Blackstone Buys Kyoto Hotel From Goldman Sachs for Reported $54M

Blackstone Buys Kyoto Hotel From Goldman Sachs for Reported $54M

The Moxy Kyoto Nijo has a new owner

US private equity giant Blackstone has acquired a Kyoto hotel from Goldman Sachs, as global investors snap up Japanese hospitality assets to take advantage of a post-pandemic tourism rebound in Asia’s second-largest economy.

Blackstone purchased the 158-key Moxy Kyoto Nijo hotel from Goldman Sachs, representatives of the two US financial giants confirmed to Mingtiandi, with market sources indicating that the deal closed on 1 December. A report by Bloomberg on Tuesday said the asset changed hands for ¥8 billion ($54 million).

The transaction comes as Japan’s tourism recovery, low interest rates, and weak currency fuel a surge in institutional demand for hospitality assets in the country, with average daily rates (ADR) and revPAR for hotels having already bounced back to pre-pandemic levels or better, according to industry analysts.

“Most major markets in Japan have experienced revPAR recovering to pre-pandemic levels due to strong ADR growth, in most cases above 2019 levels, while occupancy levels have not recovered fully to 2019 levels,” said James Abe, head of investment sales for hotels and hospitality group at JLL in Japan. “As the number of inbound visitors continues to recover and flights into Japan increase, we believe occupancy will continue to recover in 2024.”

Buying and Selling

The asset is from a portfolio of Japanese hotels which Goldman Sachs acquired in Japan through a joint effort with investment manager Pacifica Hotels KK, with the company in 2017 also having acquired the the 205-key Moxy Tokyo Kinshicho and the 155-key Moxy Osaka Honmachi, a pair of hostelries converted from office buildings.

Daisuke Kitta, head of Japan real estate for Blackstone

The Moxy Kyoto Niko and Moxy Tokyo Kinshicho are managed by Tokyo-based commercial real estate developer Pacifica Capital KK, while the Moxy Osaka Honmachi is managed by Tokyo-based EGW Asset Management.

The sale of Goldman’s commercial to hotel conversion comes just a few months after the company’s asset management division teamed up with the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (ADIA) and Singapore’s SC Capital Partners in July to acquire a portfolio of 27 resort hotels from property giant Daiwa House Industry for $900 million.

Investors Pile In

Famed for its temples and traditional culture, Blackstone’s bet on the Kyoto asset is seen by analysts as a bet on increased tourism demand.

Monthly tourist arrivals in Japan officially reached pre-pandemic levels in October, with 2.52 million visitors compared to roughly 2.50 million in October 2019, according to statistics from Japan’s National Tourism Organization.

The recovery has caught the attention of global investors, with Japan’s red-hot hotel sector dominating cross-border commercial property investments in Asia this year.

The Japanese hospitality segment clinched $2 billion worth of deals through early August — more than any other sector — and received around half of total hotel investment in Asia in the third quarter, according to MSCI Real Assets.

In the same month that Goldman, ADIA, and SC Capital acquired their portfolio of resort hotels, Hong Kong-based AB Capital Investment announced the addition of a fourth Japanese asset to the hospitality-focused private equity firm’s portfolio since the pandemic.

Hospitality deals accounted for some of the biggest real estate transactions in Japan this year, with buyout giant KKR working with Hong Kong’s Gaw Capital Partners to buy the Hyatt Regency Tokyo for ¥57.1 billion ($410 million) in March. That deal came after Canada’s BentallGreenOak acquired the Rihga Royal Hotel Osaka for ¥50 billion ($360 million) in January.

Last year, Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund GIC acquired a portfolio of railway operator Seibu Holdings’ hotels, resorts and golf courses managed under its Prince hospitality brand in a ¥150 billion ($1.3 billion) deal.

Increased competition for Japanese hotel assets has led investors to look beyond the main tourist cities of Tokyo, Osaka, and Kyoto for deals.

“Well-located, 2-3 star hotels with over 100 keys in Tokyo, Osaka, and Kyoto continue to be popular with institutional funds and offshore family offices, particular properties with international flags or properties that can be rebranded/repositioned near term,” said Craig Pearce, managing director at consultancy Nikota Capital. “Demand from funds for hotels in other larger regional cities like Fukuoka and Sapporo is increasing, and some investors are starting to consider investing in established resort areas in Japan.”

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