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ffi fi fl Foreign Investors Pile Into U.S. Student THE SCION ...€¦ · 2/28/2018 Foreign...

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MARKETS PROPERTY REPORT F oreign Investors Pile Into U.S. Student H ousing Buyers seek alternatives as the bull market in the commercial real-estate market gets long in the tooth | Foreign investors once ocked to trophy real-estate assets in the U.S. such as fancy hotels and sky-high towers. Now, as the commercial real-estate market enters the late innings of a bull market, foreigners are diving into a less exotic sector: student housing. In January, a joint venture between the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, Singapore sovereign-wealth fund GIC, and Chicago-based student housing owner Scion Group announced that it acquired a portfolio of 22 student housing properties for $1 billion. All told, the venture has purchased more than $4 billion of student housing totaling 46,555 beds in 52 university markets since 2016. Also last month, Mapletree Investments Pte, owned by Singapore state investor Temasek Holdings, bought Cira Centre South, an 850-bed student housing high-rise facility in Philadelphia, for $197.5 million. That added to its portfolio of 17 student housing holdings of more than 11,000 beds in the U.S. “It’s an asset class like social infrastructure,” said Christopher Merrill, co-founder, president and chief executive ocer of Harrison Street Real Estate Capital, a privately held rm that sold the $1 billion student housing portfolio last month to the joint venture that included Scion Group. “People will attend universities in good and bad times.” During the early stages of the bull market for commercial property, foreign investors loaded up on iconic assets such as the Waldorf Astoria hotel and One Chase Manhattan Plaza in New York. But with the expansion in its eighth year and interest rates poised to rise, some foreign investors are seeking safer territory. They say the anti-cyclical nature of student housing and the modernization of these facilities and operations oers attractive yields relative to the risk. In all, foreign capital has accounted for 42% of student-housing transactions so far this year, compared with 36% in all of 2017 and 21% in 2016, according to data from property investment advisory rm ARA Newmark. Feb. 27, 2018 800 a.m. ET By Esther Fung Ryan Lang, executive managing director at ARA Newmark and head of its national student housing group, said he has handled transactions with overseas family oces, institutional investors and private capital including from China, Russia, the Netherlands and the Middle East. He said they are looking to diversify their holdings and added that student housing is seen as a safer alternative at this point in the cycle. While overall college enrollment in the U.S. has been decreasing since 2010, enrollment in public universities is growing. Residences located near the campuses of big, tier-one state schools such as the University of Texas, and colleges with strong science, technology, engineering and math programs as well as high-prole sports teams are highly sought after. “Public institutions get a lot of attention,” said Mr. Lang. The sector isn’t without risks. There is a higher attrition rate in student housing than in multifamily real-estate investment, and missteps in leasing could cause rooms to be empty for a semester or even an entire academic year. But students’ strong preference to be as close as possible to school keeps demand strong. What’s more, an anity among foreign investors with U.S. colleges from personal experience or though family and friends gives the sector a leg up over other niche real estate categories such as manufactured housing. “The international capital ows are consistent with many investment managers’ personal experience,” said Avi Lewittes, chief investment ocer at The Scion Group LLC. “There’s an extra degree of comfort and familiarity [with student housing].” For traditional investors such as student housing REITs like Education Realty Trust Inc. and American Campus Communities Inc., the wave of deep-pocketed foreign investors makes it tough to match their previous returns, said Ryan Burke and Ryan Lumb, analysts at real-estate research rm Green Street Advisors in a research note. “Greater competition brings acquisitions at higher valuations, developments at lower yields, and less of a competitive advantage on operations relative to the past,” said the analysts. Write to Esther Fung at [email protected] Meanwhile, Safanad Ltd, an investment rm with oces in Dubai, London and New York, on Jan. 30 invested $69.5 million in a pair of student housing buildings in Hyattsville, Md., bringing its U.S. student housing portfolio to around 11,000 beds valued at $800 million.
Transcript

2/28/2018 Foreign Investors Pile Into U.S. Student Housing - WSJ

https://www.wsj.com/articles/foreign-investors-pile-into-u-s-student-housing-1519736401 1/1

Foreign investors once flocked to trophy real-estate assets in the U.S. such as fancy hotels andsky-high towers.

Now, as the commercial real-estate market enters the late innings of a bull market, foreignersare diving into a less exotic sector: student housing.

In January, a joint venture between the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, Singaporesovereign-wealth fund GIC, and Chicago-based student housing owner Scion Group announcedthat it acquired a portfolio of 22 student housing properties for $1 billion. All told, the venturehas purchased more than $4 billion of student housing totaling 46,555 beds in 52 universitymarkets since 2016.

Also last month, Mapletree Investments Pte, owned by Singapore state investor TemasekHoldings, bought Cira Centre South, an 850-bed student housing high-rise facility inPhiladelphia, for $197.5 million. That added to its portfolio of 17 student housing holdings ofmore than 11,000 beds in the U.S.

Meanwhile, Safanad Ltd, an investment firm with offices in Dubai, London and New York,on Jan. 30 invested $69.5 million in a pair of student housing buildings in Hyattsville, Md.,bringing its U.S. student housing portfolio to around 11,000 beds valued at $800 million.

“It’s an asset class like social infrastructure,” said Christopher Merrill, co-founder, presidentand chief executive officer of Harrison Street Real Estate Capital, a privately held firm that soldthe $1 billion student housing portfolio last month to the joint venture that included ScionGroup. “People will attend universities in good and bad times.”

During the early stages of the bull market for commercial property, foreign investors loaded upon iconic assets such as the Waldorf Astoria hotel and One Chase Manhattan Plaza in New York.But with the expansion in its eighth year and interest rates poised to rise, some foreigninvestors are seeking safer territory. They say the anti-cyclical nature of student housing andthe modernization of these facilities and operations offers attractive yields relative to the risk.

In all, foreign capital has accounted for 42% of student-housing transactions so far this year,compared with 36% in all of 2017 and 21% in 2016, according to data from property investmentadvisory firm ARA Newmark.

Ryan Lang, executive managing director at ARA Newmark and head of its national studenthousing group, said he has handled transactions with overseas family offices, institutionalinvestors and private capital including from China, Russia, the Netherlands and the MiddleEast. He said they are looking to diversify their holdings and added that student housing is seenas a safer alternative at this point in the cycle.

While overall college enrollment in the U.S. has been decreasing since 2010, enrollment inpublic universities is growing. Residences located near the campuses of big, tier-one stateschools such as the University of Texas, and colleges with strong science, technology,engineering and math programs as well as high-profile sports teams are highly sought after.

“Public institutions get a lot of attention,” said Mr. Lang.

The sector isn’t without risks. There is a higher attrition rate in student housing than inmultifamily real-estate investment, and missteps in leasing could cause rooms to be empty for asemester or even an entire academic year.

But students’ strong preference to be as close as possible to school keeps demand strong.What’s more, an affinity among foreign investors with U.S. colleges from personal experience orthough family and friends gives the sector a leg up over other niche real estate categories suchas manufactured housing.

“The international capital flows are consistent with many investment managers’ personalexperience,” said Avi Lewittes, chief investment officer at The Scion Group LLC. “There’s anextra degree of comfort and familiarity [with student housing].”

For traditional investors such as student housing REITs like Education Realty Trust Inc. andAmerican Campus Communities Inc., the wave of deep-pocketed foreign investors makes ittough to match their previous returns, said Ryan Burke and Ryan Lumb, analysts at real-estateresearch firm Green Street Advisors in a research note.

“Greater competition brings acquisitions at higher valuations, developments at lower yields,and less of a competitive advantage on operations relative to the past,” said the analysts.

