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			8 marzo 2012
 INVESTORS 
			SEEK LOW RISK AT MIPIM
 
			Cannes, March 8, 2012 – From 
			Chongqing to Tokyo, via Downtown Doha, Paris, London and New York, 
			delegations from 83 countries gathered in Cannes this week to attend 
			a MIPIM which saw minds concentrated on quality, low risk investment 
			opportunities, urban development and how the tight debt financing 
			situation will impact the European market.
 And at the end of the day, the general feeling among the 19,300 
			delegates, including 4,200 investors, was that despite uncertainty 
			over the availability of bank financing, prime cities and locations 
			will continue to attract strong investor interest, with many cities 
			using their low-risk potential as a selling point.
 
 Summing up the state of the European real estate market during a 
			keynote address, Jean-Michel Six, Managing Director and Chief 
			European Economist at Standard & Poor’s and Bernhard Berg, Managing 
			Director of IVG Institutional Funds GmbH, predicted that investors 
			will continue to be drawn to prime property because of its 
			attractive yields compared to bonds. Bernhard Berg told a packed 
			auditorium that focus is likely to be on high-quality, core 
			properties in excellent locations with long leases and good tenants. 
			He added that as office prices rise, investors will increasingly 
			turn to retail.
 
 Among the star real estate markets of 2011 was MIPIM 2012 Country of 
			Honour, Germany. Investment levels last year hit €23.5 billion, 20% 
			up on 2010, with foreign investors accounting for 34% of commercial 
			investment in Germany. Reflecting Bernhard Berg’s predictions about 
			investment targets, retail property in Germany made up 42% of total 
			transactional volume last year.
 
 During the course of MIPIM, international real estate advisor 
			Savills said it sees a potential shopping centre undersupply in 
			Germany as providing potential investment opportunities, 
			particularly in Südlicher Oberrhein, Münster and Munich. Savills 
			identified 200 shopping centres in need of refurbishment and said 
			retailer expansion into the German market will also drive business.
 
 Meanwhile, Berlin’s newly-appointed Senator for Urban Development 
			and Environment, Michael Müller, used his time at MIPIM to promote 
			two large residential schemes as well as the redevelopment of the 
			Tempelhof and Tegel airports.
 
 “Germany is seen as being either an ‘attractive’ or ‘very 
			attractive’ investment opportunity by the vast majority of 
			international investors. Its economy has weathered the eurozone 
			crisis well and the real estate sector has proved its national and 
			international expertise time and again. Put all these factors 
			together and you see why we felt it appropriate to pay tribute to 
			Germany as our 2012 Country of Honour,” commented MIPIM Director, 
			Filippo Rean.
 
 The impact of the eurozone’s rollercoaster ride was the focus of a 
			packed MIPIM keynote address by former German Foreign Minister 
			Joschka Fischer. Commenting on the likelihood of a widespread 
			withdrawal from the euro, Josckha Fischer joked, “It’s easy to make 
			an omelette out of eggs. It’s not easy to make eggs out of an 
			omelette!” With Germany re-assessing its policy toward nuclear 
			power, the former Foreign Minister said that within Germany and 
			beyond, the changes in energy use and sourcing “will have a 
			tremendous impact on the real estate industry and offers huge 
			opportunities.”
 
 Industry reports look to future
 
 As MIPIM progressed, a series of industry reports and analysies was 
			released to map out the state of play within the international real 
			estate sector.
 
 According to Cushman & Wakefield’s Global Property Investment 
			Outlook, “Despite the currently cautious mood in most global 
			property investment markets, a stronger second half of the year is 
			expected with a potential 20% hike in activity levels forecast, 
			driven by increased confidence and a release of pent-up investor and 
			tenant demand.”
 
 The report noted a 42% increase in industrial real estate investment 
			in Asia and a 26% increase in retail, with particularly strong 
			interest in China. Cushman & Wakefield’s report anticipated that 
			Germany and the Nordic countries will attract low-risk investors, 
			London and Paris offer good medium-term growth and that companies 
			looking for high returns could be interested in Russia and Turkey, 
			which is the MIPIM 2013 Country of Honour.
 
 Levels of risk were a dominant theme of conversations in the MIPIM 
			halls. “What has been striking this year at MIPIM is that major 
			cities are using their low-risk credentials as a selling point to 
			international investors,” noted François Ortalo-Magné, Albert O. 
			Nicholas Dean of Wisconsin School of Business. “It used to be that 
			the cities would sell themselves as exciting and dynamic markets, 
			now the low-risk card is being played to the maximum.”
 
 Risk appraisal, fund management, debt conditions and the general 
			state of the real estate market were several of the topics discussed 
			by leading institutional investors and representatives from pension 
			and sovereign funds who attended the inaugural closed-door RE-Invest 
			summit on March 6.
 
 “The real estate market is fast-moving, extremely diversified and 
			complex at the moment, with varying levels of investment 
			opportunities around the world. We have launched RE-Invest to 
			stimulate dialogue and an exchange of ideas between leaders from 
			major institutional investors,” commented MIPIM’s Filippo Rean.
 
 One factor that was concentrating minds at MIPIM was the 
			availability of bank financing. CBRE’s Real Estate Investors 
			Intentions survey summed up one major preoccupation of the market by 
			noting, “A shortage of debt financing is seen as the biggest single 
			threat to recovery of the property market in Europe.” Philip Cropper, 
			Managing Director Real Estate Finance at CBRE said, “Across Europe 
			we are seeing continual signs of lender caution. While institutions 
			such as AXA and MetLife have made encouraging announcements in 
			recent weeks, their increased presence will only go so far to 
			replace the debt lost through the withdrawal of a number of 
			established lenders to the real estate market.”
 
