More than 5.5 billion euros was invested in wealth funds

June 26, 2014 | 18:18
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Top sovereign wealth funds increase spend on European real estate by 30 per cent to 5.5 billion euros in 2013, according to a survey done recently by international real estate advisor Savills.


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Done in Europe's key markets of Belgium, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, Poland, Spain, Sweden and the UK, the survey found out that Sovereign Wealth Funds (SWFs) increased their activity in 2013 and now account for total investment volumes of 5.5 billion euros of deals in those markets compared to 4.2 billion euros in 2012, representing a year-on-year increase of 30 per cent.

The research analyses capital flows and identifies the preferred asset types, average deal sizes and destination markets of the different investor groups.

Savills notes that the top SWFs identified by the report comprise of five funds from the Middle East and Asia Pacific and the average deal size per investor group during this period was 700 million euros, up on 247 million euros in 2012, with two of their nine transactions being portfolios, according to the data.

Going forward Savills expects SWFs to record similar investment volumes in 2014, albeit coming partly from new countries.

According to Marcus Lemli, head of European investment at Savills, SWF tend to favour low risk, core assets and will usually only target investments of at least 200 million euros, which limits the markets in which they are active due to lack of suitable stock.

“However, we have seen this investor type broaden its investment spectrum looking for value in non-core deals as well as smaller lot sizes. In addition, a greater number of players are entering real estate investment,” Lemli said.

Overall the survey reveals that investment managers have the strongest presence across the markets surveyed in 2013 with domestic and international investment managers present in the top 10 of all countries monitored, particularly in the Netherlands and Germany.

In these countries they represent six of the 10 largest investors by volume in this period. In contrast, Savills research highlights that Sweden and Belgium are dominated by insurance and pension funds, usually domestic, with five of Sweden’s top investors by volume falling into this category, and three in Belgium.

This investor group tends to focus on office assets according to the analysis and, as they are usually domestic investors with local knowledge, their purchases are not restricted to tier one market. The average deal size for this group of buyers is recorded at 80 million euros.

According to Savills, private buyers invested approximately 1.3 billion euros in 2013. This represents slightly more than 3.5 per cent of the total investment volume in Europe during this period making them one of the biggest European investor groups. The remaining large-scale buyer types identified in the analysis include REITs, property companies, investment banks and corporate investors.

Going forward, with the improving economy and leasing market outlook, Savills predicts that all the top investor types with the exception of private investors, will become less risk averse and opportunistic investments will rise.

The firm believes buyers will become increasingly willing to consider opportunities in European fringe markets and secondary assets across the region.

By By Bich Ngoc

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