Write to Esther Fung at [email protected]

DOW JONES, A NEWS CORP COMPANY

DJIA Futures 25449 0.08% ▲ S&P 500 F 2749.50 0.07% ▲ Stoxx 600 381.02 -0.35% ▼ U.S. 10 Yr 2�32 Yield 2.889% ▲ Crude Oil 62.96 -0.08% ▼ Euro 1.2220 -0.11% ▼

This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers visithttp://www.djreprints.com.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/foreign-investors-pile-into-u-s-student-housing-1519736401

Copyright ©2017 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved

This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers visithttp://www.djreprints.com.

MARKETS PROPERTY REPORT

Foreign Investors Pile Into U.S. Student

HousingBuyers seek alternatives as the bull market in the commercial real-estate market gets long in the tooth

|

This student housing in Austin, Texas, home of the University of Texas, was part of a portfolio bought by a joint venture thatincludes the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, Singapore sovereign-wealth fund GIC, and Chicago-based Scion Group.PHOTO: THE SCION GROUP

Feb. 27, 2018 8�00 a.m. ET

By Esther Fung

2/28/2018 Foreign Investors Pile Into U.S. Student Housing - WSJ

https://www.wsj.com/articles/foreign-investors-pile-into-u-s-student-housing-1519736401 1/1

Foreign investors once flocked to trophy real-estate assets in the U.S. such as fancy hotels andsky-high towers.

Now, as the commercial real-estate market enters the late innings of a bull market, foreignersare diving into a less exotic sector: student housing.

In January, a joint venture between the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, Singaporesovereign-wealth fund GIC, and Chicago-based student housing owner Scion Group announcedthat it acquired a portfolio of 22 student housing properties for $1 billion. All told, the venturehas purchased more than $4 billion of student housing totaling 46,555 beds in 52 universitymarkets since 2016.

Also last month, Mapletree Investments Pte, owned by Singapore state investor TemasekHoldings, bought Cira Centre South, an 850-bed student housing high-rise facility inPhiladelphia, for $197.5 million. That added to its portfolio of 17 student housing holdings ofmore than 11,000 beds in the U.S.

Meanwhile, Safanad Ltd, an investment firm with offices in Dubai, London and New York,on Jan. 30 invested $69.5 million in a pair of student housing buildings in Hyattsville, Md.,bringing its U.S. student housing portfolio to around 11,000 beds valued at $800 million.

“It’s an asset class like social infrastructure,” said Christopher Merrill, co-founder, presidentand chief executive officer of Harrison Street Real Estate Capital, a privately held firm that soldthe $1 billion student housing portfolio last month to the joint venture that included ScionGroup. “People will attend universities in good and bad times.”

During the early stages of the bull market for commercial property, foreign investors loaded upon iconic assets such as the Waldorf Astoria hotel and One Chase Manhattan Plaza in New York.But with the expansion in its eighth year and interest rates poised to rise, some foreigninvestors are seeking safer territory. They say the anti-cyclical nature of student housing andthe modernization of these facilities and operations offers attractive yields relative to the risk.

In all, foreign capital has accounted for 42% of student-housing transactions so far this year,compared with 36% in all of 2017 and 21% in 2016, according to data from property investmentadvisory firm ARA Newmark.

Ryan Lang, executive managing director at ARA Newmark and head of its national studenthousing group, said he has handled transactions with overseas family offices, institutionalinvestors and private capital including from China, Russia, the Netherlands and the MiddleEast. He said they are looking to diversify their holdings and added that student housing is seenas a safer alternative at this point in the cycle.

While overall college enrollment in the U.S. has been decreasing since 2010, enrollment inpublic universities is growing. Residences located near the campuses of big, tier-one stateschools such as the University of Texas, and colleges with strong science, technology,engineering and math programs as well as high-profile sports teams are highly sought after.

“Public institutions get a lot of attention,” said Mr. Lang.

The sector isn’t without risks. There is a higher attrition rate in student housing than inmultifamily real-estate investment, and missteps in leasing could cause rooms to be empty for asemester or even an entire academic year.

