it signed a deal with UAE-based Jalboot to manage a luxury marina at the Crossroads scheme in the island country Maldives.

The concession deal, the value of which has not been disclosed, will give Jalboot exclusive rights to operate the marina for a 10-year period from December this year when the developmen­t opens to the public.

Jalboot also has exclusive transporta­tion rights to carry visitors by boat across the whole Crossroads developmen­t – which spans nine islands and comprises 1,300 hotel rooms, more than 11,000 square metres of retail space, leisure and entertainm­ent, a diving centre and coral preservati­on centre, under the plans.

“The creative DNA of Jalboot and Singha Estate are very similar,” said Mohamed Roestali, chief executive of Jalboot. “Among our many similariti­es, Jalboot has trailblaze­d the creation of a water transport network in the UAE as well.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates