Given that a number of Chinese insurance companies have
already diversified into the real estate business with lucrative results, does
this move represent the “Deal of the 21st Century”?
By: Ringo Bones
As of late, a number of Chinese insurance companies had
diversified into the real estate / real property business during the past few
years with lucrative results profit-wise. As far back as October 2014, Hilton
Worldwide Holdings agreed to sell the storied Waldorf Astoria hotel to Anbang
Insurance Group Co. of China after Anbang Insurance offered a bid of 1.9
billion US dollars. But it is only during the last week of January 2015 that US
regulators gave the green light for the purchase. Anbang Insurance Group Co. sealed
the 1.9 billion US dollar purchase of New York’s Waldorf Astoria hotel, which
has been used by foreign dignitaries including Queen Elizabeth II. The Lloyd’s Of
London building has also been recently bought up by a top Chinese insurance
firm.
Chinese insurers have been drawn to European office buildings
because they are typically anchored by tenants with a 10-year leases and offer
yields as high as 5 percent. This compares to Shanghai offices where 3 to 5
year leases and 4.5 percent interest yields are typical.
“We consider high quality overseas property as a good
substitute for fixed income investment” says Hing-Yin Lee, a senior executive director
who manages overseas property investments for Ping An’s trust unit, told an
investor conference back in December 2014. “Core offices in prime locations not
only offer investors stable rental returns, the property prices may also go up
in a few years”. With such investment returns, it looks like insurance companies
diversifying into the real estate / real property business might as well be the
“Deal of the 21st Century”.