GLOBAL - Rockspring will channel close to £4m (€4.8m) raised from the sale of a 55-unit Glasgow industrial estate from its £469.3m Hanover Property Unit Trust into value-added assets in the UK.
The sale, to a private investor, carries a yield of 11% and reflects the investment management firm's decision to shift its exposure towards the southeast.
In other news, UK-based Bank of London and the Middle East (BLME) has acquired a third logistics asset in northwest England for a fund aimed at Middle East investors looking to diversify outside London prime.
The Light Industrial Building Fund, which the bank expects to yield 8% when it closes later this year, should provide a "resilient and steady income stream", the bank said.
Berlin-based investment manager BEOS has acquired four business properties in disparate domestic locations for just under €45m from a consortium of unnamed overseas investors.
The firm plans to invest a further €15.6m in developing the assets, which include warehouse, production and research assets, as well as office.
Student accommodation investor the UNITE group will pay £6.2m in cash for the remaining 49% of UNITE Student Village.
The Village, a joint venture set up in 2004 between UNITE and Lehman Brothers subsidiary Parkmetro, is 99% let. UNITE said the deal would help simplify its balance sheet.
Elsewhere in the UK, Land Securities has sold a government-tenanted central London asset to Tishman Speyer for £171m.
The UK property firm said Eland House did not form part of its adjacent Victoria Circle scheme. The lease on the asset expires in 2021, with a break option in 2016.
Standard Life Investments has acquired a Tesco supermarket in army town Colchester for its £291.9m UK Property Fund.
The £13.1m sale-and-leaseback deal comes just weeks after the supermarket chain said it was freezing its superstore building programme following disappointing results.
Meanwhile, real estate fund manager ưù¾±³Ü³¾ and Terrace Hill have gained planning permission for a Mayfair office development they acquired in a joint venture last January from Prupim.
The partners plan to convert two 1960s blocks into a single grade-A office and residential scheme by the summer of 2013 to exploit undersupply of West End office and anticipated demand from retailers and businesses.
Lastly, the RMB Westport fund - focused on commercial and retail property developments in Nigeria, Ghana and Angola - had its first 'hard' close in December, following Rand Merchant Bank's $50m (€38.4m) commitment in March 2011.
The closing included a cornerstone Middle Eastern sovereign wealth fund, which committed $50m, a US foundation and a US institutional investor, as well further commitments from South African investors, bringing the total committed to $75m.
The total committed capital raised for the fund to date is $125m. The fund is targeting a further investment of $125m by 31 March 2012, which will be the final close, with a "number of prospective investors going through the due diligence process currently".