But students’ strong preference to be as close as possible to school keeps demand strong.What’s more, an affinity among foreign investors with U.S. colleges from personal experience orthough family and friends gives the sector a leg up over other niche real estate categories suchas manufactured housing.

“The international capital flows are consistent with many investment managers’ personalexperience,” said Avi Lewittes, chief investment officer at The Scion Group LLC. “There’s anextra degree of comfort and familiarity [with student housing].”

For traditional investors such as student housing REITs like Education Realty Trust Inc. andAmerican Campus Communities Inc., the wave of deep-pocketed foreign investors makes ittough to match their previous returns, said Ryan Burke and Ryan Lumb, analysts at real-estateresearch firm Green Street Advisors in a research note.

“Greater competition brings acquisitions at higher valuations, developments at lower yields,and less of a competitive advantage on operations relative to the past,” said the analysts.

Write to Esther Fung at [email protected]

DOW JONES, A NEWS CORP COMPANY

DJIA Futures 25449 0.08% ▲ S&P 500 F 2749.50 0.07% ▲ Stoxx 600 381.02 -0.35% ▼ U.S. 10 Yr 2�32 Yield 2.889% ▲ Crude Oil 62.96 -0.08% ▼ Euro 1.2220 -0.11% ▼

This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers visithttp://www.djreprints.com.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/foreign-investors-pile-into-u-s-student-housing-1519736401

Copyright ©2017 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved

This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers visithttp://www.djreprints.com.

MARKETS PROPERTY REPORT

Foreign Investors Pile Into U.S. Student

HousingBuyers seek alternatives as the bull market in the commercial real-estate market gets long in the tooth

|

This student housing in Austin, Texas, home of the University of Texas, was part of a portfolio bought by a joint venture thatincludes the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, Singapore sovereign-wealth fund GIC, and Chicago-based Scion Group.PHOTO: THE SCION GROUP

Feb. 27, 2018 8�00 a.m. ET

By Esther Fung

2/28/2018 Foreign Investors Pile Into U.S. Student Housing - WSJ

https://www.wsj.com/articles/foreign-investors-pile-into-u-s-student-housing-1519736401 1/1

Foreign investors once flocked to trophy real-estate assets in the U.S. such as fancy hotels andsky-high towers.

Now, as the commercial real-estate market enters the late innings of a bull market, foreignersare diving into a less exotic sector: student housing.

In January, a joint venture between the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, Singaporesovereign-wealth fund GIC, and Chicago-based student housing owner Scion Group announcedthat it acquired a portfolio of 22 student housing properties for $1 billion. All told, the venturehas purchased more than $4 billion of student housing totaling 46,555 beds in 52 universitymarkets since 2016.

Also last month, Mapletree Investments Pte, owned by Singapore state investor TemasekHoldings, bought Cira Centre South, an 850-bed student housing high-rise facility inPhiladelphia, for $197.5 million. That added to its portfolio of 17 student housing holdings ofmore than 11,000 beds in the U.S.

Meanwhile, Safanad Ltd, an investment firm with offices in Dubai, London and New York,on Jan. 30 invested $69.5 million in a pair of student housing buildings in Hyattsville, Md.,bringing its U.S. student housing portfolio to around 11,000 beds valued at $800 million.

“It’s an asset class like social infrastructure,” said Christopher Merrill, co-founder, presidentand chief executive officer of Harrison Street Real Estate Capital, a privately held firm that soldthe $1 billion student housing portfolio last month to the joint venture that included ScionGroup. “People will attend universities in good and bad times.”

During the early stages of the bull market for commercial property, foreign investors loaded upon iconic assets such as the Waldorf Astoria hotel and One Chase Manhattan Plaza in New York.But with the expansion in its eighth year and interest rates poised to rise, some foreigninvestors are seeking safer territory. They say the anti-cyclical nature of student housing andthe modernization of these facilities and operations offers attractive yields relative to the risk.

