SA Affordable Housing January / February 2018 // Issue: 68 | Page 27

FEATURES IHS walks the talk The road to creating and providing sustainable affordable housing is long; we speak to Rob Wesselo, MD of International Housing Solutions (IHS) to discover how they get it done. By Ntsako Khosa | All images courtesy IHS The Village in Centurion, a typical popular product which IHS develops. A t the helm of IHS for eight years, Rob Wesselo is excited about the direction the afffordable housing sector is taking. “I’ve always believed that the affordable housing industry, especially the rental market, would become an institutional asset. I’ve been saying this for a while and many people laughed at me. Now it’s happening, it’s quite exciting,” he says. IHS IHS is, simply, a private equity asset manager focused on the affordable housing market. “That means we raise capital from all over the world and invest it in affordable housing, currently mostly in South Africa,” he explains. IHS has about 8 000 units that they own and manage. They also manage three private equity funds and one Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT) that is a pure rental portfolio, called Transcend Property Fund. The African-based company is US owned by MMA Capital Management. “About 10 years ago they decided to diversify outside of the US. They were going to set up affordable housing managers worldwide but after the global financial crisis South Africa is the only business that got up and running,” he says. Despite this the company has slowly branched into other parts of Africa. “We’re starting to expand, we have a fund in Namibia and Botswana. We also have investors interested in Kenya,” he says. As the MD of the company his focus is on South Africa and he believes there is a lot of opportunity. “We have a broad set of objectives and we have very good people that take frontline responsibility. We create a business case which we then sell to investors,” he shares. IHS‘s business case in South Africa is a shortage of affordable housing. Initially matching this to investors was difficult as the company didn’t have a track record. “It’s difficult to get investors’ trust, 10 years later we’ve built many houses and we have a strong team. Now it’s much easier for us to attract capital,” he says. IHS deals with two main transaction types and invests differently in each. The first involves developments where IHS partners with developers, they capitalise the developments and then sell them off. All this depends on the environment and opportunities available to sell units in the open market. The second transaction involves buying turnkey units (apartment blocks, complexes and townhouses) and renting them out to tenants. “This operates mostly from AFFORDABLE SA HOUSING JANUARY - FEBRUARY 2018 25