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Li Ka-shing’s CK Asset swoops on UK developer CapCo’s troubled London luxury housing project

byCT Report
06/11/2018
in Uncategorized
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Hong kong : CK Asset Holdings is in preliminary talks to buy most of Capital & Counties Properties’ Earls Court project, a sign of investors’ faith in the long-term prospects of London’s luxury-housing market.

The Hong Kong company founded by billionaire Li Ka-shing wants to buy about 90 per cent of the West London site, CapCo said on Monday, confirming a Bloomberg report.

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CapCo has received several proposals for the project and will evaluate them against the benefits of spinning the division off.

Capital & Counties rose 7.2 per cent, the most since November 2016 in London trading on Monday.

CapCo’s Lillie Square venture is not part of the proposal, the company said in a statement.

“Property is a core business of the group. We study all projects with good potential and evaluate each one of them prudently, with the aim of generating reasonable returns for shareholders,” the company said in a written reply to the Post, neither confirming or denying its involvement in the project.

The market for luxury homes in London has been pummelled by tax increases and uncertainty surrounding Brexit, which have combined to push down land values and weighed heavily on the Capital & Counties stock.

The slump in its shares and a proposal to split up its assets is attracting interest from international developers with the balance sheet to undertake huge long-term projects and withstand repeated downturns in the market.

The Earls Court holdings are valued at about £707 million (US$920 million) following a series of write-downs over the past three years, Capital & Counties said in July. The 77-acre site is split into a series of parcels, some of which are owned jointly with other investors, and that may restrict the company to selling only parts of the project, which has permission to build 7,500 homes.

Capital & Counties is exploring separating its properties in the Covent Garden district from the assets in the Earls Court area to appeal to different types of investors and attract higher valuations. The firm’s market value has slumped this year to about £2.2 billion, which represents a 21 per cent discount to the company’s net asset value.

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