In all, foreign capital has accounted for 42% of student-housing transactions so far this year,compared with 36% in all of 2017 and 21% in 2016, according to data from property investmentadvisory firm ARA Newmark.

Ryan Lang, executive managing director at ARA Newmark and head of its national studenthousing group, said he has handled transactions with overseas family offices, institutionalinvestors and private capital including from China, Russia, the Netherlands and the MiddleEast. He said they are looking to diversify their holdings and added that student housing is seenas a safer alternative at this point in the cycle.

While overall college enrollment in the U.S. has been decreasing since 2010, enrollment inpublic universities is growing. Residences located near the campuses of big, tier-one stateschools such as the University of Texas, and colleges with strong science, technology,engineering and math programs as well as high-profile sports teams are highly sought after.

“Public institutions get a lot of attention,” said Mr. Lang.

The sector isn’t without risks. There is a higher attrition rate in student housing than inmultifamily real-estate investment, and missteps in leasing could cause rooms to be empty for asemester or even an entire academic year.

But students’ strong preference to be as close as possible to school keeps demand strong.What’s more, an affinity among foreign investors with U.S. colleges from personal experience orthough family and friends gives the sector a leg up over other niche real estate categories suchas manufactured housing.

“The international capital flows are consistent with many investment managers’ personalexperience,” said Avi Lewittes, chief investment officer at The Scion Group LLC. “There’s anextra degree of comfort and familiarity [with student housing].”

For traditional investors such as student housing REITs like Education Realty Trust Inc. andAmerican Campus Communities Inc., the wave of deep-pocketed foreign investors makes ittough to match their previous returns, said Ryan Burke and Ryan Lumb, analysts at real-estateresearch firm Green Street Advisors in a research note.

“Greater competition brings acquisitions at higher valuations, developments at lower yields,and less of a competitive advantage on operations relative to the past,” said the analysts.

Write to Esther Fung at [email protected]

DOW JONES, A NEWS CORP COMPANY

DJIA Futures 25449 0.08% ▲ S&P 500 F 2749.50 0.07% ▲ Stoxx 600 381.02 -0.35% ▼ U.S. 10 Yr 2�32 Yield 2.889% ▲ Crude Oil 62.96 -0.08% ▼ Euro 1.2220 -0.11% ▼

This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers visithttp://www.djreprints.com.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/foreign-investors-pile-into-u-s-student-housing-1519736401

Copyright ©2017 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved

This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers visithttp://www.djreprints.com.

MARKETS PROPERTY REPORT

Foreign Investors Pile Into U.S. Student

HousingBuyers seek alternatives as the bull market in the commercial real-estate market gets long in the tooth

|

This student housing in Austin, Texas, home of the University of Texas, was part of a portfolio bought by a joint venture thatincludes the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, Singapore sovereign-wealth fund GIC, and Chicago-based Scion Group.PHOTO: THE SCION GROUP

Feb. 27, 2018 8�00 a.m. ET

By Esther Fung

2/28/2018 Foreign Investors Pile Into U.S. Student Housing - WSJ

https://www.wsj.com/articles/foreign-investors-pile-into-u-s-student-housing-1519736401 1/1

Foreign investors once flocked to trophy real-estate assets in the U.S. such as fancy hotels andsky-high towers.

Now, as the commercial real-estate market enters the late innings of a bull market, foreignersare diving into a less exotic sector: student housing.

In January, a joint venture between the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, Singaporesovereign-wealth fund GIC, and Chicago-based student housing owner Scion Group announcedthat it acquired a portfolio of 22 student housing properties for $1 billion. All told, the venturehas purchased more than $4 billion of student housing totaling 46,555 beds in 52 universitymarkets since 2016.

Also last month, Mapletree Investments Pte, owned by Singapore state investor TemasekHoldings, bought Cira Centre South, an 850-bed student housing high-rise facility inPhiladelphia, for $197.5 million. That added to its portfolio of 17 student housing holdings ofmore than 11,000 beds in the U.S.