 According to CBRE, investors are being squeezed between the 
			difficulty of borrowing to buy the type of assets they want and the 
			relatively high cost of borrowing when funds are available.
 
 Ironically, Frank Khoo, AXA Real Estate’s Global Head of Asia, told 
			MIPIM delegates that with this situation being replicated in China, 
			opportunities are increasing for international investors to team up 
			with Chinese developers. “Local Chinese developers are short of cash 
			and this is an opportunity for international investors,” he said. 
			Frank Khoo noted that high interest rates and a (recently relaxed) 
			government requirement for banks to hold large capital reserves had 
			put extreme pressure on Chinese developers.
 
 However, with over 200 Chinese cities expected to have a population 
			in excess of one million people by 2025, Cushman & Wakefield’s 
			Managing Director Asia Pacific, John Stinson, said that this will 
			translate into 200 major residential and retail markets in China.
 
 Cities and sport drive major projects
 
 With the MIPIM exhibition space extending around Cannes’ Palais des 
			Festivals, there was no shortage of major projects on show this year, 
			many of them city-driven or connected to major sporting events.
 
 London’s Deputy Mayor, Sir Edward Lister, discussed the impact of 
			the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park with delegates. The massive 
			development for this year’s Olympic Games has so far generated €14.9 
			billion in investment.
 
 Among the new projects unveiled during MIPIM was the proposed 
			Skolkovo innovation city in Russia which is promoting itself as a 
			Silicon Valley equivalent. Set to welcome some 45,000 people and be 
			completed by 2015, Skolkovo has been set a target of 50% energy 
			consumption coming from sustainable sources.
 
 In the giant Krasnodar Region tent, delegates admired huge models of 
			the Sochi Olympic Park, which includes a proposed Formula One race 
			track and which stood alongside a mock-up of the 83-hectare Gorod 
			Sporta multi-functional sports complex which includes a 50,000-seat 
			soccer stadium.
 
 From Italy, Rome’s ambitious Ostia Waterfront development drew 
			plenty of interest. Mayor of Rome, Giovanni Alemanno, told MIPIM 
			delegates that his administration is committed to facilitating 
			investment in the Italian capital with a new development agency and 
			the upcoming launch of a strategic development plan. He said that a 
			new quality charter to standardise development procedures “will help 
			investors directly and also improve the climate for investment.”
 
 March 7 saw the arrival of France’s Minister for Urban Affairs, 
			Maurice Leroy, to support the gigantic Greater Paris project, which 
			includes 140 kilometres of new subway track linking towns around the 
			Paris region, as well as 70,000 new residential homes per year 
			through 2030. Underlining the approach of construction work - after 
			years of discussion around the project - the Société du Grand Paris 
			attended MIPIM for the first time. The public body’s mandate 
			includes responsibility for the Grand Paris Express subway and 
			transport infrastructure.
 
 In the north of France, attention is turning to Calais and its 
			Calais Premier logistics project, designed to be an integrated 
			motorway-railway hub with warehouses, ultra-rapid train unloading 
			facilities and a business park. Calais Premier was one of a series 
			of logistics projects, including Barcelona’s and Marseille’s 
			development of logistics facilities around their respective port 
			operations, that featured in MIPIM’s new Industrial and Logistics 
			Pavilion. “Industrial and logistics real estate is attracting more 
			and more industry professionals. Efficiency, functionality, 
			flow-optimisation and land use are key issues for this sector and 
			will be discussed throughout MIPIM,” said MIPIM Director Filippo 
			Rean.
 
 Qatar nurtures sustainable debate
 
 Qatar may be one of the most active investors in the international 
			real estate market with over 50 projects in 30 countries worth an 
			estimated €30 billion, but at MIPIM 2012 the Gulf state’s focus was 
			firmly on sustainable urban development.
 
 In the eye-catching, two-storey Qatar Pavilion, which brought 
			together Qatari Diar, Msheireb Properties and the Lusail Real Estate 
			Development Company, delegates flocked to the Qatar Urban Forum, a 
			two-day series of keynote addresses and panel discussions on 
			‘Sustainable Architecture and Urban Development.’
 
 Opening proceedings, internationally-renowned architect Lord Richard 
			Rogers told his audience, “The most important change of my lifetime 
			is the recognition of the importance of the environment.”
 
 Among the ambitious projects on display in the Qatar Pavilion was 
			Msheireb Properties’ Downtown Doha development, designed to 
			modernise the historic part of Doha while respecting existing 
			heritage and sustainable urban development criteria.
 
 “We’re showcasing Downtown Doha here because it tells another story 
			about Qatar,” said Omar Saudi, Msheireb Properties’ Director of 
			Marketing. “We think it shows a thoughtful approach to development 
			and the Urban Forum underlines Qatar’s commitment to sustainable 
			development. Msheireb Properties hopes that Downtown Doha will act 
			as a blueprint for future downtown development around the world. 
			It’s important for people to understand that when we approach a 
			project, the first question we ask is whether it adds value in the 
			widest sense of the term and not just financial value. We’re talking 
			social value and value for the country.”
 
 Sustainability was a central theme of MIPIM’s inaugural Building 
			Innovation programme, showcasing pioneering initiatives that enhance 
			the value of real estate. “To ensure a better return on their 
			investment, companies today need to consider more than the purely 
			financial management of their real estate portfolio. Buildings now 
			have to be constructed with the idea that they will have several 
			tenants during their lifetime and those tenants will have different 
			requirements. Functionality, ease of use, adaptability and 
			sustainability are now key elements of real estate building and 
			asset management. The Building Innovation programme addresses this 
			and spotlights some great initiatives,” concluded MIPIM Director, 
			Filippo Rean.
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