LONDON (Reuters) - More unlisted European property funds aim to extend planned expiry dates to avoid selling assets into freefalling property markets, a study by industry body INREV showed on Wednesday.
INREV's Fund Termination Study 2008 showed almost 60 percent of real estate funds due to wind up in 2008-2010 are set to be extended in an attempt to protect returns until investor demand for property recovers.
Just 29 percent of funds due to wind up in 2008-2010 plan to liquidate when originally planned, compared with 52 percent of funds in 2007, the report showed.
"Currently, the flexibility of a one-to-two year extension is attractive from a timing standpoint as it delays the need to decide whether to sell assets into a market where capital values are falling," Andrea Carpenter, INREV Research director said.
"This is particularly the case for funds invested in the UK, where the credit crunch has hit hardest so far, and where nearly half the funds surveyed are investing," she added.
The study said investors and fund managers rarely disagreed on proposals to extend the life of property funds to exploit or circumvent extreme market conditions.
When European property prices were soaring in 2006, short-term extensions were popular among fund managers who wanted asset sales to coincide with the peak of the market.
But since the market downturn gripped in summer 2007, an increasing number of managers have persuaded investors to roll over their investments to give more flexibility in the timing of the exit.
However, INREV warned some extension plans could be hindered by an acute shortage of credit.
See Original Article
Call now for help with corporate debts.
Call us on: 0800 071 1616
Email us on: info@debtsgone.co.uk
Website: www.debtsgone.co.uk
Thursday, 9 October 2008
Posted by Debtsgone LTD at Thursday, October 09, 2008
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Blog Archive
-
▼
2008
(365)
-
▼
October
(31)
- The UK is in a wrangle with the EU over measures t...
- Several major property developers have made prepar...
- As recession bites hard, a more despondent, down-a...
- Print management company T.D. Gorman has ceased tr...
- Britain’s Pension Protection Fund may have a seat ...
- Gold Bullion prices slumped yet again early Thursd...
- Oryen Mortgage Packagers has become the latest vic...
- Debenhams moved to reassure investors over its nea...
- It is often said that death, divorce and moving ho...
- Home Blogs News Adviser Surveys Adviser News Colle...
- UK – Trustees must respond to the threat of corpor...
- As of today Debtsgone Limited is located in our ne...
- Fallen soccer star Paul Gascoigne is facing the th...
- THE number of bankruptcies in Scotland has jumped ...
- The biotechnology sector looks likely to be hit by...
- Gordon Brown was accused today by the Tories of "i...
- Linens ‘n Things, the US retailer of housewares an...
- WORK has been stopped on a development of apartmen...
- ALEX Salmond insisted yesterday that Scotland woul...
- Dave Whelan believes the time will come when a Pre...
- The landscape for British savers shifted, it seeme...
- Angry local businessmen confronted football tycoon...
- LONDON (Reuters) - More unlisted European property...
- Greater Manchester-based pram and children’s furni...
- Pfandbrief literally translates to “collateral let...
- 'I'm worried and I can't sleep,' says Steve Marks....
- MORE people could be forced to delay retirement in...
- The company that introduced the concept of buy-to-...
- Merseyside's maritime revival could be sunk by swi...
- A new ‘debt tracker’ conducted by YouGov asking ho...
- Up to 600,000 people who are struggling with their...
-
▼
October
(31)
No comments:
Post a Comment