Canada’s Largest Pension Fund Launches Real Estate JVs in U.S., India

CPPIB will invest nearly $1 billion in partnership with Lennar subsidiary LMC in the U.S,. and more than $350 million in India with RMZ Corp.



The C$550.4 billion ($432.6 billion) Canada Pension Plan Investment Board has launched a $979 million joint venture with real estate developer LMC to build multifamily residential communities in the U.S.

The two will focus on urban and suburban communities in major U.S. markets that have strong population and job growth, starting with Boston, Miami and Denver. There will be a total of 1,371 apartment homes built among three developments in Denver, and one each in Boston and Miami. They said they are targeting high-growth markets where the housing supply hasn’t kept pace with renter demand.

“This investment is an excellent opportunity to meet the strong demand for high-quality multifamily housing,” Peter Ballon, CPPIB’s global head of real estate, said in a statement.

Although CPPIB refers to the endeavor as a joint venture, the Canadian pension giant will own a 96% stake in the project and LMC, a subsidiary of homebuilder Lennar Corp., will own the remaining 4%.

For more stories like this, sign up for the CIO Alert newsletter.

CPPIB has also launched a real-estate joint venture in India with RMZ Corp., its  second in the country with the local real estate developer. However, while the U.S. joint venture will focus on residential developments, the one in India will focus on developing and holding commercial office space in major cities.

The pension fund said its total capital commitments in the joint venture will be up to C$449 million, to support the development and acquisition of projects in India, which will begin with a 1.37 million-square-foot office building co-owned by RMZ and Prestige Estates in Bangalore, which is one of India’s biggest high-tech hubs. CPPIB said it will acquire Prestige’s stake in the building

“We continue to identify high demand for premium commercial office space in top city locations in India, such as Bangalore,” Hari Krishna V, managing director, real estate, India, said in a statement. “As the city grows as a destination for technology businesses and start-ups, we are working alongside market leaders, such as RMZ, to grow our portfolio to support the demand.”

Related Stories:

CPPIB, Alberta Plan Invest Nearly $2 Billion in BAI Communications

Canada’s CPPIB Taps Deborah Orida as Its First Chief Sustainability Officer

CPPIB, Greystar to Form Joint Venture in US Life Sciences Development

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Does the Office Real Estate Market Have a Pulse? Look at Blackstone’s Big Buy

Its purchase of a stake in a swanky NYC tower shows there’s demand for the new stuff. But older buildings are struggling.


So, no one will want to go back to the office, huh? A hefty office building deal just got inked for New York City, whose office buildings saw heavy outflows of workers when the pandemic struck in 2020.

The sale of a 49% stake in the 67-story, 2.1 million-square-foot office tower seems to counter the gloom and doom surrounding New York commercial real estate, and that of urban properties in general. The good news here is qualified, however: It’s the newer urban office buildings that are getting snapped up, while older ones languish.

The building, known as One Manhattan West, was bought by Blackstone Real Estate for about $1.4 billion. The seller was Qatar Investment Authority (the Middle Eastern nation’s sovereign wealth fund) and real estate company Brookfield. 

One Manhattan West, which opened in 2019, is part of the surging development in Midtown Manhattan near the Hudson River. The place already has a distinguished client list that includes accounting/consulting outfits Ernst & Young and Accenture, plus law firms Skadden Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom and McKool Smith.

Never miss a story — sign up for CIO newsletters to stay up-to-date on the latest institutional investment industry news.

Manhattan offices have seen their vacancies rise, to 12% during the current quarter from 7.8% in 2020’s first period, before the pandemic overwhelmed the world, according to real estate data provider CoStar Group. Two-thirds of the new deals in Manhattan last year were for high-quality structures such as One Manhattan West, CoStar finds.

In last year’s final quarter, the U.S. office market logged positive net absorption (new occupancy minus vacancies) for the first time since the pandemic’s onset, per the JLL commercial real estate firm. Full-year leasing volume grew 14.6% above 2020 levels, while sublease space stabilized and vacancies plateaued. 

The action is mainly in Sun Belt markets such as Atlanta, Austin, Charlotte, Dallas, Miami, Nashville, Phoenix, and Raleigh. JLL says many of these locales are nearing pre-pandemic levels of leasing volume. Meantime, larger gateway cities continue to lag, as in New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles. 

That said, there are stirrings in those major cities, especially in New York. Google parent Alphabet last fall announced it would buy its own West Side Manhattan office building for $2.1 billion, a 1.3 million-square-foot waterfront property, now under construction. This marks the biggest office transaction since the pandemic began.

Institutional investors are increasingly turning to real estate, a key component of the burgeoning alternative investments category. Alts are popular among asset allocators as these investments will diversify their holdings and (allocators hope) provide good long-term returns.

In 2021, public pension funds had 8.1% of their portfolios in real estate, which ranked fourth in allocation after stocks (46.6%), fixed income (13.2%), and private equity (13.2%), by the count of Public Plans Data.

Related Stories

Real Estate, Equities Drive 14.5% Return for Norway’s Pension Fund in 2021

CPPIB to Invest in French Real Estate Credit

Where to Invest in Real Estate Right Now, and Where Not to, Say 2 CIOs

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

«