Corona Capital: Amazon, NYC and Trump 14 Sep 2020 Concise views on the pandemic’s corporate and financial fallout: Amazon’s hiring boom highlights its weakness, and U.S. President Donald Trump could throw New York City a bone.
E-commerce is a life raft for sinking real estate 10 Sep 2020 The surge in digital sales from the likes of Walmart, Target and Amazon is driving up demand for warehouses. No wonder mall owner Simon is after the likes of J.C. Penney. Creating a fall back plan to turn malls into industrial space with higher rents has a decent payoff.
Apollo and Abu Dhabi scratch each other’s backs 2 Sep 2020 A consortium led by the private equity titan has struck a $2.7 billion deal for a 49% stake in a real estate company held by the emirate’s energy group ADNOC. Apollo-linked insurers snap up long-term secure assets. Abu Dhabi gets a cash injection from selling the family silver.
Home working will delay not kill office recovery 26 Aug 2020 Some big firms have declared remote working to be new normal. Such fervour is making big city property a buyers’ market, with shorter and cheaper leases and less new construction. But there are still good reasons to work in offices – more spacious ones than in pre-Covid days.
Hong Kong skyscrapers will scale new heights again 26 Aug 2020 Take the world’s priciest offices. Add the highest vacancy rate in 14 years, geopolitical tension, a weak economy and a broad work-from-home movement. It’s no wonder owners of IFC and other towers have suffered market slumps. There are good reasons, however, to expect a rebound.
China Evergrande pawns the family silver 17 Aug 2020 The country’s largest developer is again taking a quirky approach to a trend. As rivals float property management arms, Evergrande sold 28% of its own to 14 investors at a $10.7 bln valuation. They have a put option if there’s no IPO, but boss Hui Ka Yan now has options too.
New York City real estate bites 13 Aug 2020 Sure, Facebook just signed a lease in Manhattan but other businesses are scrambling to renegotiate contracts and residential vacancies have hit records. The Big Apple has proved incredibly resilient. But investors think New York is in for it. This time they could be right.
Realtor IPO overcharges for Chinese housing 13 Aug 2020 Tencent-backed KE’s U.S. debut could value it at $23 bln. Home sales in China are recovering on easier credit, and the company is growing fast. It’s an online play on a sector that has consistently proven sceptics wrong. The price, however, may cause buyers’ remorse.
Corona Capital: Telemedicine, Outdated movie rules 10 Aug 2020 Concise views on the pandemic’s corporate and financial fallout: Men’s wellness outfit Hims matches the online medical consultation trend with a financial one, namely blank-check companies; and Washington finally scraps a “Gone with the Wind”-era regulation.
Hammerson asks investors to catch a falling knife 6 Aug 2020 The UK mall operator will raise 825 mln pounds through a deeply discounted rights issue and sale. That should keep debt under control. However, the group must still sell assets when Covid-19 and online shopping are hurting stores and property values remain in flux.
Corona Capital: College mergers, UK property funds 3 Aug 2020 Concise views on the pandemic’s corporate and financial fallout: M&A goes to the University of Arizona; Britain’s financial watchdog considers stopping property fund withdrawals.
Investors lead the rush back into India’s offices 28 Jul 2020 Singapore’s state funds are top investors in the IPO of Blackstone-backed Mindspace, a $2 bln real estate investment trust. Work-from-home woes will prop up property demand as developers face a liquidity squeeze. The high yields on offer are a strong pull as interest rates fall.
Corona Capital: Disney/“Hamilton”, U.S. housing 6 Jul 2020 Concise views on the pandemic’s corporate and financial fallout: “Hamilton” reinvigorates Walt Disney’s digital-download challenge, and America’s stay-at-home rules may mean there’s pent-up demand for real estate and home improvement.
Corona Capital: U.S. recovery, Small-business aid 30 Jun 2020 Concise views on the pandemic’s corporate and financial fallout: White House virus adviser Anthony Fauci’s estimate that U.S. cases could breach 100,000 a day is bad news for the economy. Plus: Uncle Sam’s loan program for small businesses comes to an end with money in the bank.
Corona Capital: Carnival, Cheap funds, Salmon 18 Jun 2020 Concise views on the pandemic’s corporate and financial fallout: What lies on the horizon for the cruise operator; locking in cheap financing; and a fishy tale of coronavirus-related swings in demand.
Corona Capital: Make infrastructure great again 10 Jun 2020 Concise views on the pandemic’s corporate and financial fallout: Brookfield Asset Management CEO Bruce Flatt reckons national and local governments will start getting investors to help finance new roads, bridges and the like. That’s one way to plug deficits wrought by Covid-19.
Europe’s frenzied mall openings hide harsh reality 3 Jun 2020 Shares in landlords like Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield and Klepierre jumped after they reopened shopping centres. Queues outside IKEA suggest pent-up demand. But fewer shoppers and shorter visits will mean lower retail rents. Investors appear to be pricing in a 50% decline.
West End foray breathes life into UK property M&A 1 Jun 2020 Capco, owner of much of London’s upmarket Covent Garden district, has bought a 26% stake in $2.4 bln Shaftesbury, which manages large swathes of the trendy Soho area. A merger could follow. The risky punt shows UK landlords are starting to think about life after the pandemic.
Corona Capital: Tech diversity, CNN’s middle age 1 Jun 2020 Concise views on the pandemic’s corporate and financial fallout: As big U.S. technology companies’ CEOs speak out about racial inequality, working from home trends could give them a chance to make a real difference; and 24/7 news network CNN feasts on Covid-19 as it turns 40.
Mall-to-retailer relationships will get creative 29 May 2020 Brookfield Asset Management launched a $5 bln fund to invest directly in retailers. It’s an effort to salvage some of the Canadian mall owner’s top customers. As Neiman Marcus and J.C. Penney march into bankruptcy, other real estate owners will rethink traditional rents, too.