Global real estate manager looks to double Asian bets

Franklin Templeton is looking to double its real estate assets under management in the high-growth Asia Pacific region with the launch of a new fund over the next few weeks.


Jack Foster, the US-based veteran of global real estate investing who has headed up that division since 1987 (with Franklin Templeton’s predecessor company Fiduciary Investors), says the new Asian real estate fund will pick up where the first fund, which raised $300 million in 2008, left off.

The first fund still has 50 per cent in cash, although 73 per cent is committed and the manager is “not fully out with the launch” of the new fund, which is looking to raise a similar amount from institutional investors.

“Our strategy is the same,” Foster said in a visit to the region last week. “The main differences are that Japan is more of a distressed debt play rather than buying assets and the veneer has come off India.”

The funds of funds real estate specialist says the focus of the new Asian found is China and Japan, followed by Hong Kong, Singapore and Korea.

“All have different risk profiles,” Foster said. “Real estate is the most local of asset classes. There is no global pricing. That’s why the asset class has good inefficiencies to be exploited. For example, Hong Kong is more efficiently priced than China.”

Sponsored Content

Chinese real estate  “represented by long-term leases” is more transparent than several years ago but getting difficult to buy, Foster says.

The fund is a closed-end vehicle with a seven-nine-year lifespan.

Franklin Templeton tends to invest in smaller and emerging property funds which can better capture market inefficiencies.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

CEM study reveals in-house savings

A defining characteristic of leading pension funds globally is the cost savings garnered from in-house investment management. An organisational design study by CEM Benchmarking has revealed that “leading” funds have an average of 49 per cent of assets managed in-house, and yet the internal staff and non-manager third-party costs make up only 15 per cent

US public pensions take to social media

US public pension funds, under fire for the sustainability of their defined-benefit plans, are increasingly opening a new social-media front line in the battle to influence public opinion. The Maryland State Retirement and Pension System is the latest to step up its social media presence, posting its first You Tube video, which outlines the positive

Pimco advocates emerging markets

The flight to quality was not limited to certain developed-country debt during the volatility in the second half of 2011. Indeed, Pimco’s global co-head of emerging-markets portfolio management Ramin Toloui says that some emerging-market government bonds are potential safe havens during times of market stress. He says that the bond giant’s Global Advantage Government Bond

The spectre of defined-benefit plans

The recent sharp growth in US corporate defined-benefit-plan liabilities, coupled with concerns that interest rates will start to rise from current historical lows, is slowing the push to de-risk plans, Wilshire Consulting’s head of investment research, Steven Foresti says. The latest Wilshire Consulting research into defined-benefit (DB) plans at S&P 500 companies reveals that aggregate

Swedish Ethical Council
goes proactive

Moving from reactive engagement to proactively working with companies and regulators to avoid major environmental, social or corporate governance (ESG) events has become a key focus of the Swedish Ethical Council, its new head says. Newly appointed chairwoman Ulrika Danielson says that the council, which is a collaborative engagement effort for the AP 1 to

SWFs in real estate

The 800-pound gorilla of the real estate market, sovereign wealth funds, is increasingly exercising its muscle by investing directly in property as a way of cutting fees and potentially achieving better returns, new research finds. The latest snapshot of sovereign wealth funds’ interest in property by alternative-asset researcher Preqin shows that 85 per cent of

Previous