International governments, super funds and global business giants cashing in on Aussie home building boom revealed
International property giants and super funds are splashing huge sums buying into Aussie builders and developments as they look to cash in on the nation’s housing crisis.
While the investments from across Japan, South-East Asia, the United States, Canada and United Arab Emirates could bring down home prices and rental costs for Victorians, key building industry figures have warned it could squeeze some companies out of business.
The nation and Victoria’s biggest builder, Metricon, this week revealed it has all but finalised a $115m deal to become 51 per cent owned by Japanese giant Sumitomo Forestry Group.
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The Japanese giant is also the owner of Henley Properties Group, Victoria’s seventh-biggest builder, as well as Wisdom Homes in NSW, and the Scott Parker Group in Western Australia.
The series of acquisitions have been underway since 2008 and will end with Australia’s biggest builder being based in Japan, and 12 per cent of Australia’s new homes being built by companies at least partially owned offshore.
The nation’s second biggest builder NXT Group, is already owned by Japanese corporation Asahi Kasei, and has an about 11 per cent stake in Victoria’s fifth largest builder: Simonds Group.
International developers now dominate Melbourne’s city skyline with three of the city’s four tallest towers built by offshore developers, and more on the way.
Prominent housing industry experts believe state and federal housing targets that will add hundreds of thousands of homes to our suburbs are drawing international giants to our housing sector, and that they cannot be reached without significant increases in foreign finance.
Housing Industry Association chief economist Tim Reardon said offshore ownership in Aussie building businesses had increased since the global financial crisis, but more international activity was needed to reach the nation’s housing targets.
“The worst own-goal in the housing crisis is that state governments taxed foreign investors out of the market,” Mr Reardon said.
He noted that increased foreign ownership among big builders could lead to a greater impact from “vertical integration”, or supply chain streamlining, that can help homebuyers with more efficient housing construction.
However, the economist warned it could also result in mid-tier operators who normally build 100-300 homes a year struggling to compete with an increasingly efficient top tier of builders.
Builders Collective of Australia national president Phil Dwyer said adding an international connection to already big building firms would make it harder for mum and dad-level builders to stay in business.
“These bigger companies have buying power for materials that the rest can only ever dream about,” Mr Dwyer said.
“Smaller builders have been struggling to compete for the past decade and now more and more are just getting out altogether.”
International developers are also driving Melbourne’s skyscraper market, with the city’s four tallest towers today including Australia 108, developed by Singapore’s Aspial Corporation, Aurora Melbourne Central, created by UEM Sunrise from Malaysia, as well as the Hong Kong-based Far East Consortium’s West Side Place.
The city’s future tallest skyscraper, STHBNK by Beulah, is being developed by Malaysian-backed firm Beulah International.
And the city’s surging build-to-rent market is also being heavily funded by internationals hoping to cash in on the rising number of tenants expecting to lease a home long term.
The world’s biggest commercial property owner American-giant Blackstone owns the 437-apartment Caulfield Village complex, while Canadian pension fund-owned Oxford Properties have backed a now partially built $180m tenants-only Southbank development by local developer PDG.
Other international groups buying into Melbourne’s build-to-rent market include Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund, GIC, as well as American-based Sentinel Real Estate and the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority which invests for the United Arab Emirates city’s government.
Charter Keck Cramer research national executive director Richard Temlett said an Australian goal of building 1.2 million homes over the coming five years and the Victorian government’s gazetted 800,000 new homes in a decade plan were “strong pull factors” for these groups.
“Australia is a very attractive country, and they (foreign firms) have a very important role to play — we need that international capital, and it needs to be embraced,” Mr Temlett said.
Global giants cashing in on Aussie building boom
Sumitomo Forestry
Japan
Company value by shares: $13.727bn (AUD)
In the midst of $115m bid to buy 51 per cent of Metricon
Bought controlling share Henley Homes (Vic), 2009
Bought controlling share Wisdom Homes (NSW), 2016
Bought controlling share Scott Park Group (WA), 2020
Increased ownership of Henley Homes (Vic), 2020
Asahi Kasei Group
Japan
Company value by shares: $14.89bn
Bought NXT Building Group, NSW’s biggest builder, 2021
Bought Arden Homes (via NXT), 2023
Owns 10.8% of Simonds Group via shares, 2024
Daiwa House
Japan
Company value by shares: $29.847bn
Acquires majority stake in Melbourne Quarter build-to-rent project for $650m, 2023
Bought Rawson Group (NSW), 2017
Blackstone
America
Company value by shares: $184.68bn
Built Caulfield Village (Melbourne) build-to-rent complex, 2022
Purchased Kangaroo Point (Brisbane) build-to-rent complex, 2021
GIC
Singapore – sovereign wealth fund
Estimated value: $770bn
Backs build-to-rent firm Home, with sites in Richmond, Southbank and more coming
Also backed Gurner development firm with $400m in 2022
Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (ADIA)
United Arab Emirates – government investor
Estimated value: $1.5bn
Backs Qualitas property investment funds, which has partnered with Melbourne developer Gurner on build-to-rent projects across Australia
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