RioCan remaking malls into mixed-use havens

CEO aiming for his firm to get 90% of rental revenue from Canada's largest urban markets by 2020

RioCan remaking malls into mixed-use havens

RioCan Real Estate Investment Trust CEO Ed Sonshine has inked deals to sell 19 assets in the past four months, part of his drive to unload about $2 billion worth of properties. At the same time, he’s tearing up some of his malls to develop apartments, trying to capitalize on the rental boom and insulate RioCan from the rise of e-commerce.

By 2020, he wants more than 90% of rental revenue to come from Canada’s six major urban markets, up from about 75% now.

“I learned a long time ago that having the title of Canada’s biggest REIT is not something that is one of my prizes so I don’t see this as a threat at all,” Sonshine said in a Bloomberg interview. “I’m busy trying to get smaller.”

Earlier this month, Choice Properties REIT, the real estate arm of Loblaw Cos., agreed to buy Canadian REIT for about $3.1 billion – a deal that will give it more access to industrial and office space and topple RioCan from its long-held title as Canada’s biggest REIT by market value. Retail REITs have lagged Canada’s S&P/TSX Capped REIT Index over the past two years amid a decline in mall traffic and companies are pushing into other sectors including apartments and offices.

Read more: Look out for these cities to become 2018’s commercial hotspots

RioCan is moving quickly. It’s already closed deals or is under firm agreements for about $512 million worth of properties with $200 million more under conditional contract. While most of the deals have been off-market, the company is planning to market up to $500 million worth of properties in the next two months, said Sonshine. RioCan is planning to sell about 100 of its 289 properties altogether.

“I’m pretty comfortable that we’re going to hit our numbers,” Sonshine said.

A major migration to metropolitan areas is underway globally, Sonshine explained. “So that’s where we’ve got to start focusing our assets because that’s where you’re going to get rent growth, more demand for space and that will be where you get population growth.”

Part of the revenue used from RioCan’s sales will go toward the development of as many as 10,000 residential units in Canada’s major markets, called “RioCan Living.”

“There’s less demand for retail space but there’s a lot of demand for great residential apartments,” Sonshine stated. “So I said, well, let’s just rip down all, or part of, our shopping centers and replace it with medium-rise or, depending on location, even high-rise apartments and then just put new retail on the ground floors of those buildings because there still is retail demand, it’s just very different.”

RioCan has five buildings under construction in Calgary, Ottawa, and Toronto so far, and is aiming to have at least three more by the end of 2018.

New RioCan rentals will include “tech packages” with automated concierges, lockers, and cold-storage to appeal to the new trend of online grocery shopping, while common areas could include study or co-working spaces as previous amenities such as gyms, party rooms, and swimming pools fall out of favor.