INDUSTRY NEWSINTERNATIONAL

Brookfieldโ€™s US$16B bet: buying big while property crashes

Brookfield Asset Management has raised $5.9 billion (approx. A$9.1 billion) in the first quarter of 2025 for its latest global real estate fund, bringing total commitments to $16 billion (approx. A$24.6 billion). This represents the firmโ€™s largest real estate vehicle to date and comes amid rising investor interest in distressed commercial assets.

The fundraising reflects growing willingness among property owners to sell troubled assets, and increased pressure from lenders.

As a result, firms like NY-based Brookfield are moving from capital accumulation to active acquisition strategies.

โ€œWeโ€™re buying at much lower prices than we would have a few years ago,โ€ Lowell Baron, Chief Investment Officer of Brookfieldโ€™s real-estate group told the Wall Street Journal.

About one-quarter of the fund has already been invested, mainly in apartment buildings and warehouses.

According to Mr Baron, asset prices are โ€œwell below what it would cost to replaceโ€ them and are around โ€œ20% to 40% of what the properties would have traded for at their peak.โ€

Key acquisitions include a portfolio of troubled loans backed by more than 2,000 San Francisco apartments and the purchase of Tritax EuroBox, a European logistics property owner, in a deal valuing the company at over $1.4 billion (approx. A$2.15 billion).

The firm is reportedly aiming to raise a further $2 billion (approx. A$3.1 billion) before the fundโ€™s final close.

Real-estate private-equity fundraising is showing signs of recovery. According to PERE, funds raised $57.1 billion (approx. A$87.8 billion) globally in the first quarter of 2025, up from $32.5 billion (approx. A$50 billion) during the same period last year.

Blackstone led with the two largest fund closes of the quarter.

Baron said Brookfieldโ€™s decisions would factor in ongoing economic uncertainty, including the Trump administrationโ€™s tariff efforts and fears of a potential recession. But he also noted that:

โ€œPeople in general are nervous and uncertain,โ€ and โ€œThat keeps competition away.โ€

Show More

Catherine Nikas-Boulos

Catherine Nikas-Boulos is the Digital Editor at Elite Agent and has spent the last 20 years covering (and coveting) real estate around the country.