Madison International Realty has hired a listed real estate specialist to 鈥渇ormalise鈥 its growing activity in the space.
Madison, more closely associated with acquiring direct stakes in individual properties, has appointed Andrew Schaffler to the newly created position of director of listed real estate securities.
Schaffler, who was a portfolio manager at Cohen Steers, a specialist in listed real estate strategies, will oversee all listed activities from the New York office.
Madison has been using the public markets for five years as another way of accessing prime real estate at a discount. Most recently it bought shares in Songbird Estates, which recently sold London鈥檚 Canary Wharf Estate to Brookfield and Qatar Investment Authority.
Ronald Dickerman, CEO of Madison, told IP Real Estate that the public markets offered an alternative means of pursuing its 鈥渜uality at a discount鈥 strategy that for most part comprises buying discounted stakes in direct assets.
鈥淭he purpose of hiring Andrew is to formalise our activities in the listed property space,鈥 he said.
Dickerman said Madison鈥檚 experience in the listed real estate markets 鈥 which started with its investment in Tishman Speyer Office Properties, an Australian REIT 鈥 had disproved certain theories about the listed real estate markets.
He explained: 鈥淓verybody says鈥 public markets are perfect and they reflect forward-thinking information and there are no bargains.
鈥淲e have found that to be absolutely false. There are a lot of misunderstood property companies.鈥
Dickerman said Madison bought into Songbird Estates at 拢1.40 per share before selling to Brookfield and Qatar at 拢3.50.
鈥淣ot a bad return for investing in prime London office buildings,鈥 he said.
Asked whether the added volatility of listed markets posed a problem for Madison and its investors, Dickerman said: 鈥淲e are value investors. We are not traders. So we are willing to incur some market volatility in order to access these opportunities.鈥
Madison, which , is understood to be raising capital for a successor. The company would not comment.