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Home / Northern Advocate / Property

Where smart money is heading: Greg Goodman at Goodman Property Trust AGM

Anne Gibson
By Anne Gibson
Property Editor·NZ Herald·
22 Jul, 2020 05:00 PM5 mins to read

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Greg Goodman, a director of the trust's manager. Photo / supplied
Greg Goodman, a director of the trust's manager. Photo / supplied

Greg Goodman, a director of the trust's manager. Photo / supplied

The rise of e-commerce and the pandemic has prompted one of the world's largest property investors to expand its development base by A$1.5 billion in the last year, Kiwi investors heard.

And they got an insight into where the smart money is headed these days for the best returns.

Sydney-based Greg Goodman, a director of the manager of NZX-listed Goodman Property Trust, told the AGM which was staged online: "Fifty to 60c of each dollar going into property wants to go into industrial."

Australian-headquartered Goodman owns and manages properties worth around A$48b, the ASX listed business has a market capitalisation of around $30b and is Australia's largest listed real estate business.

READ MORE:
• Revenue up but Goodman Property Trust net profit falls 18 per cent after lower revaluations
• Goodman Property portfolio revalued up $185 million to record
• NZ shares fall; Goodman placement sees property stocks sold

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Greg Goodman, son of former Nelson baker Sir Pat Goodman, was referring to a global chase for logistics and industrial land, buildings, tenants and development sites.

That was because so many people were buying goods online, hence more storage space is needed.

Goodman is spending A$5b-plus internationally developing. It was spending A$1.5b more developing now than this time last year, Goodman told the meeting.

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Chief executive John Dakin told the meeting: "Retail and tourism are challenging and the jury is out about demand for offices. People with money who want to invest are heading towards industrial and values are holding up pretty strongly."

Goodman told the meeting of structural changes and trends in the sector being "overwhelmingly in favour of e-commerce around the world and we've seen that in regards to the A$50b of assets we own and manage around the world in Asia, Europe, USA, Australia and New Zealand. We're seeing the infill sites we own strongly in demand where we're building more warehouses to date than we were pre Covid-19.

"That is primarily assisting customers with more technology, better efficiencies, ultimately trying to get costs out of their business but also creating a new way of doing things in Covid-19 which is about more convenience where location of your warehouses is obviously more important and that convenience leads to the warehouse becoming the retail front," Goodman told the meeting.

Dakin (right) also addressed today's meeting. Photo / Chris Gorman
Dakin (right) also addressed today's meeting. Photo / Chris Gorman

After the meeting, Dakin explained how the business had only two vacancies when level four lockdown was implemented. Those were in warehouses. It leased space to food operators for online deliveries and one new tenant was a supermarket owner, he said.

"We've since leased more space to NZ Post, to deal with rising parcel volumes," Dakin said of Goodman's Wiri industrial estate. "NZ Post has taken quite a bit of space around the city due to the volume of that business rising significantly."

Goodman was working on further development opportunities, he said. Globally, Goodman's biggest tenant was Amazon, Dakin said.

"If you look back 10 years ago, Goodman internationally might have had a small number of facilities with Amazon and they may have been in the top 10 [tenants]. Today being number one, well that tells you about the growth of online retailing," Dakin said.

"Retailers will be investing in online platforms more to ensure they can meet the needs of customers who want their goods delivered within a day. Once someone starts delivering in a day, everyone else has to do that. In order to do that, you have to have sites close to consumers," Dakin said.

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"I thought prices of good industrial property would come off with Covid but we're not seeing that," he said.

The biggest property Goodman owns is Highbrook at 150ha including parks and reserves.

"We're about 90 per cent done. There are around 4000 people working there now," he said.

The southern area of Auckland remained the most attractive for the business, he said.

Goodman bought Foodstuffs North Island's existing headquarters at Mt Roskill "which we regard as an infill site, close to consumers. We're looking at either re-leasing that or redeveloping it, but they don't move out till next year.

"We'll just look at the demand in the market and one option will stand out over the others," he said.

"It's a great site and we've got good interest in it from prospective tenants," he said. "We'll work on it over the next few months."

How many people would work there or the dollar value of investment was "a bit hard to guess".

Goodman ran its AGM virtually but Dakin said the trust's preference was "to do them in person".

Only one question was asked yesterday and that was around how negative valuations would be in the next 12 months.

Dakin said Goodman's properties would be revalued and those figures released next in its year-end in March, 2021. But he doesn't see values falling.

"Values are at pre-Covid levels, if not slightly higher in some places, because interest rates are falling so yields for industrial property are looking pretty attractive," Dakin said.

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