Oxford Properties has bought a site for a A$450m (鈧275m) build-to-rent (BTR) project in Melbourne to capitalise on recent changes to state taxes to encourage multifamily developments.
It will be the Canadian investor鈥檚 second BTR project in Australia. It is currently developing BTR apartments in central Sydney.
With the latest acquisition in Melbourne鈥檚 inner western suburb of Footscray, Oxford鈥檚 Australian pipeline has grown to around 1,000 units. The Melbourne site will add appropriately 700 apartments to its portfolio.
Alec Harper, Oxford鈥檚 head of Australia, said: 鈥淭he Footscray acquisition is in line with Oxford鈥檚 strategy to actively grow its exposure to Australia and the nascent build-to-rent sector.鈥
He said the focus would be in core markets that offered scale, access to wider amenity and the right household demographics.
鈥淥xford has a strong track record delivering transformative build-to-rent precincts in the UK and North America,鈥 he said.
Last month, Oxford bought a 50% stake in the Investa management platform and has appointed the Australian company to implement its strategy to build up a BTR rent business in Australia.
Investa recently created a BTR unit, appointing Jason Greener as its fund manager.
Peter Menegazzo, chief investment officer of Investa, told 91传媒在线: 鈥淭his will be a development-led business. And over the next five to seven years, the portfolio could grow to 4,000-5,000 apartments.鈥
Initially, Oxford is funding the projects from its balance sheet.
鈥淲ith a growing pipeline of projects, and increasing interest from investors looking to make an investment into the sector, we are considering opportunities to bring in capital partners to help fund the portfolio鈥檚 growth,鈥 he said.
This would underpin Oxford鈥檚 commitment to build a significant build-to-rent portfolio in the gateway cities of Sydney and Melbourne.
鈥淒efinitely,鈥 he said. 鈥淪tate governments鈥 recent changes to the (BTR) tax regime have been really well received. They have removed a barrier to investing in this sector.鈥
The Australian property industry is also talking to the Federal Government, hoping to persuade it to extend the withholding tax on foreign investment in commercial real estate under its management investment trust legislation to the BTR sector.
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