GLP, a private equity-backed logistics operator and investor, plans to raise as much as US$2.5 billion for a new fund, betting Chinese consumer spending will underpin demand for modern warehouses.
The Singapore-based asset manager raised US$1.75 billion for GLP China Logistic Fund III at the first close last week, said Teresa Zhuge, executive vice chairman of its China operation. It is the firm’s third so-called "opportunistic fund", focusing on logistics in the country, targeting an internal rate of return at about 15%, Zhuge said.
In China, GLP develops and manages modern warehouses across 68 cities, and leases to customers like express courier SF Holding and logistics services provider Best. The new fund will keep focusing on such assets, especially those in first-tier cities and economic hubs, in the next two to three years, Zhuge said in an interview.
See: AIA to partner GLP to invest in global logistics real estate industry
“Modern warehouses are still scarce in China,” Zhuge said. “The market needs to grow 15 times to reach the same level as the US on a per capita basis.”
Leasing demand for China’s logistics facilities accelerated in the second quarter, driven by e-commerce platforms, according to a report by CBRE. Overall vacancy for Grade A warehouses fell to 14.2%, the lowest since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic, CBRE said.
GLP was taken private in 2017 after a seven-year listing on Singapore’s stock exchange. It is now owned by a consortium that includes co-founder Ming Mei, private equity firms Hillhouse Capital Management and Hopu Investment Management and manages assets of more than US$72 billion in China, including logistics, data centers and renewable energy.
Photo: Bloomberg