German insurer Volkswohl-Bund is looking to secondary cities, following a decision to invest in commercial real estate debt for the first time.
Having recently mandated fund manager Caerus to invest 鈧200m in senior real estate debt, the 鈧11bn institution sees opportunity away from the core playground of Germany鈥檚 main cities.
The move into real estate debt is yet another example of institutional capital entering a traditionally bank-dominated sector.
Significant yield compression in core locations has pushed investors and lenders towards Germany鈥檚 鈥樷 in the search for opportunities.
鈥淭here is still demand for finance,鈥 Axel Hoffmann, Volkswohl-Bund chief finance officer told IP Real Estate, pointing to banks鈥 reluctance to lend in 鈥渘iche鈥 sectors.
鈥淭here are market players who don鈥檛 have access to credit in certain markets 鈥 particularly in the mid-sized loan market and in the CRE loan market.鈥
Whole loans up to loan-to-value ratios of 80% are being offered through the mandate.
While Volkswohl-Bund鈥檚 focus is firmly fixed on domestic real estate, Hoffmann says the US offers a good example of how certain sectors are less crowded than others. 鈥淚f you take project development for multifamily housing in the US, then it鈥檚 very hard to find credit for,鈥 he says. 鈥淪o in certain niches, there is demand.鈥
Entering a new asset class, the investor is 鈥渃onvinced鈥, he says, that commercial real estate debt 鈥渕akes sense as part of a strategic asset allocation鈥.
鈥淲e have our mortgage department, we have a real estate department, so that helps,鈥 Hoffmann says. 鈥淭his sits in between. Low bond rates mean we are somewhat forced to go towards CRE debt.鈥
For Caerus, the latest backing follows a parallel 鈧150m commitment from another, unnamed German insurer.
Last year, German insurer Gothaer backed Caerus鈥 Real Estate Debt Fund I with 鈧50m. The fund also received a 鈧20m commitment from Swiss private bank, Reichmuth & Co.
Along with junior and mezzanine loans, Caerus said it has been mandated with 鈧420m for CRE debt, with investments worth 鈧188m in place.
Fund I has a target volume of 鈥ㄢ偓300m and focuses on German-speaking countries but has not ruled out financing in the Benelux region.
Caerus chief investment officer, Patrick Z眉chner, said there is a pre-conception that German commercial real estate financing was liquid.
鈥淭his is not the case,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a split market 鈥 there鈥檚 a core market where the banks are active but there鈥檚 a market beyond that.鈥
The office and retail sectors of Germany鈥檚 鈥楤鈥 cities, Z眉chner added, have been 鈥渓ess volatile鈥 than the prime side.
鈥淚n some cases 鈥 such as a mixed-use asset in a 鈥楤鈥 city 鈥 it is not even a case of pricing but more an issue of basic availability as some German banks have strict lending disciplines. You can find surprises.鈥