Sunday, June 20, 2010

Secured Capital Shareholder looks to increase Japanese Real Estate Investments

Pacific Alliance Group, an Asia-focused fund investment manager, said it expects to at least double its investments in Japan over the next year or so as financial institutions speed up sales of distressed assets.

Pacific Alliance Group planned to raise investments in Japan to as much as $500 million over the next 1- years from about $200 million now, Anthony Miller, chief executive of Pacific Alliance Japan, said at the Reuters Global Real Estate and Infrastructure Summit.

"The Asian fund has approximately $200 million invested in Japan, which we've invested in the last 18 months," Miller said via telephone from Tokyo. "It is our intention to grow our business here significantly."

Miller said Pacific Alliance Group planned to increase investments in Japan, the world's second-largest economy and Asia's biggest property market, by $200-300 million over the next 12-18 months.

Sales of distressed property assets had been slow as owners were unwilling to get rid of them at rock-bottom prices.

"That seems to be changing. In the last 2- months since the end of March, we have seen a dramatic increase in the number of distressed assets that are seriously for sale," said Miller, a Harvard graduate who joined Pacific Alliance Japan in June 2009.

He said Pacific Alliance would be looking for opportunities in Japan as tens of billions of dollars worth of debt, including securitized debt, met maturity dates in the coming year or so.

Sales of distressed assets would likely speed up in the meantime as some financial institutions are not expected to roll over their debt, Miller said.

Morgan Stanley won an agreement with lenders for a 60-day extension on about $2.4 billion in loans used in a troubled hotel investment in Japan, sources said in April, with the market watching closely what would happen once that extension expired.

Miller said Pacific Alliance Group would be looking at hard assets, such as office and residential property, although resorts in Japan would be its least favorite as they were hit the hardest during a downturn.

Miller noted that he was mindful of external risks that could affect Japan's economy and real estate sector.

"If China falls off the cliff, Japan will certainly suffer. The biggest risk to Japan is China and the second is America. The third is Europe," he said.

Pacific Alliance Group had about $5 billion in total assets under management, which included $2.35 billion AUM by Secured Capital, in which it held a 46 percent stake, he said.




http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE65D3XY20100614

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