Meanwhile, Safanad Ltd, an investment firm with offices in Dubai, London and New York,on Jan. 30 invested $69.5 million in a pair of student housing buildings in Hyattsville, Md.,bringing its U.S. student housing portfolio to around 11,000 beds valued at $800 million.

“It’s an asset class like social infrastructure,” said Christopher Merrill, co-founder, presidentand chief executive officer of Harrison Street Real Estate Capital, a privately held firm that soldthe $1 billion student housing portfolio last month to the joint venture that included ScionGroup. “People will attend universities in good and bad times.”

During the early stages of the bull market for commercial property, foreign investors loaded upon iconic assets such as the Waldorf Astoria hotel and One Chase Manhattan Plaza in New York.But with the expansion in its eighth year and interest rates poised to rise, some foreigninvestors are seeking safer territory. They say the anti-cyclical nature of student housing andthe modernization of these facilities and operations offers attractive yields relative to the risk.

In all, foreign capital has accounted for 42% of student-housing transactions so far this year,compared with 36% in all of 2017 and 21% in 2016, according to data from property investmentadvisory firm ARA Newmark.

Ryan Lang, executive managing director at ARA Newmark and head of its national studenthousing group, said he has handled transactions with overseas family offices, institutionalinvestors and private capital including from China, Russia, the Netherlands and the MiddleEast. He said they are looking to diversify their holdings and added that student housing is seenas a safer alternative at this point in the cycle.

While overall college enrollment in the U.S. has been decreasing since 2010, enrollment inpublic universities is growing. Residences located near the campuses of big, tier-one stateschools such as the University of Texas, and colleges with strong science, technology,engineering and math programs as well as high-profile sports teams are highly sought after.

“Public institutions get a lot of attention,” said Mr. Lang.

The sector isn’t without risks. There is a higher attrition rate in student housing than inmultifamily real-estate investment, and missteps in leasing could cause rooms to be empty for asemester or even an entire academic year.

But students’ strong preference to be as close as possible to school keeps demand strong.What’s more, an affinity among foreign investors with U.S. colleges from personal experience orthough family and friends gives the sector a leg up over other niche real estate categories suchas manufactured housing.

“The international capital flows are consistent with many investment managers’ personalexperience,” said Avi Lewittes, chief investment officer at The Scion Group LLC. “There’s anextra degree of comfort and familiarity [with student housing].”

For traditional investors such as student housing REITs like Education Realty Trust Inc. andAmerican Campus Communities Inc., the wave of deep-pocketed foreign investors makes ittough to match their previous returns, said Ryan Burke and Ryan Lumb, analysts at real-estateresearch firm Green Street Advisors in a research note.

“Greater competition brings acquisitions at higher valuations, developments at lower yields,and less of a competitive advantage on operations relative to the past,” said the analysts.

Write to Esther Fung at [email protected]

DOW JONES, A NEWS CORP COMPANY

DJIA Futures 25449 0.08% ▲ S&P 500 F 2749.50 0.07% ▲ Stoxx 600 381.02 -0.35% ▼ U.S. 10 Yr 2�32 Yield 2.889% ▲ Crude Oil 62.96 -0.08% ▼ Euro 1.2220 -0.11% ▼

This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers visithttp://www.djreprints.com.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/foreign-investors-pile-into-u-s-student-housing-1519736401

Copyright ©2017 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved

This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers visithttp://www.djreprints.com.

MARKETS PROPERTY REPORT

Foreign Investors Pile Into U.S. Student

HousingBuyers seek alternatives as the bull market in the commercial real-estate market gets long in the tooth

|

This student housing in Austin, Texas, home of the University of Texas, was part of a portfolio bought by a joint venture thatincludes the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, Singapore sovereign-wealth fund GIC, and Chicago-based Scion Group.PHOTO: THE SCION GROUP

Feb. 27, 2018 8�00 a.m. ET

By Esther Fung

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