Mingtiandi

Asia Pacific real estate investment news and information

  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS
  • Twitter
Remember Me

Lost your password?

Register Now

Loading...
  • Capital Markets
  • Events
    • Mingtiandi 2025 Event Calendar
    • Mingtiandi APAC Residential Forum 2025
    • Mingtiandi Singapore Forum 2025
    • Mingtiandi APAC Logistics Forum 2025
    • Mingtiandi APAC Data Centre Forum 2025
    • Mingtiandi Tokyo Forum 2025
    • More Events
  • MTD TV
    • Residential
    • Logistics
    • Data Centre
    • Office
    • Singapore
    • Tokyo
    • Hong Kong
    • All Videos
    • Post-Event Stories
  • People
    • Industry Moves
    • MTD TV Speakers
  • Logistics
  • Data Centres
  • Asia Outbound
  • Retail
  • Research & Policy
  • Advertise

Sunac China Agrees to Buy 42 Projects from Legend Holdings for $2.1B

2016/09/19 by Michael Cole Leave a Comment

Sunac Sun Hongbin

Sunac chairman Sun Hongbin may finally have something to smile about with this $2.1B deal

Sunac China has agreed to buy substantial stakes in 42 real estate projects from investment firm Legend Holdings for RMB 13.7 billion ($2.1 billion) as the developer controlled by tycoon Sun Hongbin takes another swing at joining the big leagues of the mainland property industry.

The Tianjin-based developer announced the acquisition of majority stakes in 35 companies, and minority shareholdings in five more companies in a statement to the Hong Kong stock exchange that was posted late on Sunday. Sunac acquired a 50 percent stake in an additional firm.

Sunac Now Has 7.3M SQM to Sell

The companies acquired are scattered across a range of second tier cities in China, including Yantai in Shandong province, Hangzhou in Zhejiang and Dalian in Liaoning province, but there are also projects in Beijing.

In total the acquisition, which was agreed to on September 16th, involves 6.9 million square metres (74.27 million square feet) of land, allowing for construction of over 18 million square metres of space. With Legend Holdings already having begun sales on many of the projects, only some 7.3 million square metres currently remains unsold. Several of the projects appear to be industrial parks, including one company incorporated as a cloud computing centre, and most of the acquisitions were made from Legend’s Raycom high tech manufacturing subsidiary.

Looking for a Place in the Big Leagues

Sunac Raycom

As part of the deal Sunac now owns 100% of this cloud computing centre in Daqing, Heilongjiang

Sunac, which started out as a local developer in Tianjin has been striving to join the top tier of China’s national-level developers in recent years, including two frustrated attempts to acquire rivals over the last two years.

During the 2013-2014 property slide Sunac attempted to acquire Hangzhou-based rival Greentown China Holdings, only to have Greentown boss Song Weiping backtrack on an agreement to sell 24 percent of his company to Sun for HK$6.298 billion.

In 2015 Sunac pounced on troubled developer Kaisa Holdings when the Shenzhen-based company was squeezed into default by regulatory hassles with the local government, agreeing to purchase a 49 percent stake in the troubled developer as it came under mounting financial pressure in February of last year.

However, the Kaisa deal fell apart once the local government released a freeze on the Shenzhen company’s sales, and Sun’s shortcut to joining China’s top developers was blocked once again.

Since then, Sunac has continued to make opportunistic acquisitions of projects, including agreeing in late July to buy seven developments in six Chinese cities from Hong Kong-based competitor Top Spring International Holdings for RMB 4.4 billion ($663 billion).

Industrial Upside Could be Limited

Now with 18 million square metres of new projects in its portfolio Sunac is now substantially larger than it was a week ago. However, if these projects consist largely of industrial land, as it appears, the potentially profitability could be blunted by the continuing manufacturing slowdown on the mainland. One of the projects acquired in the transaction is a 30,000 square metre cloud computing centre to be built in the third-tier city of Daqing, in northeastern China’s Heilongjiang province. Once the deal is closed, Sunac will own 100 percent of the facility which broke ground in August 2013.

With China’s government emphasising a shift to a service-based economy, and production costs rising on the mainland, the PMI – a measure of manufacturer confidence – plunged 3.2 percentage points last month. If Sun’s new sites are predominantly industrial in nature, and given the challenges involved in converting industrial land for other purposes, the potential upside of this acquisition by Sunac could be limited, despite the size of the deal.

Share this now

  • LinkedIn
  • Share
  • Tweet
  • Email

Filed Under: Finance Tagged With: acquisition, Legend Holdings, Sun Hongbin, Sunac China Holdings, weekly-sp

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Get Mingtiandi Delivered

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

MTD TV

CDPQ's Josephine Yip
ESR, CDPQ, Emergent, Yardi Take Temperature of Trade War at Forum: MTD TV
Andrew Lee Blackrock2
BlackRock, Hines, ESR-Logos REIT and Realterm Bullish on Singapore Industrial

More MTD TV Videos>>

People in the News

Alan Miyasaki of Blackstone
Blackstone Rejigs Asia Real Estate Leadership as Alan Miyasaki Departs Singapore
Thomas Viertel Vita
Asia Real Estate People in the News 2025-09-08
Ian Liem SC Capital
Asia Real Estate People in the News 2025-09-01
Jun Ando
Schroders Names Former OTPP Exec Ando APAC Head as Moore Moves to Chairman Role

More Industry Professionals>>

Latest Stories

Centurion group CEO Kong Chee Min
Centurion REIT IPO 70% Committed at $1.2B Valuation and More Asia Real Estate Headlines
Jeremy Deutsch Vantage
Vantage Announces $1.6B Investment From ADIA, GIC – Confirms Yondr Johor Deal
Jonathan Zhu Bain Capital
Bain Capital Sells China Data Centre Business to Local Consortium for $3.9B

Sponsored Features

Bernie Devine,
From Tools to Traction: Where Real Estate Tech is Heading in 2026
Fiona Ngan, Colliers Hong Kong
In a Market of Caution, Tenants Have The Upper Hand in Hong Kong’s Office Sector
How to Create a Win-Win for Investors and Occupiers

More Sponsored Features>>

Connect with Mingtiandi

  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS
  • Twitter

Real Estate News

  • Capital Markets
  • Mingtiandi 2025 Event Calendar
  • MTD TV Archives
  • People
  • Logistics
  • Data Centres
  • Asia Outbound
  • Retail

More Mingtiandi

  • About Mingtiandi
  • Contact Mingtiandi
  • Mingtiandi Memberships
  • Newsletter Subscription
  • Advertise
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy
  • Join the Mingtiandi Team


© 2007-2025 China Advertising Media Ltd (Samoa). All rights reserved.

We use cookies in accordance with our Privacy policy to provide the best user experience on Mingtiandi and to safeguard user data. By continuing to browse you consent to the policy.