A Kiwi Income Property Trust institutional investor fears that if 75 per cent of voting unit-holders don't back internalisation next week, a lucrative management contract could be snapped up by a third party.
Craig Tyson, equity investment manager of ANZ New Zealand Investments which owns 8 per cent of Kiwi on behalf of investors in its funds, said if that happened, the first opportunity in 20 years for Kiwi unit-holders to fully align management with unit-holders could be lost.
He told of at least one interested party circling Kiwi, whose unit-holders will vote next week on the $70.6 million internalisation deal, buying the management from Commonwealth Bank of Australia.
Mark Ford, Kiwi's chairman and an independent director, said the internalisation was expected to result in pre-tax net expenditure savings of about $8 million annually.
Kiwi owns properties valued in September at $2.1 billion, including Auckland's Sylvia Park Shopping Mall, Vero Centre and the new ASB North Wharf, Wellington's big Majestic Centre, Northlands Shopping Centre at Papanui in Christchurch.