To increase the value of strategic land, investors tap the skills of professional land development managers. It clearly is not a job for amateurs.
Rare is the investment that succeeds out of dumb luck. Whether one invests in market-traded securities, mineral exploration, rarities, agricultural commodities, land or business start-ups, it’s the people who lead and manage the asset who carry the most weight in achieving good returns.
UK Land that is purchased for development is no exception. It is an asset that requires expert management through several critical stages, typically taking acreage from agricultural use or disuse to build residential communities. The value of that land could increase by several multiples when managed effectively.
But what is the role of land fund managers? What do they do to grow the asset as much as possible in the least amount of time as possible? Here is a short list of their value-adding strategies:
Even when the land manager – quite typically working within a capital growth management group – has an excellent portfolio of successful projects in his or her experience, it makes sense for the investor to do third-party research. An independent financial advisor can provide that perspective.
Rare is the investment that succeeds out of dumb luck. Whether one invests in market-traded securities, mineral exploration, rarities, agricultural commodities, land or business start-ups, it’s the people who lead and manage the asset who carry the most weight in achieving good returns.
UK Land that is purchased for development is no exception. It is an asset that requires expert management through several critical stages, typically taking acreage from agricultural use or disuse to build residential communities. The value of that land could increase by several multiples when managed effectively.
But what is the role of land fund managers? What do they do to grow the asset as much as possible in the least amount of time as possible? Here is a short list of their value-adding strategies:
- Look for opportunistic transactions – The nature of land investing involves many variables. Early in the process when homebuilding is the goal it is to simply identify where there is a critical need for new houses, usually to accommodate workers for growing firms in the area. Then it becomes a matter of finding landowners who may be in a position to sell. Both require good research as well as a network of contacts to keep them informed.
- Invest where value can be added – With strategic land, a change of use can increase value exponentially. But that depends on the cost of the property purchase as well as the costs associated with building infrastructure and buildings. Certain geological and topographical features can make that difficult; therefore the fund manager should be able to assess those (with professional guidance) in advance.
- Access to local knowledge – Change of use strategies have to take into account the goals and objectives of the local planning authorities. Local politics are certainly a factor, as is the local plan for increasing the housing stock (about half of all towns in England and Wales have developed a Government-mandate plan this far). The business community too can play a role at encouraging local development. Good land fund managers have a sense of where all parties stand.
- Approach with rigorous financial analysis – At the end of the day, the numbers have to add up. Time factors into this as well: because development can require two to five years of time, how a fund matures is dependent in part on externalities. The manager’s analytical framework needs to synthesize all variables over the time that transpires from the initial investment to the sale of property.
Even when the land manager – quite typically working within a capital growth management group – has an excellent portfolio of successful projects in his or her experience, it makes sense for the investor to do third-party research. An independent financial advisor can provide that perspective.
No comments:
Post a Comment