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Long-income vehicle hits LSE

London-Stock-Exchange-THUMB.jpegA new listed company focusing on long-term secure income is to launch on the London Stock Exchange.

LXI REIT, chaired by Stephen Hubbard, UK chairman of CBRE, hopes to raise £200m from the listing.

It is the latest of a growing number of firms to invest in secure assets and will target what it sees as long-term, inflation-protected commercial property. Assets acquired will have 20- to 30-year leases, institutional clients and upward-only rent reviews. The REIT will take on no development activity. Target LTVs will be 30%, with a maximum of 35%.

Hubbard said: “In this low- yield environment with higher inflation looming on the horizon, the company’s intention is to deliver attractive, inflation-protected income and capital returns, underpinned by a secure and diversified portfolio of property investments let or prelet to a wide range of financially strong tenants on long-term and index-linked leases.”

The firm said it already had a substantial pipeline and expected to invest its initial capital within six months of its IPO.

LXI REIT will target a minimum annual dividend yield of 5%. The net total shareholder return is expected to be 8%.

The company will be managed by LJ Capital and advised by LXI REIT Advisors, which will receive an annual fee of 0.75% based on market capitalisation, and no performance fee.

Peel Hunt is sole sponsor, broker, placing agent and intermediaries offer adviser.

LXI directors

  • John White is former investment partner at Cushman & Wakefield and co-founder of Osprey Equity Partners (part of the LJ Partnership, which has more than $4.5bn of property under management)
  • Simon Lee is former solicitor at Slaughter & May and co-founder of Osprey Equity Partners
  • Stephen Hubbard is UK chairman, CBRE
  • Colin Smith is former chairman of Poundland, currently chairman of Hilton Food Group
  • John Cartwright is chief executive of AREF

Secure asset investors

Secure Income REIT

  • Led by: Nick Leslau
  • Launched: 2014
  • Market cap: £730m

Civitas Social Housing

  • Led by: Paul Bridge
  • Launched: November 2016
  • Market cap: £350m

Impact Healthcare REIT

  • Led by: Rupert Barclay
  • Due to launch: March 2017
  • Target cap: £180m

Hemant KotakComment: REITS specialising in secure-income assets are attractive – but hurdles must be overcome

Hemant Kotak, managing director, Green Street Advisors

This idea of long, secure income with an element of inflation-linked leases is very attractive. Much of property’s return comes from income, and in our low-yield environment, the income aspect becomes ever more important.

Although the underlying investments might be attractive, there are problems, and one of them is that the REIT doesn’t have a portfolio that it is listing with. Acquiring properties will take time and there will be a drag on returns.

The REIT is also trying to get off the ground with an IPO that is small in scale, especially compared with Secure Income REIT. There are a few advantages with scale. You can shed the cost burden of managing a portfolio over a larger platform and you potentially have better access to debt financing.

But it can be done. Tritax Big Box went from a standing start to £1.5bn.

Some investors, however, will choose to wait on the sidelines until the company grows in scale and has a bit more of a proven strategy.

The fact that it is a cash box, externally managed, and has low liquidity are all hurdles, but the underlying investment is attractive.

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