BY Moses Michira Nairobi, Kenya:
University of Nairobi’s Staff
Pension scheme and consultancy firm PriceWaterHouseCoopers (PwC) has
acquired Delta Corner building at Westlands, marking one of the largest
individual deals in the property market.
The buyers are estimated to have jointly spent Sh4 billion to acquire
the building whose completion has significantly altered the skyline of
the Westlands business district in the past year.
Professionals who have been involved in the transaction have revealed
that the two institutions invested in the prime property to gain from
the attractive rental returns in the fast-growing business district,
which has become the focal point of the construction sector.
Sought after
“Quality commercial space in Westlands is still much sought after,”
said one source who spoke in confidence, adding “The pension scheme
bought purely for the rental income, while PwC would occupy more than
half of the space in wing B and lease the rest.”
Office space in Westlands attracts a monthly rent of between Sh100
and Sh120 per square foot, exclusive of service charges – which is the
highest in Nairobi.
Commercial property has emerged as a top choice as an asset class for
pension schemes, owing to the long-term stability in revenue earnings
that office space is able to generate. Minimum tenancy for office space
in Kenya is limited to six years, which eliminates erratic occupancy
rates, and providing the much needed cushion for commercial property
investors.
Joins others
PwC now joins global banks Barclays and Standard Chartered that have
shifted their head offices to the Westlands business district. The two
banks previously had their head offices within the city centre.
The 20-storey building, which adds over 251,000 square feet of office
space to Nairobi commercial real estate segment, was developed by Delta
Corporation East Africa Limited (DCEAL), a firm associated with Indian
billionaire Mukesh Ambani.
Other deal
Mr Ambani’s firm also closed another major deal when it sold the
Delta Centre in Upper Hill to the World Bank late in 2010 for an
estimated Sh2.2 billion. DCEAL has also sold about 85 per cent of Delta
Riverside, a boutique office park along Riverside Drive consisting of
four blocks of commercial space.
Reliance Corporation, owned by Mr Ambani, owns a 60 per cent stake in
DCEAL, while Delta Corporation controls the minority stake.
Jimmy Shah, the managing director of DCEAL, says that his firm was
looking at investing in ‘several’ other office blocks, especially in the
Upper Hill business district indicating that the Indian-owned firm
still has appetite for commercial property in Nairobi.
Biggest deals
“I think the sale of the Delta Corner could be among the biggest
deals in this property market, but we are looking for several other new
projects especially in Upper Hill,” says Mr Shah.
“Our bias in future will be in commercial property, but we are
satisfied with the performance of our residential project considering
the (tough) current situation ” he added.
DCEAL developed a residential estate in Athi River called Delta
Plains, which is about 50 per cent sold. The finished projects that have
been sold are estimated to have earned the firm over Sh6 billion in net
profits, showing the Indian firm to have gained big from the
decade-long boom in Kenya’s property market.
Jaydev Mody, the chairman of Delta Corporation — the parent company —
alluded to increased investment in Kenya’s real estate market in an
address to shareholders.
“The company will receive a substantial amount of dividends from its Kenyan business in the near future,” Mr Mody said.
“The Company’s real estate business in Kenya continues to perform
well, driven by strong and favourable economic growth, particularly in
Nairobi.”
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