<p>US-based investment firm KKR & Co said on Thursday it had closed its first fund targeting real estate investments in Asia Pacific at $1.7 billion.</p>.<p>The announcement comes days after KKR closed its inaugural Asia infrastructure fund, as the private equity powerhouse expands its platforms in the region.</p>.<p>John Pattar, KKR head of real estate Asia, told <em>Reuters </em>the new fund would focus on Asia's urbanization trends, corporate carve-outs of non-core real estate assets in Japan and also take-private opportunities in markets including Australia, Singapore and Japan.</p>.<p>"Increased domestic consumption, productivity and urbanization – combined with the acceleration of e-commerce and platform-based businesses and the evolution of the traditional office landscape – is fundamentally reshaping the region's real estate sector," he said.</p>.<p><strong>Also read — <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/private-equity-firm-kkr-places-prosieben-shares-dampening-merger-speculation-938580.html" target="_blank">Private equity firm KKR places ProSieben shares, dampening merger speculation</a></strong></p>.<p>The fund is also looking at opportunities in countries such as South Korea, which has recovered from the Covid-19 pandemic, said Hong Kong-based Pattar, a veteran real estate investor poached by KKR in 2018 to lead its Asia real estate efforts.</p>.<p>"We look at markets that handle Covid best," he said. "...Asia Pacific is the first to recover in 2021."</p>.<p>KKR's real estate fundraising comes as private equity firms globally have expanded from a model of buying out companies to turn around and sell for profit. They now invest through a range of alternative asset management products including infrastructure, real estate, hedge funds and credit.</p>.<p>Investment firms raised $9 billion in 47 Asia-focused real estate funds last year, following a record $26 billion raised in 2019, according to data provider Preqin. KKR’s U.S.-based rival Blackstone Group raised the region’s biggest real estate fund in 2018 at $7.1 billion.</p>.<p>KKR will also be competing with regional firms such as Hillhouse Capital Group, which has hired former Warburg Pincus and Blackstone dealmakers to build out its real estate capabilities.</p>.<p>The New York-headquartered firm launched its dedicated global real estate platform in 2011 and has about $14 billion of real estate assets under management as of the end of September 2020.</p>.<p>In Asia Pacific, it has deployed more than $1.5 billion of equity across about 20 real estate transactions since 2011.</p>.<p>Its portfolio includes office tower Namsan Square in Seoul, Oasis Shopping Centre in Australia's Gold Coast and Hong Kong retail assets Lake Silver and Parkside. </p>
<p>US-based investment firm KKR & Co said on Thursday it had closed its first fund targeting real estate investments in Asia Pacific at $1.7 billion.</p>.<p>The announcement comes days after KKR closed its inaugural Asia infrastructure fund, as the private equity powerhouse expands its platforms in the region.</p>.<p>John Pattar, KKR head of real estate Asia, told <em>Reuters </em>the new fund would focus on Asia's urbanization trends, corporate carve-outs of non-core real estate assets in Japan and also take-private opportunities in markets including Australia, Singapore and Japan.</p>.<p>"Increased domestic consumption, productivity and urbanization – combined with the acceleration of e-commerce and platform-based businesses and the evolution of the traditional office landscape – is fundamentally reshaping the region's real estate sector," he said.</p>.<p><strong>Also read — <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/private-equity-firm-kkr-places-prosieben-shares-dampening-merger-speculation-938580.html" target="_blank">Private equity firm KKR places ProSieben shares, dampening merger speculation</a></strong></p>.<p>The fund is also looking at opportunities in countries such as South Korea, which has recovered from the Covid-19 pandemic, said Hong Kong-based Pattar, a veteran real estate investor poached by KKR in 2018 to lead its Asia real estate efforts.</p>.<p>"We look at markets that handle Covid best," he said. "...Asia Pacific is the first to recover in 2021."</p>.<p>KKR's real estate fundraising comes as private equity firms globally have expanded from a model of buying out companies to turn around and sell for profit. They now invest through a range of alternative asset management products including infrastructure, real estate, hedge funds and credit.</p>.<p>Investment firms raised $9 billion in 47 Asia-focused real estate funds last year, following a record $26 billion raised in 2019, according to data provider Preqin. KKR’s U.S.-based rival Blackstone Group raised the region’s biggest real estate fund in 2018 at $7.1 billion.</p>.<p>KKR will also be competing with regional firms such as Hillhouse Capital Group, which has hired former Warburg Pincus and Blackstone dealmakers to build out its real estate capabilities.</p>.<p>The New York-headquartered firm launched its dedicated global real estate platform in 2011 and has about $14 billion of real estate assets under management as of the end of September 2020.</p>.<p>In Asia Pacific, it has deployed more than $1.5 billion of equity across about 20 real estate transactions since 2011.</p>.<p>Its portfolio includes office tower Namsan Square in Seoul, Oasis Shopping Centre in Australia's Gold Coast and Hong Kong retail assets Lake Silver and Parkside. </p>