By Sharon
Smyth and Eleni Chrepa Oct 10, 2014 1:02
PM GMT+0300
Bloomberg
The Greek
fund charged with selling state assets will attempt to raise 400 million euros
($508 million) by securitizing real estate in a move designed to attract
investment to the debt-stricken country.
The
Hellenic Republic Asset Development Fund will sell shares in a company with
about 300 properties ranging from retail, office and tourism-related real
estate including land for development, Andreas Taprantzis, the fund’s executive
director, said in an Oct. 8 interview in his Athens office. The company will then sell
debt backed by the properties.
“This
transaction is important for investment in Greece
and for society, not just because of the immediate returns it will generate,
but this will bring multiple sums of money into the real economy of Greece ,”
Taprantzis said.
The
privatization fund is tapping into renewed investor demand for Greek assets as
the country emerges from a six-year economic crisis, which enabled it to return
to bond markets in April after a four-year exile. The fund has completed 1.9
billion euros of real estate transactions over the last year.
Vacant
buildings account for about a third of the real estate that’s being sold by the
fund, while another third of the properties are occupied and generating rental
income, Taprantzis said. The rest is made up of development land, he said. The
fund aims to complete the deal by the first quarter of 2015.
Appealing Structure
“The idea
is to create a transaction structure that will invite a variety of
institutional investors to invest in Greece , from private equity funds
to hedge fund investors,” Taprantzis said. “It also offers investors a safe way
to invest in property developments.”
The fund
has held two road shows in London
and is seeing strong interest from investors, Taprantzis said. If the project
is successful, the fund will seek to replicate the deal and has an additional
1,000 properties that could be securitized, he said.
There is
“window of opportunity” to invest in Greece as markets such as London become
overpriced, according to Paul Gomopoulos, a managing director at Hines who
recently moved to Athens from London to explore investment opportunities.
“The
country is on the radar of investors and that was not the case five or six
years ago,” he said at a conference in Athens
this week.
Money
managers including Paulson & Co., Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd. and
Fidelity pumped 8.3 billion euros into Greece ’s four biggest banks in the
first half, while investors such as David Einhorn and Wilbur Ross have taken
stakes in Greek lenders. In July, seven funds managed by GSO Capital Partners,
a unit of the Blackstone Group LLC, acquired 4.4 million shares, or 10 percent
of the voting rights, in Lamda Development SA, Greece ’s largest publicly traded
developer.
The Athens
Stock Exchange General Index has jumped 112 percent since reaching a 22-year
low in June 2012 and the economy is set to grow in 2014 for the first time in
seven years.
Greek bonds
have delivered the highest returns this year out of 34 sovereign securities
tracked by Bloomberg, gaining 21.5 percent, as the country narrowed its once
ballooning budget deficit and returned from a four yearlong market exit.
To contact
the reporters on this story: Sharon Smyth in Madrid
at ssmyth2@bloomberg.net; Eleni Chrepa in Athens
at echrepa@bloomberg.net
To contact
the editors responsible for this story: Andrew Blackman at
ablackman@bloomberg.net Andrew Blackman, Nikos Chrysoloras
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