
The deal boosts Hongkong Land’s stake in Marina Bay Financial Centre Towers 1 and 2 (Image: Keppel REIT)
Hongkong Land on Thursday acquired a 10.8 percent interest in Suntec REIT from ESR for S$541 million ($422 million), in a deal that expands the developer’s exposure to Singapore’s prime office market.
The stake gives Jardine Matheson-controlled Hongkong Land a foothold in a portfolio anchored by Marina Bay Financial Centre Towers 1 and 2 and One Raffles Quay — assets in which the company already holds indirect interests through its new private fund strategy.
Industrial giant ESR exited its investment in the SGX-listed REIT two days after completing its sale of the trust’s manager to Acrophyte Asset Management, a unit of Tang Organization, the private real estate platform controlled by China-born financier Gordon Tang and his wife Celine.
Thursday’s transaction allows Hongkong Land to deploy capital from its January sale of a set of Singapore office assets into a private fund under its management, with the developer tying the latest deal to its faith in the city-state’s prospects.
“This aligns with the company’s positive outlook and conviction in Singapore’s prime commercial property market,” the builder led by CEO Michael Smith said in a release. “Additionally, the yield derived from the company’s stake in Suntec REIT will contribute to the diversification of Hongkong Land’s earnings profile.”
Strategic Review Ahead
The deal positions Hongkong Land alongside the new leadership of Suntec REIT after the takeover of the manager by the Tang family, which holds a 36 percent stake in the trust.

Gordon Tang of Tang Organization
As the new sponsor, Tang Organization has signalled plans to undertake a strategic review of the REIT’s portfolio, targeting improved performance and enhanced capital efficiency as part of a broader value-creation push.
The S$11.8 billion portfolio spans Singapore, Australia and the UK, with holdings in the Southeast Asian financial hub which include Suntec City mall, a two-thirds interest in Suntec Singapore Convention & Exhibition Centre and one-third stakes in Marina Bay Financial Centre Towers 1 and 2 and One Raffles Quay.
Hongkong Land’s entry as a Suntec REIT unitholder comes as the company builds out its Singapore-focused capital strategy, including a $6.4 billion private vehicle seeded with prime office assets in the city’s central business district.
The Singapore Central Private Real Estate Fund, backed by institutions including the Qatar Investment Authority and APG, acquired one-third interests in Marina Bay Financial Centre Towers 1 and 2 and One Raffles Quay — mirroring Suntec REIT’s stakes in those assets. The fund also owns One Raffles Link and Asia Square Tower 1.
The overlap in assets could provide a pathway for joint initiatives or asset-level transactions between the REIT and Hongkong Land’s fund platform, according to investment bank RHB Singapore.
Potential routes include Suntec REIT selling its stakes in the jointly held assets to Hongkong Land’s fund, with the proceeds being used to reacquire the refurbished 9 Penang Road — the Singapore home of UBS — from the sponsor, RHB analyst Vijay Natarajan said in a research note.
“Another possibility (low likelihood in our view) is privatisation of entire Suntec REIT and moving the assets to a private fund where it can fetch higher valuation compared to c.30 percent discount to book value,” Natarajan said. “However with Tang recently acquiring manager stake we believe the odds are low for another full privatisation.”
Leadership Changes
The investment in Suntec REIT comes as Hongkong Land reshapes its leadership structure, putting former APG Asia Pacific head Graeme Torre in charge of the Hong Kong Central portfolio and Mapletree veteran Pei Teng Foo at the helm of the private fund strategy.

Hongkong Land CEO Michael Smith is expanding his Singapore strategy
Also taking on portfolio chief roles are Alvin Kong as CEO for China integrated properties and Stuart Grant as CEO for the Westbund Central development in Shanghai. The appointments reinforce the company’s pivot to an asset-light, partnership-driven model under Smith, who was hired away from Singapore-based Mapletree less than two years ago to lead the transformation.
Governance at Suntec REIT’s manager has also begun to shift after the change in ownership, with chairman David Matheson stepping down and longtime director Lock Wai Han appointed as interim chairman of the board. Formerly an executive at Starwood Capital, Matheson joined ESR’s management team in 2025 after Starwood led a buyout of the company and was appointed chairman of the REIT’s manager last September.
ESR Selldown Continues
ESR’s divestment of its stake in Suntec REIT comes as the latest in a string of disposals for the industrial specialist after the company was taken private by a consortium comprising Starwood Capital Group, SSW Partners, Sixth Street, Warburg Pincus, the Qatar Investment Authority, and ESR’s founders, in a deal which closed in June last year.
Most of the disposals have come from businesses which ESR took over through its $5.2 billion takeover of Singapore’s ARA Asset Management in a deal which closed in 2022, with the company selling its remaining stake in Australia’s Cromwell Property to Brookfield in July of last year. ESR followed up in October with its disposal of its remaining stake in Japan’s Kenedix to SMFL Mirai Partners, with that business also inherited from ARA.
Earlier this year ESR sold the Platinum Tower in Shanghai, which was held by a former ARA fund managed on behalf of California pension fund CalPERS, for RMB 1.62 billion ($233 million), according to market sources who spoke with Mingtiandi.
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