Australian real estate investment firm Qualitas has raised more than AUD200m (鈧125.3m) from investors for a food infrastructure fund.
Qualitas, which launched the AUD400m close-end Food Infrastructure Fund, has seeded the fund with assets acquired from Australian flour supplier Allied Pinnacle.
Andrew Schwartz, Qualitas group managing director and CIO, said the fund raised more than AUD200m in equity from European and Asian pension, life insurers and Australian ultra-high net worth investors.
Schwartz said the fund remains open for subscription.
Qualitas has negotiated a sale-and-leaseback deal with Allied Pinnacle to buy its 10 flour-milling and bakery operations across Australia for AUD400m.
鈥淭he reason we call it an infrastructure fund is because wheat and flour is a very important staple ingredient, constituting more than 20% of the Australian diet,鈥 Schwartz told 91传媒在线.
鈥淕iven the very long-term nature of the cash-flow and fixed (rental) escalation, it is a very infrastructure-like investment.鈥
Mark Fischer, Qualitas鈥 managing director, principal investments, described the assets as 鈥渟oft infrastructure鈥 and the Qualitas Food Infrastructure Fund as a 鈥渦nique offering鈥.
鈥淚t has elements consistent across real estate, infrastructure and agricultural investment, and brings benefits from each sector,鈥 he said.
鈥淥ur thesis is that there is a developing universe of 鈥榗ross-over鈥 investors from each of those sectors who are increasingly focussed on what we call 鈥渟oft infrastructure.鈥
The assets, said Fischer, will deliver long-duration income without the regulatory risk that comes with hard infrastructure 鈥 or the tenant demand vagaries of traditional real estate.
The portfolio is expected to provide a yield of 6%.
James Ajaka, Allied Pinnacle CEO, said: 鈥淭his partnership will allow us to maintain full operational control of our business, while Qualitas takes ownership of a great suite of properties.鈥
Allied Pinnacle, a supplier of flour in Australia, will maintain full control of its operations at the sites.