TH Real Estate plans to launch an Asia-Pacific Cities Fund next year to invest in core real estate in the region.

The fund will be modelled on TH Real Estate鈥檚 core, open-ended European Cities Fund, which was and has already invested 鈧1bn.

Speaking to media on a visit to Sydney today, Mike Sales, head of TH Real Estate, said: 鈥淭he idea is to have a sister product for Asia-Pacific.鈥

TH Real Estate expects to begin marketing the new fund in the second quarter of 2018, Sales said.

鈥淲e will have money to start it up and the aim is to have hundreds of millions in real estate in the next two years [following the launch].鈥

The fund will invest in Singapore, Hong Kong, Tokyo and the main Australian cities.

Sales said the European Cities Fund has been well supported and is moving closer to 鈧2bn in assets under management.

Last week, TH Real Estate raised an additional 鈧422m for its European fund from five international investors, including one in Australia.

鈥淲e are hoping that this will be the kind of trajectory for our Asia-Pacific fund,鈥 Sales said. 鈥淲e are cognisant of where the markets are, and we will be incredibly selective.鈥

The firm has appointed an executive, to be based in Hong Kong, to head the Asia-Pacific fund.

TH Real Estate is also due to launch a large China retail fund, having last year announced an intention to create $2bn fund in conunction with Gaw Capital.

鈥淲e are pushing on with our Asia-Pacific expansion, but are also being very considered about where we go,鈥 Sales said.

Currently, the firm has a presence in Australia, Hong Kong and Singapore, and it will have an office in Tokyo next year.

As part of its Asia-Pacific expansion plan, TH Real Estate has established a debt business for the region, based in Australia.

Sales said the firm has allocated 鈥渉undreds of million鈥 to establish its APAC debt business. Martin Priestley, the firm鈥檚 newly-appointed head of the APAC debt business, said discussions are already under way and the first transactions could be completed before the end of the year.

Priestley said the focus initially will be on senior debt, but later, as the firm gets 鈥渕ore comfortable鈥, it will move up the risk curve. It would be hard to place debt into Asian markets, he said, but there was an opportunity to bring capital from the region into Australia.

鈥淭here are good opportunities in Japan for us to bring investors to Australia because of the level of returns they can get in Australia versus the returns in their domestic market,鈥 said Priestley.

Jack Gay, TH Real Estate鈥檚 global head of commercial real estate debt, said debt had become mainstream for institutional investors, which look at it for certainty of income.

Gay expects to place some US$7bn in debt this year, with the key markets being the US and UK.

Sales said that, presently, Asia-Pacific represents 鈥2% to 3%鈥 of the US$110bn of assets under management at TH Real Estate. With the new funds it is creating, particularly its Asia-Pacific cities fund, TH Real Estate鈥檚 core exposure could rise to around 10% of AUM, he said.