1 / 24

Structuring Stable Business Deals in a Volatile Development Market

Structuring Stable Business Deals in a Volatile Development Market. Richard A Jones FRICS | April 2010. Unprecedented Times. Reduction in residential values Historically high land values High densities Planning gain. The Perfect Storm. Financial liquidity Mortgage pre-conditions

jabari
Download Presentation

Structuring Stable Business Deals in a Volatile Development Market

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Structuring Stable Business Deals in a Volatile Development Market Richard A Jones FRICS | April 2010

  2. Unprecedented Times • Reduction in residential values • Historically high land values • High densities • Planning gain Richard A Jones |

  3. The Perfect Storm • Financial liquidity • Mortgage pre-conditions • Economic uncertainty Richard A Jones |

  4. A Transparent Approach • Collaborative and transparent • Equitable risk share • Strengths and contributions Richard A Jones |

  5. A New Model • Different deals • Different approaches • Everyone is talking about it! Richard A Jones |

  6. Three Main Ingredients Asset Money Expertise Richard A Jones |

  7. Two Main Partnerships • Public Sector Partnerships • Private-Public Sector Partnerships Richard A Jones |

  8. Public Sector Partnerships • Local Authorities and the HCA • “Virtual Developer” • Value generation • Ring fenced return • Mutual set of objectives • Self financing Asset Expertise Money Richard A Jones |

  9. Public Sector Partnerships • RSL and the HCA Asset Registered Social Landlord Expertise Money • More grant • Equity and investment • Risk share Money Richard A Jones |

  10. Public Sector Partnerships • Local Authorities and RSL’s Asset • Much needed investment • Regeneration • Value generation Registered Social Landlord Expertise Money Richard A Jones |

  11. Private-Public Sector Partnerships • Local Asset Backed Vehicle Development Project Development Project SPV Asset Development Project Development Project Private Sector Developer • Long term partnership • Holistic approach • Value generator • Rationalise working practices • Catalyst for regeneration Money Expertise Richard A Jones |

  12. Private-Public Sector Partnerships • Local Housing Company Housing Project Affordable Housing Project LHC Asset Private Housing Project Housing Project Private Sector Developer • Long term partnership • Unlocking stalled sites • Increased housing supply • Risk share between private and public sectors • Opportunity for LA to capture future value Money Expertise Richard A Jones |

  13. Private-Public Sector Partnerships • The Joint Venture Money Private Sector Developer LLP Expertise Development Project Registered Social Landlord Asset • Clear benefits case for each stakeholder • Incentivised model • Improved cashflow • Risk share • Competitive supply chain Money Expertise Richard A Jones |

  14. Private-Public Sector Partnerships • The Collaboration Agreement Private Sector Developer Asset Expertise • Looser arrangements • Less complicated • Quicker • Pre-cursor to a more formal arrangement CA Registered Social Landlord Money Expertise Money Asset Richard A Jones |

  15. Private-Public Sector Partnerships • Residential PFi Registered Social Landlord Constructor Private Sector Developer Funder Expertise Money Money Expertise PFi Credits Operating Partner Residential Regeneration 30 Year Contract • 30 year partnership • Service provision including maintenance, repair, rent collection, tenancy management etc. • Performance against “output specification” Asset Agreed Performance Outputs Richard A Jones |

  16. New Initiatives • Upfront investment • Infra-structure and other development costs • Viability test • £1.06bn allocated Richard A Jones |

  17. New Initiatives • Higher income yields • House Price inflation • Build for rent • Good rental demand • Opportunity to let to Intermediate market Richard A Jones |

  18. New Initiatives • Bring into play other Constructors • Public sector land • Deferred payment mechanism • 1,250 units initially (500 affordable) Richard A Jones |

  19. New Initiatives • Bridges local ambition and national targets • A shared vision through shared investment agreements • Secure local delivery • Positive outcomes for people and places Richard A Jones |

  20. Conclusion Structuring Stable Business Deals in a Volatile Development Market • Unprecedented times • Times of challenge, times of change • Opportunity • Remodel and re-engineer housing delivery Richard A Jones |

  21. Conclusion Structuring Stable Business Deals in a Volatile Development Market • Transparency • Clarity on drivers for each party • Acknowledgement as to what each stakeholder needs from the scheme • Transparency on what each party takes away from the deal (financial & non- financial) • Agreement on the risk and reward share • An agreement which is equitable for all parties Richard A Jones |

  22. Conclusion Structuring Stable Business Deals in a Volatile Development Market • Different and the opportunity to encourage new players • Viability – Look at the upside as well as downside Richard A Jones |

  23. Conclusion Structuring Stable Business Deals in a Volatile Development Market • Risk strategies that provide comfort to the key stakeholders • Benefit, both financial and non-financial • Holistic business case creates sustainability Richard A Jones |

  24. Conclusion Structuring Stable Business Deals in a Volatile Development Market • The challenge for individual organisations is to understand the direction of change and to adapt accordingly • The challenge for the industry as a whole is to see how the new models may be harnessed to meet the very much unsatisfied demand and need for homes Richard A Jones |

More Related